Page 1 of 1
MSI GT80 Titan - Laptop with SteelSeries MX Brown board
Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 22:19
by bhtooefr
http://event.msicomputer.com/gt80titan/
What is this I don't even. And, it looks like the touchpad is also the numpad, making it a
full layout.
Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 22:27
by Nuum
Not bad, I kinda like it. If I were in the market for a Gaming laptop I'd really appreciate the option to have a mechanical keyboard build in.
Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 22:29
by webwit
Very nice, mechanical switches in a laptop. I'm jealous of the gamers it is aimed at, under the presumption it doesn't make them want to poke their eyes out, which is my handicap.
Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 22:48
by Daniel Beardsmore
Nooo … they should have used Cherry ML!
Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 23:11
by scottc
MX brown? Anything but MX brown...

Posted: 30 Oct 2014, 23:26
by Compgeke
I agree. I honestly feel like it should be an option to get different switches since most people I know don't like browns.
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 00:06
by Daniel Beardsmore
ML is wonderfully tactile AND smaller! It's a win-win.
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 01:01
by Muirium
The keyboard is at the… front? That's even more retro for a laptop than mechanical switches!
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 01:06
by bhtooefr
Indeed it is - I have an RDI laptop with rear-keyboard (and a tiny trackball) and
Alps SKFR/SKFS switches:
(Also, how many laptops have you seen with a Props key?)
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 07:13
by ماء
yup, ML more slim and light weight

Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 10:26
by HzFaq
That's so 1989, behold the Psion MC400
Doesn't have a props key though

.
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 16:08
by andrewjoy
the first laptop with a mechanical keybord in years and they use MX brown !!!!!
ML exists for a reason
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 21:40
by Daniel Beardsmore
HzFaq wrote: That's so 1989, behold the Psion MC400

I remember the trackpad that you physically clicked (and that used absolute co-ordinates, if I remember correctly) but I don't remember anything about the keyboard now.
What sort of switches does that have? And is that a regular AT keypad connected into it?
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 21:52
by HzFaq
That's the one, worst trackpad in the history of trackpads. The keyboard is MX clears on a Cherry made PCB. I'm going to try and get some pictures tomorrow or Sunday. The keypad is a G80-5700 which I'm also going to be snapping at the same time, not connected, they just both arrived on the same day

.
Posted: 31 Oct 2014, 22:03
by scottc
I actually almost picked up one of those recently, HzFaq. Really nice little machines! I decided against it because I'd feel bad just using it for the keyboard.
Posted: 04 Nov 2014, 18:03
by cookie
I think you can't compare Cherry ML switches with MX, I tryed them once and was terribly disappointed about the feel. And they tend to stuck if you don't hit the center of the switch.
If they are PCB mounted, it shouldn't be a problem to swap the brown sliders with once you like.
Posted: 04 Nov 2014, 18:22
by andrewjoy
Each to his own I guess, the ml board I used had very small laptop style caps so I never noticed the sticking. Ml are far superior to brown keyfeel wise IMO.
Posted: 04 Nov 2014, 19:23
by cookie
Really? I can barely type on mine.
Posted: 04 Nov 2014, 23:39
by Daniel Beardsmore
I have two ML boards. One is a 1999 G84-4400 and that's superb. No off-angle binding, feels great, sounds great, just has no Windows keys, so it's not of much use to me. I got it NIB.
The other is a 2005 G84-4100, and it does have Windows keys. The Windows key versions are slightly squished, which is why the key between shift and Z in UK ISO no longer fits and got relocated. I found that one to be just too cramped and the switches don't feel as good; they're a bit balky. That one I bought used.
ML certainly can be made to work very well; I don't know if the plastics change, or if the switches degrade with wear, or what, only that the 2005 one isn't as nice as the 1999 one. I could type on the 1999 one all day, it's perfectly comfortable: neither too heavy or too light, and neither too harsh or too soft. It's pretty close to an ideal switch for me: it's got the strong tactility and soft feel of Topre without the mush of Topre or the jarring landing of MX, and it's got a proper mechanical sound.
Posted: 06 Nov 2014, 20:41
by andrewjoy
The winkeyles was what i had as well, i would love to get another some day.
Posted: 06 Nov 2014, 22:44
by woody
ML beats all scissor switches for me. Not MX, of course, but quite nice low-profile switch.
@Daniel: my ML experience is the reverse. Used G84-4400 that I got feels and performs worse (subjective, of course) than brand new G84-4100. That's why I got a stash of NIB 4100s at one point.
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 00:48
by Daniel Beardsmore
Is it, though? My G84-4400 was NIB (albeit a battered box) and the G84-4100 was used. In both cases we prefer the NIB keyboard to the used one.
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 11:15
by andrewjoy
possibly then ML are subject to change in feel with environment possibly they swell or corrode or something
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 12:16
by cookie
Have you really compared a ML switch with a Topre?
I can't express myself with words, how wrong this is.
Don't get me wrong though, I respect your objective opinion but they simply can't be compared with each other.
The whole construction and actual feel is fundamentally different.
Also from my objective perspective I've never typed on a pleasing ML switch,
all of them I typed on felt scratchy, inprecise and they tend to stuck.
I initially bought a g84 as a "guest keyboard" at work, so that a colleague is able to type on my pc.
Noone liked to type on this keyboard, so it wen't back home and I use it to open beer now.
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 12:25
by Muirium
What, there's a UNIX command for that?
> open -beer1 -now
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 12:28
by cookie
No I actually use the keyboard itself to physically open a beer

Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 19:45
by woody
Daniel Beardsmore wrote: Is it, though? My G84-4400 was NIB (albeit a battered box) and the G84-4100 was used. In both cases we prefer the NIB keyboard to the used one.
That could be valid reason.
The G84-4400 I got was from industrial environment, so fine dust might've entered with time.
G84-4100 after about half a year was still good. A guy I know has stomped on 4100 daily for, like, 10 years. I gave him one brand new lasered as a gift, just because he had the old pad printed legends worn out.
Still waiting for someone to report lubing results on ML.
As to comparing ML (low-profile) and Topre (full travel) - why?
Posted: 07 Nov 2014, 21:44
by Daniel Beardsmore
ML is still 3 mm travel though, it's not as short travel as you might think.
Posted: 08 Nov 2014, 09:03
by woody
Just a different niche with different set of compromises.
Would've been nice if there was something better in the low-profile category, but as they are, ML do an okay job.
Personally, I'd pay some premium for a modern laptop with ML and have much increased ergonomy, but this is not going to happen.
Posted: 08 Nov 2014, 23:24
by Daniel Beardsmore
Ultimately they're all keyboards. They all have keys which have vertical motion with a varying degree of force at each point in their position from released to fully depressed. As such, they're all comparable. Being able to compare is useful when you need multiple compromises; for example, it's helpful to be able to find a laptop that is as close as possible to what you prefer using on your desktop computer. (The only laptop keyboard that stood out for me was the Dell Latitude E4310 (?) which had an exceptional keyboard, but unfortunately it wasn't mine and I only got to use that laptop briefly. It was a nice laptop, too.)