Your review references the 2-year-old review of the 3510 for the keyboard and input devices, and gives the keyboard an "88%" score.
This score is misleading. The keyboard of this laptop has significant ergonomic problems which your review should have picked up. Here are some of them:
- Key covers have a sharp edge to them (an "arris") so that off-center finger positioning or accidental touches, for example with unused fingers, are uncomfortable/unpleasant
- Keys need a significant actuation force (approx 65-70g) but offer little resistance after actuated. This means that when a key is pressed hard enough to actuate, the key is then too easily depressed fully and hits the base ("bottoming out"). This is an uncomfortable feeling for any typist and a cause of fatigue and, potentially, long-term physical symptoms.
- Left side Shift and Ctrl keys are too small
- Space bar is not wide enough
- Enter and Backspace key are too small
- The small size of Enter and Backspace keys combined with no gap between main keyboard and numeric pad, means it is too easy to hit numeric pad keys by mistake - for example, hitting Num Lock when aiming for the Backspace key
- Cursor keys are too small
- PageUp and PageDown keys are too small, and in a strange position like an afterthought
- The small keys have a different physical feel - a different stiffness or actuation force
- Numeric pad has 6mm of wasted space below it, this could have been used instead to give the top row of the numeric pad full-sized keys
- Premium keyboard real estate - the top right corner - normally used for navigation keys like Home End PageUp PageDown - has useless Calc and media keys
- F1-F12 function keys are too small, too narrow and much too closely spaced
- Bizarre gap between Insert and Delete keys in top row
- No 'Break' key (note that Windows+Break is a useful shortcut)
- A 15 inch notebook is too small to have a full size keyboard and numeric pad, the compromise is that the main keyboard is positioned too far to the left on this notebook. This creates a serious ergonomic problem: the typist with hands centered on the keyboard (centered on the G and H keys) has the hands below the left side of the screen, so must either twist the body, or move the notebook so the typist's head is not directly facing the screen center. Either way creates ergonomic strain. For now, my solution is to move documents and configure app layouts so that text is on the left side of the screen with menus and toolbars on the right, but that cannot be done for all apps.