this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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Mechanical Keyboards

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submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Hail Mary question here, in case someone somewhere knows something:

In the late 90s, I lived in the UK in Hampshire. One weekend, I went to a local computer show in Portsmouth or Southampton. You know, a few tables in a community center with people selling all kinds of computer bits.

A small UK company had a booth there and sold a really interesting keyboard. It might have been the manufacturer, or a local importer. I don't remember. But the keyboard had a UK layout. I bought one.

The keyboard was a folding full-size beige 102-key mechanical keyboard with a chunky coiled cable and an AT interface. It was built like a tank and had really good clicky switches. Basically imagine a slightly lighter model-M sawed in two with a mechanical hinge in the middle, allowing the keyboard to fold in two, with the keys on the inside facing each other.

It was a great keyboard, and while it didn't fold into a particularly compact package and wasn't light by any stretch of the imagination, it fit great in a small suitcase and protected itself naturally by sandwiching the keys in the middle. And it folded with a loud, satisfying clunk ๐Ÿ™‚

I loved that keyboard, but I lost it in a move 20 years ago. I've been trying to find out who made it and what it was for years, but I was never able to find anything at all. The only hits that come up when I search for folding mechanical keyboards are those awful miniature battery-powered bluetooth keyboards for cellphones.

Does anybody know what that keyboard might have been?

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[โ€“] [email protected] 9 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Yes! That's exactly the one! You're a genius!

Now to find me a used one with a US ANSI layout... ๐Ÿ™‚

[โ€“] sturlabragason 9 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I will show you how to use GPT4 to perform miracles like this. Because I personally had no idea:

https://chat.openai.com/share/10cb347d-e16d-474e-8ea6-886bed3a4fc2

[โ€“] [email protected] 6 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

You know, I wish you hadn't told me that. I was enjoying the thought of a fellow human being blessed with a phenomenal memory having found what I had been looking for for years in a matter of minutes.

Instead, I'm reminded that we're entering an age where no effort is required to come up with anything, and also that I really should pay close attention never to reveal any personal information in anything I put out on the internet - even more attention than I already pay - because AI will immediately swallow it without my consent.

Yes, it is a miracle indeed - a sad technological miracle, instead of a happy human one.

But thanks all the same ๐Ÿ™‚

[โ€“] sturlabragason 4 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

I have almost the exact opposite view.

I really like that much like a calculator or a very sophisticated search engine we can use large language models (LLMs) to enhance our cognitive capabilities. My memory works in such a way that I would be completely useless without a search engine, while I have almost unlimited capacity when it comes to puzzling together LLMs and search queries. I don't feel that it takes anything away from humans, it's just a tool like any other that allows us to expand our capabilities, just in a cognitive capacity!

I would have never ever been able to figure out what that keyboard was called, but just by squeezing the answer out of a model that has obviously been trained on that data, we were able to figure out the answer.

If it were to have been done by purely human memory, we would have had to have a person that actually knew this bit of super obscure knowledge and the same person by some amazing chance reading this post.

I see no sadness, just a tool that is globally available to almost anyone (25 USD month for GPT4 or perhaps anyone being able to run their own open-source miqu-1โ€“70b from mistral.ai) and has the capacity to elevate human cognition, simply by adopting a mindset of directing an LLM to get the results we need, much like typing a query into a search engine.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I see no sadness, just a tool that is globally available to almost anyone [...] and has the capacity to elevate human cognition

Kind of off-topic, but I'm genuinely curious: how old are you if I might ask?

I'm a gen-Xer myself, and I see AI as one of the greatest advances for mankind that could have been, that is quickly being turned into a tool of utter social devastation by greedy capitalist psychopaths, putting profits before all, putting people out of a job, pushing them into poverty while widening the already obscene inequality gap between ordinary working Joes and the ultra-billionnaires. My own prediction is that all of this will end badly, and blood will be shed when enough people are unable to feed their families because AI has rendered their jobs obsolete.

All I see in AI is sad times ahead, that will pass eventually and probably lead to a better life for everybody, but not before I'm long dead and a lot of people of today have suffered greatly because of it.

But here's the thing: whenever I discuss AI with friends and coworkers, I'm always shocked by the disconnect between people my age and people even only 15 years younger: younger folks genuinely seem to think it's a great time to be alive, to be part of the brave new AI world, and they genuinely can't wait to be part of it. And all I can think of - I and people my age alike - is "How can they not see what's unfolding?"

That's why I'm curious what age you are. If I was to guess, I'd say you're under 40. Did I guess right? ๐Ÿ™‚

Ultimately it doesn't matter though: either we older folks are right and the great disaster is coming, or we're wrong and we'll look like fools - and we'll probably end up just as clueless about new technologies as our grandparents were with computers. Either way, whatever must happen will happen...