Not exact matches
There is a split
key feature with light up one
key, follow, and ensemble modes so you can play with
different timbres
on each side of the
keyboard and make some pretty cool music, all by yourself.
In the piano
keyboard analogy, that's like using one
key to make a note early
on, but a
different key to make the same note later.»
A group of test subjects sat at a computer and carried out two tasks: They had to press a
key on the
keyboard if they heard a low - pitched sound and a
different key if they heard a high one.
I mean, does it really seem very
different if I am pressing the E
key on my
keyboard from the F
key?»
«They are placed differently
on different keyboards and may be
on either the two index - finger
keys or
on the middle - finger
keys.
The optional
keyboard is
different from normal
keyboards, with a very small Enter
key, and without a touchpad
on the
keyboard as well.
The
keyboard is mainly similar to the 9780's, with only some tiny differences that I can tell (the
keys feels a bit softer to press
on the 9790 compared to the 9780 and the bottom row buttons are a bit
different).
Some of the
keys are in a
different position than
on the Android
keyboard.
The Y and Z
keys are
different on the German
keyboard.
The basic idea (as spotted by Patently Apple) is to use a touch display that can morph into anything — another concept Apple has toyed with in past patents — switching
on - the - fly between, say,
different language layouts, or perhaps an emoji
keyboard, or an ergonomically designed one with
keys split into two
different banks.
Additionally, for those rare individuals who actually keep their
keyboard sounds
on, backspace now sounds
different from other
key presses, and space, shift, return and the number / emoji toggle all have new sounds.
The standard Android
keyboard is here, and you also get the TouchPal
keyboard which gives you a couple of
different layouts including a 12 -
key phonepad and one that puts two characters
on each
key.