'Playing the plastic piano'
Keyboards
Cleaning
Keyboards get dusty. The dust won't stop keys working and
a vacuum cleaner with a soft brush will extract deep-down dust from between
the keys. Occasionally, a small piece of debris can cause a key to stick or
stop working. A sharp tap will usually dislodge the problem but might move it
to another key. In this case just keep tapping until the grit is off the
sensitive area.
Coffee and keyboards do not mix. Those taking it black
might get away with the odd slop or spill. There are no dangerous voltages and
the actual key switches are sealed in a membrane. Milk and sugar both form
glue. For those who peck slowly at the keys, the stickiness should not cause a
problem. Touch typists might have problems until the dust coats the glue you
have added and a fairly normal service is resumed. You will get away with it once or
twice, but learn to keep coffee and keyboards apart.
The right solution: if the patina of grime on the keys gives offence, get a
damp cloth. Put one drop (not a squirt) of almost any kitchen-based cleaner on
it and then squeeze the cloth so that the cleaning agent is dispersed. Squeezing also makes sure that there will be no drips. After half a
dozen, gentle passes the grime will dissolve (an impressive demonstration of
the power of cleaning fluids even when very
dilute) and you can polish away the damp and debris with a dry
cloth (avoid kitchen roll or tissues or you will have another cleaning
job on your hands picking the paper fragments from between the keys).
Retirement
Keyboards get tired and wear out, especially if you have
a few keen games players who can't afford a separate controller. They will
bash a few keys and destroy the keyboard quickly. The letters suffer more when pounded by peckers rather than
by touch
typists. The clever Mr Remington arranged the most common letters on the
keyboard so that they would be hit by the weaker digits. At the time, avoiding
clashing keys was more important than user convenience. But the Qwerty
keyboard survived and is a monument to this robust approach to industrial design.
Fancy keyboards on the market include various
touch pads or rollerballs to replace mice and items such as a volume control.
A new keyboard incorporates the latest thinking on ways to avoid sore wrists,
arms, back and neck with padding and contours in ergonomic places. Happily
they are detachable for those who find them uncomfortable.
So when your keyboard shows sign of age, show it some
respect. Think about retiring it to a shelf where it can gather dust and gaze
down on your creativity, and buy a new one.
Useful keystrokes
© Charles Jones 2001