These things are so weird looking. Does anyone actually use them?
Oh, and I guess it's useful for boring stuff, too.I've seen the basic ones (like the left one in the top picture) used for data input and basic accounting before. The employees were using Chromebooks that did not have numpads built into the keyboard.
I guess the first one could be useful if you want to play roguelikes on a tenkeyless laptop.
git gud and use extended vi keys.Get the one on the left, plug it into your laptop without a numpad, use it to play roguelikes.
No.git gud and use extended vi keys.
I don't make a habit of correcting minor usage errors, but I thought this was funny enough to share.If I had the misfortune of using a computer without numpad I'd get the standalone one, but having full keyboard is my #1 criterium when choosing a laptop/keyboard.
Thanks, I presumed it's the same in English as in my language, didn't work this time.I don't make a habit of correcting minor usage errors, but I thought this was funny enough to share.
Criterium: A one-day bicycle race on a circuit road course
(you were looking for criterion)
I have one very similar to that, though mine's made by Belkin, not Razer, and it only has three rows of keys instead of four (and no fucking RGB):Im most curious about the middle one. It has a scroll wheel and some kind of analog stick on it. what I hear is that those are used for computer drawing so you can set keyboard shortcuts. But a scrollwheel seems useless if you have a mouse.

Oh yeah, I think that's why it was funny to me. It's perfectly reasonable to assume that the singular would end in 'ium', but the fact that acting on that reasonable assumption yields some ultra-specific word for a type of bicycle race is what's funny.Thanks, I presumed it's the same in English as in my language, didn't work this time.