Good question, isn't it?
Looking back at
my very first post, I too came here with specific demands in mind, rather than an ethos. I was, incidentally, largely right about what I wanted from the start; or you could just as well say inflexible! Buckling spring did indeed once come in tenkeyless, and even 60% if you were really lucky.
Mission accomplished! Bluetooth was tricky, but I
got to that. Thanks to DT, I never did get around to buying a Ducky or a Filco… (Though I've
won both in contests over the years here.)
But what is it about keyboards, really?
What you guys have been saying is pretty much the heart of it. They're a meeting place of several vital things. They're inherently tactile, sensory, touchable. They're mostly quite affordable, but some knowledge, persistence and luck is required to nab the really good stuff. They come in really quite an astonishing range of attributes, from damped silence to beamsprings with
electric jackhammers. Whole different geological ages of technology have gone by, and despite it all, their vintage keyboards still work magnificently! Better, in fact, than so much has come since. And, to clinch the deal: we all still use them like crazy.
Actually, it's the community, too. You can just keep on chatting about keyboards forever if you want to. Believe me.
Strange that so simple a problem—entering text—has such a wide and deep solution space. And that it's possible for us all to have such varying opinions about it. No one ever knows the whole field. Even the past is still unfolding.