![]() With a full sized keyboard you can work at ease on your iPhone or iPad without having to resort to your computer system for every small work. The Apple MQ052HN/A Magic Keyboard With Numeric Keypad comes with a unique scissor mechanism beneath each key which allows for increased stability, while optimized key travel and a low profile provide a comfortable and precise typing experience. Since it comes with the numeric keypad it makes it easier for you to work with spreadsheets and other financial applications. The built-in, rechargeable battery is incredibly long-lasting and keeps the keyboard powered for about a month or more between charges. It has an extensive list of compatible devices which features most iPhones, iPads along with Macbook Air and Macbook Pro. Owners of iPhones and iPads, in case you are in such a job where you need to extensively type out stuff in your phone or tablet, you must get yourself the Apple MQ052HN/A Magic Keyboard With Numeric Keypad. It is natural to face trouble while typing on your touchscreen cellular devices no matter how big the screen is. | 19th Floor Concorde Tower C UB City No.24 Vittal Mallya Road Bangalore 560001 Manufacturer/Importer/Marketer Name & Address.Mac OS 9.1/iOS Devices with iOS 10.3 or Later.Unique Scissor Mechanism | Lightning to USB Cable and Bluetooth Connectivity | Numeric Keypad | Extended Layout with Navigation Control | Built-in Rechargeable Battery.(On the Magic Keyboard, I can replicate that by holding Fn while pressing the up and down arrows, but that’s a two-handed job. I don’t miss the dedicated number pad on the Wired Keyboard, but I did like having the Page Up and Down buttons. Like Jason Snell, I find the full-size right and left arrows a bit harder to find with my fingers than the half-size arrow keys on my MacBook Air and Wired Keyboard. ![]() ![]() The Logitech Bluetooth Easy-Switch Keyboard costs about the same as the Magic Keyboard, while including extra features like easy pairing of multiple devices, and backlit keys.īesides its smaller size and lack of a wire, the Magic Keyboard doesn’t improve on the Wired Keyboard in any significant way. I have to retrain my fingers to find them without looking.īefore getting the Magic Keyboard, I primarily used Apple’s wired keyboard, and occasionally dabbled with Logitech’s excellent Bluetooth Easy-Switch Keyboard ($99.99), which we reviewed very favorably in 2013. The biggest change to the keys is the new full-height left and right arrows on the Magic Keyboard (left). The keys on the Magic Keyboard are large and flat and stark white they don’t wobble at all and they’re generally pleasing to type on. But the difference didn’t seem striking to me (if you’ll excuse the terrible pun). Going back and forth, I started to feel like I was hitting the laptop keys harder, while typing on the Magic Keyboard felt like it took slightly less effort. The keyboard is a little bit shorter top to bottom, and the travel of the keys is shortened as a result, but I didn’t feel much of a difference between it and my laptop, a late 2013 MacBook Air. The Magic Keyboard uses scissor-switch keys, like its predecessors the wired Apple Keyboard with Numeric Keypad ($49) and Apple Wireless Keyboard, which Apple has discontinued but is still available for $49 from Other World Computing.
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