• Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown

    Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown
    1. Das Keyboard Dask4mkprosil 4 Professional With Mx Brown
    2. Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown Hair

    What is Free shipping program? All orders of 100 AED or more on eligible items across any product category qualify for FREE Shipping. You receive free shipping if your order includes at least 100 AED of eligible items. Any item with 'FREE Shipping' label on the search and the product detail page is eligible and contributes to your free shipping order minimum. What happens when I have an item in my cart but it is less than the eligibility threshold? You can get the remaining amount to reach the Free shipping threshold by adding any eligible item to your cart.

    Once the total amount of items (eligible for Free Shipping) is 100 AED & above, you will get the Free shipping benefit. Should I pay a subscription fee to always have free shipping? No, you will enjoy unlimited free shipping whenever you meet the above order value threshold. Can I benefit from FREE Shipping internationally? Unfortunately, FREE Shipping is only available for standard domestic shipping. We’re working hard to make it available internationally soon. An Experience Like No Other The Das Keyboard 4 is an experience like no other.

    From the initial idea to every fine detail when crafting this machine, the experience we deliver to customers is what drives our team. The combination of tactile feel, the psycho-acoustic experience and incredible craftsmanship all deliver an unmatched typing experience that only Das Keyboard 4 offers. With a Das Keyboard 4 for Mac, you'll type faster and longer. It feels so good, you won't want to stop. By Alex Paluzzi on 16 August 2014 For the last few years, I had mistakenly thought I understood the joys of the mechanical keyboard.

    I had been using a Razer Black Widow Ultimate. It's not that there's anything 'wrong' with that keyboard. I do have my issues with Razer and their products, but this isn't a Razer review, so I'll just stop there. I found it important to bring up because that keyboard uses Cherry MX Blacks and for the longest while, this was the only switch that I knew. Enter the Das Keyboard 4 Professional Soft Tactile (the one with MX Browns). I think half the reason I am even writing this review is because I was looking for an excuse to use this keyboard.

    It is an absolute joy to use- both for typing and for gaming. I am a software engineer by day and a gamer by night, so I have recently been putting a lot more emphasis on a good keyboard given how much I use them every day. I am really glad that I did.

    Das Keyboard 4 Professional for Mac Soft Tactile MX Brown Mechanical Keyboard (DASK4MACSFT).

    The Das 4 is not a cheap keyboard. That fact was a little off-putting at first and I wondered if I would feel like it was worth the purchase when it finally got here. Spoiler alert: it ABSOLUTELY does. I want to start with build quality. This is something that deserves a lot of attention especially if you want to consider the value that you're going to get in the long-run with this purchase. The Das 4 is outstanding.

    It's a very solid keyboard. It doesn't flex at all, despite me giving a reasonable amount of effort. The keys are laser-etched (of course), so you needn't worry about the caps fading or anything like that. Not that you ever should with a keyboard of this caliber. Next I want to talk about the keys and the layout. The keyboard feels just a tad more compact than usual. It took me all of about an hour to get used to typing on it.

    The spacebar length is just perfect. It has a standard numpad. The overall layout in general is no-frills, and that's exactly what I wanted in my keyboard. I also find it pretty cool that there is no 'Windows' key. There is a key in lieu of the Windows key, and that key functions exactly the same as the Windows key, but I like that there's not a Windows logo etched onto my keyboard. There are media controls. A big knob for quick access to volume controls.

    Prev, play/pause, next, and mute. All of the essentials and none of the fluss. There's also a button for putting the system to sleep. That's literally all of the 'extra' keys on this keyboard. The keyboard comes with a footbar that doubles as a ruler.

    Enjoy the audio and tactile feedback of soft keys on the compact 4 Pro Mechanical Keyboard for Mac from Das Keyboard. The full-size keyboard features all the Mac-specific keys you are used to, as well as a convenient, large volume knob. Amazon price history for. Das Keyboard 4 Professional for Mac Soft Tactile MX Brown Mechanical Keyboard (DASK4MACSFT) (B00TU7UA86) in Personal. The Das Keyboard 4 Professional for Mac makes it easy to toggle between screens, view your desktop along with other applications that you have open and access your brightness controls all at the push of a button. UV Hard Coat-Protected Key Caps The Das Keyboard 4 Professional for Mac has UV hard coat-protected key caps to prevent fading.

    It props the keyboard up just enough to be at a nice angle for me, personally. It's magnetic and pops right off if there's ever an emergency need to measure something. We are all thinking the same thing about the ruler, trust me.

    I haven't tried the MX Blue version of the keyboard, but I imagine it's quite similar to the MX Brown version but with the added clicks. I have fallen in love with the MX Brown switch, so I am quite happy where I'm at now. After using hundreds of keyboards over the last 20+ years, I am happy to recommend the Das 4 and am confident in saying it's my all-time favorite so far. When I'm done with this one (which might be 10 years from now because of build quality) I will immediately look back to Das for a replacement. Cons: I tried to find some. I thought I would miss backlighting but I don't.

    I find backlighting distractive and non-helpful. I got nothing. Buy this keyboard. Edit: It's May, 2018. Roughly 4 years later. I'm still using it.

    By davido on 03 November 2016 Growing up as a kid in the late 70's and early 80's, keyboards were mostly crisp, clacky, and sturdy. They evoked feelings of working on something special. Computers.were.

    special back then. Keyboards had well designed actions, built around techniques such as leaf spring mechanical switches, buckling springs, and a number of other innovations. But over the years that followed mass production techniques and tightening profit margins led to the industry-wide adoption of lightweight, plastic-feeling keyboards with keystroke actions built upon rubber domes.

    Nowadays a typical OEM keyboard might have a production cost of a few dollars, and a spongy, rubbery action to match. We sailed right past midrange scissor switch actions into the low end rubber dome action with barely a thought, arriving at mediocrity. Mid-range keyboards from reputable manufacturers still build upon the rubber dome actions, so even upgrading from OEM or $12 keyboards to the $40 - $50 range significant improvements in the action are not found. So again, we are duped into settling with mediocrity. There is hope out there. Cherry MX switches, Topre switches, and other mechanical style switches are being manufactured for keyboard actions.

    They're expensive compared to rubber dome keyboards. Each key has a mechanical switch of some sort beneath it, rather than a sheet of heat-molded rubber domes. And the mechanical switches are made with precise characteristics - softer, firmer, clicky and tactile, non-clicky and tactile, and smooth linear. Each style is designed with a different market segment in mind; linear being the preference of gamers, tactile (clicky or quiet) being the preference for those who's keystrokes produce text, softer for light-press typists, and firmer for mashers. The Cherry MX Brown is a soft, tactile, quiet key, with a subtle bump at the actuation point. With practice muscle-memory is able to get accustomed to that bump, and users become able to type without bottoming out the keys.

    Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown

    Typing speed and accuracy often improve, and finger fatigue is reduced compared to typing on keyboards where you have to bottom out each stroke (rubber domes, for example). I debated back and forth between this keyboard and one from WASD, and ultimately went for the Das-4 because of the sturdy aluminum face and USB3 hub. It arrived today and I've had a chance to put it through its paces. While it may take a day or two to get used to the feel, it's going to be a pleasure getting there. Lifting it, the keyboard feels like a tank.

    Das Keyboard Dask4mkprosil 4 Professional With Mx Brown

    Typing on it, the keyboard feels absolutely fantastic. However, I may still add 2mm O-rings to reduce clatter, though I'll wait until I've gotten more accustomed to the tactile feel of Cherry MX Browns. It's possible I'll develop more of a habit of not bottoming out my keystrokes.

    This sounds too predictable, but when I first plugged it in and began typing on it my first notion was 'Wow!' Pros: Heavy and sturdy like you might imagine a keyboard in a 1960's NASA mission control center.

    A light, tactile, pleasing touch with ample stroke and precise response. The tactile bump of Cherry MX Browns allows me to type without bottoming out the strokes. Already with a little practice my typing is feeling more effortless. Nice, sturdy media controls with a well-engineered volume knob. Beautiful design. If there is a better feeling and better engineered keyboard on the market, I sure can't find it. The keycaps are crisply engineered, flawless, and elegant.

    Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown Hair

    Cons: Because it is built to last, and made of metal, bottoming out keystrokes makes a bit of clattering that you wouldn't be accustomed to if you have spent years obliviously enduring the misery of rubber-dome keyboards. A set of 2mm O-rings would alleviate that issue, and they are easy enough to order. It's too bad the keyboard manufacturer doesn't make O-rings a special-order option as WASD does. Another con is that the keyboard's elevated support is a little on the low side - the keyboard sits slightly flatter than I would prefer. But after a few hours I'm already getting used to it. Legal implications of an egea approval label for mac. Nearly every mechanical keyboard has a spacebar that seems to stick up a little higher in the air than space bars for dome keyboards.

    That takes a little time to get used to as well, but after awhile will begin to feel normal. Conclusion: If quality and feel are more important to you than price or RGB lights, this keyboard must be on your short list. The keyboard seems to strive for elegance, feel, and function while eschewing trendy light shows and annoying color schemes. Updated 2/4/17: I've been using the DAS Keyboard 4 Professional with Cherry MX Brown key switches for a few months now.

    And I even installed first WASD red, and later WASD blue O-rings to further customize the feel. The keyboard feels so nice to use I barely notice it's there. It's a pleasure to type on.and then I go home from my office, and when I sit down at the home computer I place my hands over the mid-range 'rubber dome' style keyboard, and loathe every moment. The solution? I ordered a second DAS Keyboard 4 Professional and a set of WASD blue o-rings. One at work, one at home.

    Great keyboards! Updated 9/30/2017: I've been using one of these at my office, and one at home. The one that has had the most use is in my office. I'm a software engineer, and type all day long. The key caps have become a little polished, but the symbols have not faded at all.

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    The key strokes feel as good as the day I got the keyboard.maybe even a little better with age. It's my 'daily driver'. Recently my company provided a second office for me a little closer to home, with the understanding that I would split my time between the offices. For my third mechanical keyboard I ended up going with a Logitch Professional (tenkey-less, with Roamer-G switches). The Roamer-G switches have a slightly shorter keystroke, and the overall feel of that keyboard is more plastic. The Roamer-G switches don't allow for o-ring installation, so it clatters a little more too.

    But I had to try something new. One thing I can say for the Roamer-G switches is that they feel smoother right out of the box than Cherry-MX Browns. But with age the MX Browns acquire that smooth feeling too. Overall I'm convinced that I like the Das Keyboard better. (A few weeks of use and I have to conclude the MX browns are smoother, and feel more high-end.

    Sticking with browns in the future.). Reid on 20 April 2017 The keyboard itself is excellent. The improvements over the 3 are all spot on; the volume knob is a joy to turn, and the steel case feels great. But there's one seriously idiotic flaw. Somebody had this inane idea to make the feet a magnetic ruler that sticks on the bottom. Except that it doesn't stick.

    Pull the keyboard towards you? Push it back? The tiny rubber constraints do nothing to keep it in place. It just baffles me that an otherwise perfect keyboard could have made it through testing without somebody saying 'a magnetic ruler as feet for a keyboard? What the heck?'

    Just give me the normal feet back please. By Roger on 26 June 2017 I wanted to really like this keyboard, I found the sound soothing in video, but as a programmer, I type way too much and way too fast. The noise generated is really constant and really annoying. Compared to my standard Apple Magic Keyboard, I felt like I could glide across the keys and gently peck, but with this, I feel like I am having to jump onto narrow ledges and force down. I don't understand why everyone is raving on about the 'quality' of thing thing.

    This really doesn't feel all that different from a $50-60 Logitech you could pick up at your local electronics store. Also, because the keyboard is so wide and much bigger compared to the 'Magic' keyboard, I feel like I am putting much more effort in to reach for the mouse after I am done typing.

    I'm going to use the keyboard for the week and hope I get used to it, I'll update my review then. EDIT: Nevermind, I tried going back to my old keyboard and it felt like mushy garbage. Two days in and I'm actually loving this thing now.

    Haha, who knew??? By ReadnWrite on 08 November 2017 I have had this since July 2016 and unfortunately my search for the perfect keyboard continues. I bought it to replace a Corsair K70 RGB Keyboard which had all sorts of LED and quality issues along with the legendary poor Corsair customer service.

    Honestly, that keyboard was pricey and had terrible quality control problems. After reading loads of reviews I decided to go for the Das Keyboard 4 Professional with Cherry Brown switches. The reviews were solid and people said the quality was excellent. I was not too happy at the price but hoped that the quality would speak for itself. Initial impressions were positive - it looked well made and I liked the typing experience over the Corsair, even with the same switches. However, quality was not perfect - the keyboard was slightly warped when using the magnetic lift stand underneath (not a brilliant design choice anyway in my opinion) - therefore it rocked slightly when on a flat solid surface. Googling showed this was a common problem and recommended solutions included bending the keyboard straight!

    Not something I was going to try and I have fixed it by using one of those very large mouse mats that covers the desk - the softer base compensates the warp. It shouldn't have this issue though full stop.

    Next up, after around a month or so of use I noticed that the white lettering was fading. Google again shows this as a FAQ on DAS's website (i.e. Known issue). Apparently they cannot fade as they are etched and all that is required is a clean with rubbing alcohol. I have done this a number of times now in the last year and they do not look anyway near as good as they should. The lack of back-lighting is a bigger personal issue for me than I thought. I'm not bothered about fancy RGB but I do wish this was back-lit.

    Not DAS's fault as it is not advertised as such but it's in the same price range as the competition who do offer back-lit keyboards and it's a pain not to have it in a darker room. Now onto the biggest issue I have. The keyboard has connectivity issues. For example, on a computer restart, the keyboard will either take an age to be recognised (preventing logging in to Windows with your key code) or won't be recognised at all. Either a full shut down or cable removal/reinsert is required.

    A quick Google shows that I'm not alone with these issues and I don't buy the 'just unplug and plug it in' fix for a keyboard at this price range. The connection issues are made worse if you have any USB items attached to the keyboard USB ports - this seems to just confuse the keyboard/Windows and often I won't get a registered working keyboard as a result unless I unplug all peripherals connected to the keyboard and unplug/plug in the keyboard itself again. It's getting to the point where it's a real hassle if I need to restart my computer. Not only that, the Windows USB disconnect sound started happening around 2 months ago.

    With

    I couldn't figure out what it was so downloaded 'usbdeview' and sure enough watched as the keyboard disconnected and connected itself a few times. The weird thing is that it is still usable when it happens, but the sound and USB is registered as disconnecting which is highly irritating. There is some sort of design fault with this keyboard. I am not the only one with issues as I saw others with the problem when trying to figure out what was going on. The connection issues can manifest themselves as either the keyboard not being recognised or more recently a key being pressed down constantly (any key, doesn't seem to matter) after the disconnect sound.

    Unplug/plug in fixes it but it's pretty ridiculous. I have the latest drivers and nothing I have done seems to fix this issue. I don't buy that I have a bad copy either. Windows and DAS do not seem to play nice together. So in short, I think the quality, as with Corsair, falls short. The connection issues are frustrating, I regret buying a non back lit keyboard and the warping is unacceptable on it's own. For the price, I am gutted.

    It's been a year and I'm starting to look for alternatives but unfortunately I am struggling to find one. I would not recommend this keyboard.

    Das Keyboard Dask4macsft 4 Professional With Mx Brown