The slim - line wireless
keyboard feels solid, and the wireless mouse suffers from zero lag — both extremely important factors for gamers.
The Yoga 920's backlit
keyboard feels solid and responsive, with this year's model boasting a fix for a design snafu on the Yoga 910: a diminutive right - side Shift key, which has now been restored to its standard size.
This keyboard feels solid when you pick it up.
The Folio's
keyboard felt solid and well - defined.
Not exact matches
The
keyboard also comes with a large rubber feet that can grip the surface well enough for imparting a
solid feel on a desk and also under fast or intense typing conditions.
That doesn't sound bad for a premium ultrabook with a 10 - point multitouch panel, a 1600 x 900 IPS display and 128 GB of
solid state storage — particularly one that
feels this good, with a supple textured back, a leathery palmrest, a smooth glass touchpad and a comfortable
keyboard.
We love the
solid feeling of this tablet, and how well it pairs with the matching
keyboard.
The phones aren't mind - blowing, but they're
solid, if not pretty good, and TCL has taken care to keep that BlackBerry
feel with the phones, with striking designs, and — in the case of the BlackBerry KEYone — a worthy physical
keyboard.
I think on BlackBerry phones the sheer number of buttons (
keyboard, convenience keys, menu / back keys, etc. etc.) could sometimes give off a
feeling of plastic - ness that could come across as cheapness, but the PlayBook is a lot more like a
solid object.
There is decent
feeling of weight to the
keyboard without it being absurdly heavy, certainly fitting given Razer's desire to present it as a good choice for traveling between E-sport events, and the plastic casing doesn't flex, creak or otherwise give any indications that it's anything less than
solid.
The majority of the
keyboard is built out of plastic, but it
feels solid.
It's movement in its 360 degree space is
solid but I have a
feeling this nub will wear out way before any of the other movable parts on the
keyboard will.
This offers a
solid grip and a pretty satisfying tactile
feel to the
keyboard.
The game's controls and combo system, despite being awkwardly mapped to
keyboard controls,
feel very
solid.
It is a full - sized, wired membrane
keyboard with good
feel in the keys and
solid legs to prop it up.
The tablet alone just
feels solid, but it's the
keyboard dock that makes the Pixel C a convertible which really deserves some praise here.
It also
feels durable and
solid, with almost no flex or give in the
keyboard deck or lid.
On the positive side, the
keyboard is well - built, with
solid, chunky island - style keys that
feel great to type on.
We would also have liked larger keys, more viewing angles (we are still stuck to the one) and slightly more
solid feel, but then we did get used to the
keyboard on the 9.7 inch iPad Pro, so we are putting that down to habit more than anything else.
The
keyboard surface
feels solid during normal use.
There's the usual ThinkPad
keyboard with its extensive seven - row
keyboard and generally
solid feel — it has plenty of travel and a comfortable bottoming action, but it's a bit loose and lacks the precision of its ThinkPad X1 Carbon sibling.
The
keyboard itself also
feels significantly more
solid than Acer's previous 2 - in - 1 attempts and because of the tablet's noticeably large 13.5 - inch form factor, this
keyboard cover also has one of the largest palm rests we've seen.
This 100 percent aluminum case
feels solid, but because it's just a
keyboard that clamps directly to the tablet, it's not too heavy.
As for the
keyboard itself, the key usage
feels solid, and provides a soft, distinct actuation with every key press so you can
feel that your typing requests are firmly received by the laptop.
The build quality is
solid, the
keyboard feels just right, and the form factor is really cool.
The large gaming
keyboard offers plenty of space,
solid key
feel, back - lighting, and a comfortable palm - rest.