Hi everyone,
I’m looking for some advice and perspective from the community—especially from those who have been typing for a few decades.
I’ve been a "typis"t for over 45 years, and to this day, the absolute gold standard for me remains the IBM Selectric typewriter. It was incredibly responsive, and I have never matched that level of speed and accuracy on any modern computer keyboard except maybe in the early 90s.
Lately, I’ve been using cheap standard keyboards, but I'm noticing severe input lag. It feels like I'm typing too fast for the hardware to keep up, and it’s driving me crazy. Someone suggested I look into wired mechanical keyboards to fix this.
The problem is, I just started looking into them and immediately fell down a massive rabbit hole. The terminology is overwhelming. I have no interest in building my own board or swapping parts, and names like "Banana," "Brown," or "Red" switches mean absolutely nothing to me.
What I'm looking for:
I’m looking for some advice and perspective from the community—especially from those who have been typing for a few decades.
I’ve been a "typis"t for over 45 years, and to this day, the absolute gold standard for me remains the IBM Selectric typewriter. It was incredibly responsive, and I have never matched that level of speed and accuracy on any modern computer keyboard except maybe in the early 90s.
Lately, I’ve been using cheap standard keyboards, but I'm noticing severe input lag. It feels like I'm typing too fast for the hardware to keep up, and it’s driving me crazy. Someone suggested I look into wired mechanical keyboards to fix this.
The problem is, I just started looking into them and immediately fell down a massive rabbit hole. The terminology is overwhelming. I have no interest in building my own board or swapping parts, and names like "Banana," "Brown," or "Red" switches mean absolutely nothing to me.
What I'm looking for:
- Simplicity: A solid, reliable, wired mechanical keyboard that works right out of the box.
- Size: full size — preferably with keypad
- That "Selectric" Feel: Something highly responsive with good tactile feedback, without being deafeningly loud if possible.
- Peer Experiences: If you are around my age or grew up learning on heavy-duty typewriters, what mechanical keyboard/switch did you settle on?
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 11NVIDA 1650 Ti
- OS
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Lenovo
- Graphics Card(s)
- NVIDA 1650 Ti
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Lenovo C32q-20









