ThinkPads have historically been known for their great keyboards. Recently, certain models have been having issues with registering keystrokes or even just scrambling letters around. On the affected AMD ThinkPads, the keyboards are hardly usable until an update has been applied.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-s-struggle-with-keyboards-on-its-AMD-powered-ThinkPads.442790.0.html
Hi! Just wanted to point out that one of the links in the sources is incorrect:
Lenovo forum - ThinkPad E495 Lagging and Unresponsive Keyboard
forums.lenovo.com/t5/ThinkPad-11e-Windows-13-E-and/Thinkpad-E495-Lagging-and-unresponsive-keyboard/td-p/4511832
Also, thank you so much for bringing attention to this! I was happy to see that you sourced that particular forum post because I am the wrong that created it and am constantly checking it for updates.
*i am the one* typo :)
So Lenovo finally sold a competitive AMD powered laptop with first class CPU and incredibly not only is a low end cheap side, but also was difficult to find AND the keyboard was faulty and needed a bios update. Sooo curios, isn't it?
Quote from: davide445 on November 17, 2019, 23:48:39
So Lenovo finally sold a competitive AMD powered laptop with first class CPU and incredibly not only is a low end cheap side, but also was difficult to find AND the keyboard was faulty and needed a bios update. Sooo curios, isn't it?
Eh? The cheap ones - the E485 that I have is among them - were easy to find and didn't have this issue at all. This same issue affected their Intel laptops for years, some going back to the IBM era, and only recently was it fixed.
People just put up with it, adjusted their typing, etc. I had an X1C6 before this, and it was affected. The Intel-only X1 series was affected. Hardly a conspiracy, just sheer arrogance and incompetence.
I've an A475 here running Linux. I keep seeing "mout: command not found" because my relatively ancient and non-ideal stroke pattern is (apparently) to press the N before releasing the O. For the first time ever, I get a jam on these 3 keys, so I get no N. if I hold O and U, it repeats the later one, but if I then press and hold the N, it keeps sending that last [O or U] with a slight hiccup in between every few repetitions.
Though what I do can hardly be called touch typing, I can do 50-65 WPM on short sample texts using the wide keyboard (NSK-THA01) on an old Toshiba L505D. Just like with arbitrary UI changes, I hate being told that my muscle memories are wrong. I'm only just finding out about this and it is just kinda sad.