Please feel free to add your boards, guys!

Topre counts as a hybrid, I would say.
There must have been different versions of this keyboard, because the one I had was absolutely disgusting, like typing on a pile of wet newspapers.
OMG, that is almost universally considered one of the worst keyboards ever, mush-deluxe. And the clear case is notorious for collecting keyboard chow. My daughter had one for a short while because she thought it was "cute" but it was truly dreadful to use, in my opinion.
I might have been fooled since I didn't type on that one while plugged in to a computer.
My workplace is almost exclusively Dell, and in the last couple of years I have collected the following observations regarding Dell's recent keyboard offerings.Elrick wrote: Was actually hoping someone would post CURRENT made keyboards that are available to purchase today that are of HIGH quality.
Not the Cherry-esque type of keyboards which are dime a dozen everywhere but the quiet all membrane keyboards that are dirt cheap but still of decent feeling and actuation when used.
Something NOT mushy or dead when pressed. Come on DT Experts, there must be something else out there in this huge world worth considering?
Suspect that would be the reality concerning ALL rubber domes. Unless it's pure silicone like Topre keyboard's, all other compounds that were used shall degrade over time.
I can tell you one of my HHKBs that has been used for seven years straight is still superb, still looks like brand new and types perfectly. And I’m very fussy about my boards.Menuhin wrote:Topre counts as a hybrid, I would say.
RealForce says "each switch ... clear 50 millions keystrokes"
But how would we rate Topre's switch durability if we include the wear and tear and hardening over time of its rubber domes on top?
As a point of reference, for a typical imaginary worker (who is not a programmer because a programmer types way fewer keystrokes per day) who writes 10 mid length e-mails per day, assuming each of about 300 words, and let's assume this worker works 365 days every year, and let's assume the typing when using other applications and on websites are negligible comparatively:
For keystrokes per year for the spacebar, it would be:
300 x 10 (e-mails) x 365 days ~ 1.1M keystrokes (i.e. it takes about 50 years to reach 50M keystrokes)
For vowel keys which may occur 2 or more times in a word, we can have an estimation:
300 x 2 (key occurrence) x 10 (e-mails) x 365 days ~ 2.2M keystrokes
My question is then, can these rubber (or silicon indeed) domes last that 50 years or 25 years?
How does silicon materials used in these rubber domes hold up throughout the years? I heard older rubber domes becomes harder, is it the case?
Is there any mechanical capacitive switch design apart from IBM Model-F?
Else I would be worried
I don't really understand what you're saying. 7 years is not minutes and how my hands adjust is irrelevant, as I am comparing a 7 year old daily beater and a 3 year old daily beater to a new 55g board. I have them side by side (2x HHKB, RF). I have just ordered 2 brand new HHKBs and it will be interesting to see how they stack up one next to the other, but I'd say the difference won't be much. I can not tell the difference between the 3 years old and 7 years old.