I have been lurking for quite a while now and figured I should finally get around to introducing myself so that I can take advantage of your vast knowledge of keyboard lore in a more active way

My keyboard story is one that is still weirding me out a little. I am a heavy-duty LaTeX user working in the humanities with a way-too-small desk and loads of books heaped across the room, the walls, etc. So I've always had the desire for the perfect keyboard, that is
- as high quality as I - a poor scientist - can afford it,
- as small as it gets,
- capable of all kind of strange Emacs-editor keystroke goodness., which means at least a better positioned ctrl-key and NKRO.
When I first encountered mechanical keyboards about a year ago I immediately went for the Model M, since I thought I could not possibly go wrong with that except for the size (well there's the SSK, but, lo, the €€). I picked one up pretty cheaply from a neighbor. It was in great condition (sorry, gave it away for a friend's birthday who was the same age as the keyboard and did not take any pics) but I immediately had problems with it. I like my keyboards loud but I found clicky switches really don't do it for me, same for cherry blues and the like. The thing is I practically grew up pounding Cherry MY switches as the editor for my local church's bulletin, so the preference for beating stiff linear switches is somehow infused in my fingers by now. After some more erring from the road (I actually went back to a MY board for a couple of months for the nostalgic feel of it and had a IBM Spacesaver II that died almost instantly), I found this: It is small and portable, with a spiral cord, it has all the right keys (control instead of capslock!) and none of the unncessary ones, a nice metal backplate, it's got those lovely integrated locklights and some rather stiff linear switches. It is – and here I really wonder how I ever ended up with this - a Reflotron 1248715 (= Marquardt Mini white) with Italian layout that was originally bundled with a medical device. I had somehow found the DT wiki page I linked to before and thought it might be what I had desired, and, well: yes it is! And even more strangely I happened to chance upon it again at an Italian IT recycler's page a couple of days later. It is now my daily driver for some two months. So, ahem, Thank you Deskthority for making the world (or at least my desk) a better place.
That being said there's still room for improvement. For instance the keycaps don't have any bumps for touch-typing and some are rather faded. The wiki tells me the Marquardt stems are Cherry-compatible, but the keycaps on my board seem to be some lower profile version. Would anybody know where such caps could be had - or would Cherry regulars fit on that board too? As a someone who is regularly switching layouts for work reasons (German, US, Italian, Ancient Greek, Hebrew, you name it) I don't care much for printed caps or any particular key arrangement at all (except for that control key), so Ideally I would leave all the alphanumericals blank.
So thanks everybody for that garden of keyboard enthusiasm you cherish. I might just have another one of those seeds planted on my desk now and will surely be coming back for more.