Similar Articles |
|
T.H.E. Journal September 1999 |
Hands-On - Datadesk Technologies Datadesk Technologies has introduced a child's keyboard into the market. LittleFingers is a full-functioning keyboard with all of the standard features, only made smaller for a child's hands.... |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Ghostly Keys The iBiz Virtual Keyboard projects a full-size keyboard onto a flat surface. |
PC Magazine September 16, 2003 Robyn Peterson |
Quirky, Not QWERTY The innovative Keybowl orbiTouch keyless keyboard transforms the sometimes painful act of typing into a comfortable exercise. |
Entrepreneur January 2005 Amanda C. Kooser |
Key Bored? Innovative alternatives to the old qwerty keyboard |
T.H.E. Journal March 2000 |
Typing Software Well Suited for Classrooms |
PC Magazine April 19, 2006 Loyd Case |
Keyboards For Less Our man hits the stores for $20 keyboards. Inland Pro Keyboard Typematic... Labtec Media Keyboard... Key Tronic KT800PS2... BTC Multimedia Keyboard... Microsoft Comfort Curve Keyboard 2000... Logitech Media Keyboard... |
Entrepreneur January 2008 Mike Hogan |
Touch and Go Quick, secure login is at your fingertip. |
PC Magazine June 22, 2005 Jim Louderback |
Keyboard Happiness The author rates a number of keyboards, and decides the Logitech Access Keyboard is the most comfortable and usable. |
PC World July 2002 Michael Lasky |
It's a Wrap: New Logitech PDA Keyboards One is a well-designed winner; one's close but no cigar. |
PC Magazine June 8, 2004 Neil J. Rubenking |
Accented Characters Revisited In our February 17 issue, we presented a number of techniques for entering "Accented Characters in E-Mail." Here is another solution for Windows users. |
PC Magazine September 9, 2004 Robyn Peterson |
Microsoft Wireless Optical Desktop Comfort Edition The Microsoft Wireless Optical Desktop Comfort Edition is a cleverly designed wireless keyboard that's comfortable and easy to use. |
Inc. October 1, 2009 Shivani Vora |
The Best Ergonomic Keyboards Three ergonomic keyboards to soothe aching wrists. |
National Defense December 2010 Eric Beidel |
Cybersecurity Threatened By Common Password Buster GTRI researchers have proven that an inexpensive graphics processing unit (GPU) can bust passwords at the speed of a $100 million supercomputer. |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Robyn Peterson |
Kinesis Maxim Adjustable Ergonomic Keyboard This is one of the most transformable ergonomic keyboards on the market. |
PC Magazine March 10, 2004 Jamie M. Bsales |
PDA Case/ Keyboard If you like a keyboard to use with your PDA but hate carrying two things, iBIZ Technology has an answer. |
PC World January 2002 Anne B. McDonald |
Bent Any Keyboards Lately? Inpace's Flexi Keyboard rolls up like a newspaper... |
PC World December 2005 Harry McCracken |
Pocket PC Phone May Leave You Squinting Sprint Nextel's PCS Vision Smart Device PPC-6700 has promise, but its keyboard suffers from poor legibility due to problematic backlighting. |
PC Magazine December 21, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
FilterKeys Fiasco Adjusting your Filterkeys options will make typing on your keyboard more manageable. |
PC Magazine February 8, 2005 Lance Ulanoff |
MyKeyO Keyboard with Organizer MyKeyO is both a standard keyboard and a desktop-debris storage system. |
Fast Company Chris Gayomali |
Fleksy Opens Its Magical Keyboard SDK To IOS Developers Fleksy is a keyboard that allows you to mindlessly pound out sentences on your phone with one hand. Android users are able to swap their default keyboard for Fleksy. Now, there may be evidence that Apple is loosening the reins. |
Macworld October 24, 2006 Dan Frakes |
DeskSaver Companion keyboard and mouse BenQ's compact DeskSaver Companion keyboard/mouse combination is designed for places where a standard keyboard and mouse won't fit. |
Fast Company January 9, 2012 Rachel Z. Arndt |
Wanted: Levitatr's Portable Keyboard Features Keys That Only Raise Up When You Type Sporting keys that recede into the product's body when not in use, the travel-ready Levitatr stands apart from other portable keyboards. |
PC World July 2002 Steve Bass |
Treat Your Fingers to a New Keyboard 'Penny-wise, pound-foolish' goes for your favorite input device, too... |
Entrepreneur July 2003 Gisela M. Pedroza |
Soft Touch A flexible PDA keyboard you can roll up and put away |
PC World December 2005 Michael S. Lasky |
Microsoft's Comfy, Ultra-Ergonomic Keyboard The padded, curved Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000 provides comfort and relief. |
PC Magazine November 1, 2006 |
Look Ma, No Scrolling Ever tried to switch songs on your iPod while riding a bike? New keyboard independent touch typing may solve your problem. |
PC World March 2003 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Wireless Keyboards That Blab Input devices that share a radio frequency can also share keystroke information across surprisingly long distances. |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Stephen Wildstrom |
Honey, I Shrunk The Keyboard New wireless phones make typing e-mail easier, but they're not perfect. |
PC Magazine March 1, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
Keyboard Metamorphosis What if every key on your keyboard had its own customizable display? |
PC Magazine September 14, 2005 David Murphy |
Chameleon Keys Competitors are lining up to bring a viable LCD-based keyboard to market. |
Macworld November 22, 2006 Dan Frakes |
Evoluent Mouse-Friendly Keyboard Despite its compact size and interesting design, most Mac users will find this keyboard disorienting and frustrating to use. |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Robyn Peterson |
Belkin Wireless Keyboard and Mouse Belkin's contribution to the budget-minded is the Belkin Wireless Keyboard and Mouse. |
PC Magazine February 2, 2005 Bill Machrone |
The Sound of One Hand Typing A one-handed keyboard for PDAs is a viable solution, but you have to teach yourself a whole new skill before you can use it. |
PC Magazine April 6, 2004 Peter Suciu |
Press to Pass The APC Biometric Password Manager doesn't just put your online passwords at your fingertips, it uses your fingerprints to remember passwords for you. |
PC World November 14, 2001 Tom Spring |
Virtual Keyboards Let You Type in Air Samsung and Senseboard are developing wearable keyboards for use with PDAs... |
PC Magazine December 21, 2005 Troy Dreier |
Natural Comfort For incredibly comfortable ergonomic designs, we'll take Microsoft's keyboard any day. |
BusinessWeek December 6, 2004 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
The Treo 650 Is Leading The Pack Treo 650's phone, e-mail, and PDA combo has stayed ahead of the BlackBerry. |
Macworld November 27, 2006 Dan Frakes |
Adesso Mac Slimmedia Mini Keyboard Adesso's Slimmedia Mini Keyboard offers full-size keys in a standard layout, despite being several inches narrower than a traditional full-size keyboard. |
PC World March 2002 Aoife McEvoy |
Dragon: Worth Talking To The Dragon NaturallySpeaking 6 voice recognition program can help you take a break from the keyboard... |
Fast Company September 2006 Joseph Manez |
We Got the Beat Our distinctive typing patterns could prove the key to digital security. BioPassword, a Washington-based company, is offering a system that uses keystroke patterns to verify identity. |
PC Magazine March 11, 2008 Kyle Monson |
Microsoft Wireless Laser Desktop 7000 The Microsoft Wireless Laser Desktop 7000 is both a cool-looking and ergonomic keyboard/mouse combo... Saitek USB Multimedia Keyboard and Optical Mouse Set... KB-1400S Slimline Keyboard... Trust Vista Remote keyboard KB-2950... |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Robyn Peterson |
The Earthquake Keyboard With its three keypad units, the Comfort Keyboard ($299 list) looks more like the victim of a tremor than an input device. |
PC Magazine February 8, 2008 Loyd Case |
Keyboard Bugs Cleaning your laptop keyboard. |
Home Toys June 2005 Gary Drake |
Web Based Sensors Using Open Source Software and Web Services By using the open source program Hotkey, along with Web services from BroadbandSentry, a simple interface can be built to generate sensor inputs on your home computer. |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Robyn Peterson |
Maximum Contour The Kinesis Advantage Pro USB challenges the notion of a flat keyboard by affixing keys to a bowl-like chassis. |
National Defense January 2012 Eric Beidel |
DARPA to Turn Humans Into Passwords The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is working on a solution that would allow a computer to determine on its own if the person at the keyboard is an authorized user through the use of software biometrics. |
Wall Street & Technology November 6, 2006 Cory Levine |
Slacking on Security Information security solution vendor Cyber-Ark reports that passwords with administrator-level permissions are too common at most firms, creating security loopholes. |
PC World January 2006 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: More Criminals Use Keystroke Loggers A computer security firm reports that the array of software programs that cybercrooks use to record every character a user types has grown significantly in recent months. |
Bank Technology News March 2006 John Adams |
Biometrics: The Keyboard Has a Good Memory San Antonio city employees Credit Union has deployed a password management product that remembers user keystroke patterns for less user invasive authentication |
PC Magazine September 15, 2003 Sebastian Rupley |
What's My Name? Do you keep a list of your user names and passwords in your wallet or PDA? If so, you're not the only one who can't remember them all. |