
It is a word processor AND keyboard introduced in 1978. It has a total of 6 keys, which consist of microswitches with the keycap mounted directly on the lever. Extremely smooth, with a light click that can barely be felt in the fingers, giving an impression of an almost linear switch. With being mounted on a lever, it does not travel straight down like a standard slider based switch, but "rotates" down, somewhat following the movement of the finger.
How does it work? Chording, where each combination of fingers produce a characters. Only the 5 topmost buttons output characters directly, where the 6th button is used in combination with the top 4 buttons to enter different "modes", which can be uppercase, numbers, settings menu, special symbols etc. According to the manual, it should be possible to exceed "normal handwriting" speed after a few weeks of use. It even have an advertised battery life of 30 hours!
I am yet to figure out all of the functions, and the machine seems to freeze up every time I attempt to write more than 6-10 characters. But the features are vast, offering features such as saving to cassette tape, outputting to an external monitor, working as keyboard and much more!
Interesting unique piece of tech, that's for sure. Manuals and some extended history can be found here.
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