Adesso Flexible Full-Sized Keyboard Review Washington DC

Several vendors offer compact or foldable keyboards to pack alongside your PDA or notebook PC, but this sealed silicon strip not only folds but rolls up - and survives spilled liquids or even washing with soap and water (in the sink; it's not dishwasher-safe). Better yet, it manages to have an actual typing feel instead of being a mushy mess, and it's a bargain to boot.

Local Companies

COMPUTER HELPERS
703-836-1753
901 N. Washington St.
Alexandria, VA
Ace American Insurance
(202) 347-6852
901 F St Nw Ste 550
Washington, DC
Compies
(202) 621-7852
3620 12th St NE
Washington, DC
Mercury Computers Systems
703-413-0781
1901 S Bell St
Arlington, VA
Apple Store R129
703-418-1092
1100 S Hayes St
Arlington, VA
Dupont Computers Inc
(202) 232-6363
1761 S St NW
Washington, DC
Logic Computer Software
703-920-2552
2340 Columbia Pike
Arlington, VA
AA Computer Supplies
(202) 955-5097
15733 Crabbs Branchway
Washington, DC
Document Systems Inc
(202) 466-8383
1347 S Capitol St SW
Washington, DC
Axtron Corp
(202) 785-4390
Washington, DC

provided by: 
Originally published at Internet.com


Airport security attendants will ask you to take the notebook PC from your briefcase, but usually send other stuff through the X-ray machine with only a glance. If they see a rolled-up rubbery strip with a cord hanging from it, they'll assume it's the cuff of a blood pressure monitor (four out of four of our coworkers did). If they notice a Windows key on the strip, they'll just think that Microsoft is getting into everything these days.

The cord, however, is a USB cable, and the rolled-up object is a 109-key keyboard - Adesso's Flexible Full-Sized Keyboard, a seamless silicon peripheral suitable both for work in wet or dusty environments and as an easy-to-pack alternative to a cramped laptop keyboard. Available in either black or white for a thrifty $30, the Adesso shrugs off coffee spills, rough treatment, and the skepticism of a reviewer prepared to dismiss it.

Where the Rubber Meets the Road

Taking 17.5 by 5 inches of desk space (Adesso offers a 14-inch, no-numeric-keypad model for the same price), the Flexible plugs into any Windows 98/Me/2000/XP system with a free USB port. An old-school PS/2 keyboard port works too, thanks to a supplied adapter; no software-driver shenanigans are required for either.

While not an especially ergonomic design, the keyboard reduces wrist strain by lying flat, with no tilt or slope from rear to front - and at only half an inch thick, it's about as flat as you can get. Set it up and come back to work the next morning, and you'll think for a second there's a giant Band-Aid stuck to your desk.

Apart from the funky grid of contact wires visible through the silicon, the layout is familiar, right down to Num Lock, Caps Lock, and Scroll Lock lights at the right edge. One quirk: Presumably because there's a limit to how big a key can be before failing to detect off-center touches, the Adesso has two short, side-by-side space bars instead of the usual one. Weirder still, it has two blank, do-nothing keys between the space bars and Alt keys, though the rest of the bottom row holds Ctrl and Windows keys as usual.

We noticed that the rubbery, gray-black surface of our test unit seemed a magnet for tiny specks and dust particles, which stuck better or proved harder to brush or blow off than specks on the slicker surface of a conventional plastic keyboard. But if that bothers you, head for the sink and wash the thing.

Rather than soak the Labs, Weather, & Sports Desk, we put the Adesso in a kitchen sink, plugged it into a laptop on the adjacent counter, and spilled a can of Diet Coke over the keyboard. It felt a little fizzy under our fingers, but typed a few paragraphs without missing a beat.

Then we turned on the faucet, rinsing the keyboard clean and shaking off some water before plunging it back into the sink, which filled to a depth of about an inch. (Adesso does concede that the Flexible should stick to shallow waters, rather than sinking to a depth of 50 meters like your sports watch.) Again, a few minutes of word processing, Alt-Tabbing among applications, and navigating the Windows menu showed no ill effects.

Patted dry with paper towels, the Flexible returned to desk duty with no sign of its brief swim - and no damage when we pounded it with our fists, toddler-on-piano style. Ditto for dropping the keyboard to the floor and walking on it, although the latter opened a jumble of Windows menus and switched Microsoft Word into track-document-changes mode.

Built for Comfort, But Not for Speed

OK, the Flexible lives up to its name, we hear you saying, but doesn't it feel awful to type on it? Short answer: No, or at least not as awful as we weree expecting. The Adesso has a predictably soft, somewhat rubbery typing feel, but at least it has a typing feel - the keys give tactile feedback instead of feeling mushy, and after a day's practice we found ourselves tapping steadily along. We replaced our usual Logitech desktop keyboard with the Adesso for a week and, while we never felt like making the swap permanent, never felt too harshly deprived or punished either.

Tapping steadily along, however, doesn't mean touch-typing at maximum speed (in our prime we were clocked at 130 and can still reach 100 wpm, thanks). During Day 1 we made lots of errors; on Day 2 we slipped into a decent rhythm; on Day 3 our error rate actually crept up again as our eyes returned to their usual focus on the screen instead of unconsciously glancing at the keyboard regularly.

The errors were annoying but not fatal. A few were due to misjudging the layout, such as hitting the backslash when we wanted backspace or one of the blank keys instead of Alt. But most were due to the keys' needing a firmer strike than the swift brush of a fingertip that's become muscle memory for our fastest, near-simultaneous keypresses. Some of our thumb flicks were too light to trigger the space bar; Web addresses ending in .com registered as .co. Hunt-and-peckers, however, will experience no problems, and we think even low- to middling-speed touch typists will be satisfied with the Adesso.

Whether you'd tuck it into your briefcase as a hotel-room replacement for your laptop's keyboard will depend on how much you like the latter. Generally speaking, we think we'd stick with the keyboard of a full- or mid-sized notebook but be glad to pack the Flexible alongside a subnotebook or especially a handheld or micro-mini like the OQO or Sony Vaio UX. And if you've got a PC in any kind of shop-floor, outdoor, or hospital environment, it's likely to be the best $30 you've ever spent.

HardwareCentral Intelligence

Adesso Flexible Full-Sized Keyboard
Adesso Inc.
$30
Available: Now

On a 5-star scale:
Features:
Performance:
Value:
Total: 12 out of 15

Author: Eric Grevstad

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

COMPUTER HELPERS

COMPUTER HELPERS is Your Competitive Source For Your Hardware, Software and Network Needs. MCSE & A+ Certified.

703-836-1753
901 N. Washington St.
Alexandria, VA
www.computerhelpers.net

COMPUTER HELPERS is Your Competitive Source For Your Hardware, Software and Network Needs.

Looking for the Best in Customer Service?
Walk-In Service
Fast, Reliable Client Onsite Support
FREE Pick-Up and Delivery With Service
Special Residential Rates
Gift Certificates Available
Ask About Our Convenient Saturday Hours
Save $$ with Our Maintenance Plans and Retainers


Related Local Events
DC Chamber Technology Series: Session 4
Dates: 12/10/2009 - 12/10/2009
Location: Robert H. Smith School at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center
Washington, DC
View Details

National Facilities Management & Technology (NFMT)
Dates: 3/16/2010 - 3/28/2010
Location: Baltimore Convention Center
Baltimore, MD
View Details

Human Capital Management Federal (HCMF)
Dates: 11/16/2009 - 11/18/2009
Location: Sheraton National Hotel
Arlington, VA
View Details

CSI 2009: The Next Phase In Security
Dates: 10/24/2009 - 10/30/2009
Location: Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center
National Harbor, MD
View Details

ACIs 3rd Annual Carbon Capture and Sequestration Summit
Dates: 9/14/2009 - 9/15/2009
Location: Omni Shoreham Hotel
Washington, DC
View Details