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Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:06
by bhtooefr
Out of curiosity, what happens if you flick the pointer against the edge of the screen?
Does it just stay against the edge, or bounce back?
That'll be one clue as far as where the TrackPoint modules came from.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:13
by mr_peck
It stay against the border. Same on my thinkpad.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:22
by bhtooefr
If your ThinkPad is newer than a 750 from about 1995, it should bounce back if you do it right.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:26
by mr_peck
Thinkpad X201 => no bounce back.
Maybe it's more a software functionality.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:30
by bhtooefr
Basically, what you should be doing is "throwing" the pointer against the edge of the screen, rather than pressing it against. And the negative inertia functionality is present in all TrackPoint III and IV microcontrollers, and works even when no TrackPoint driver is running.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 15:38
by scottc
X201 here too, can't seem to reproduce that on my built-in trackpoint either.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 17:34
by eloi
I have an external USB thinkpad keyboard laying around (a future a trackpoint "donor" for my main driver) and I think that I can reproduce the behaviour described by bhtooefr, but it took me several tries.
The trick is not to press hard the trackpoint, but instead tap hit it lightly in a sideways motion. The methapor here will be to use a similar motion as if you were throwing a ball.
If you use the trackpoint like this you could see the pointer bouncing back at the end of the movement, when the negative inertia "kicks in". I confirmed also that this behaviour is not present in an ancient laptop that I have also laying around that its not an IBM/Lenovo one.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 18:06
by bhtooefr
Remember, though, the TrackPoint II also lacks this functionality, and I believe some Toshiba laptops as well as a few Unix workstation laptops used that version of the TrackPoint.
(And the TrackPoint I isn't a pointing stick, it's a horrendous mouse/trackball hybrid thing, so it doesn't count.)
Posted: 29 May 2014, 18:12
by scottc
eloi wrote:The trick is not to press hard the trackpoint, but instead tap hit it lightly in a sideways motion. The methapor here will be to use a similar motion as if you were throwing a ball.
Ah yes, thank you! That's a good description for how to reproduce it. That works here.
Posted: 29 May 2014, 18:24
by rindorbrot
With my X220 internal Trackpoint it bounces, too.
On my current gen USB Thinkpad keyboard it does not.
Posted: 05 Jun 2014, 21:15
by mr_peck
My Yoda gets a new dress for his second week :

Posted: 25 Jun 2014, 10:24
by Medowy
mr_peck wrote: My Yoda gets a new dress for his second week :

I really like that color scheme!
Posted: 25 Jun 2014, 10:43
by Grond
Any review for this keyboard?
Posted: 02 Jul 2014, 20:40
by maxrunner
this looks really neat where can you buy it?
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 13:05
by maxrunner
This is on massdrop now? but as usual we have to assemble it.
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 13:12
by Grond
No Iso plate included in massdrop... and still expensive for something you keed to solder yourself.
https://www.massdrop.com/buy/tex-yoda?mode=guest_open
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 15:05
by maxrunner
Yeah, and where would you get the ISO plate btw?
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 15:06
by scottc
Wow, that's almost the same price as the fully assembled one. What a rip-off.
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 15:16
by maxrunner
Where can you buy a fully assembled one?
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 15:18
by scottc
There was a pre-release thread somewhere around the forums but it's over now. Search for "TEX Yoda".
Posted: 10 Jul 2014, 15:26
by Grond
I understand with such numbers as 50 units they don't get much volume discount. If they included the Iso plate and a universal blank keycaps set, or no keycaps at all, maybe they would be able to sell more units and make it cheaper. Or maybe it's just them being greedy.

Posted: 11 Jul 2014, 10:55
by Uncleleech
If I wasn't spending all of my money on my ErgoDox I would really want this for a travel keyboard. I really love the aluminium body.
Posted: 11 Jul 2014, 16:05
by vivalarevolución
If I understand things correctly, the unassembled keyboard does not include switches in that $200 price?
The aluminum case is probably the main thing jacking up the price. If they offered a plastic option, it probably would be a lot cheaper.
Posted: 31 Jul 2014, 14:27
by Thion
Hi, is it still possible to order from the website? (EU-Version)
Posted: 09 Sep 2014, 10:18
by zmurf
I would also like to know if there is somewhere to buy this? Or if it will be sold again some time soon?
Posted: 06 Mar 2015, 07:01
by justin
mr_peck wrote: My Yoda gets a new dress for his second week :

WOW !! YODA + DSA profile keycap , that's super !!