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Optimus Maximus keyboard

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The Optimus Maximus keyboard, previously just "Optimus keyboard", is a keyboard currently in development from the Art. Lebedev Studio, headed by Artemy Lebedev. Each of its keys is a display which can dynamically change to adapt to the keyboard layout in use or to show the function of the key. Pre-orders began on 20 May 2007 for a limited production run from December 2007 to January 2008, with a second batch expected to arrive in February 2008.

Contents

Overview

Photoshop layout
Photoshop layout
Quake III Arena layout. The production model uses the same 48x48 display for all keys including the space bar, unlike this rendering.
Quake III Arena layout. The production model uses the same 48x48 display for all keys including the space bar, unlike this rendering.

The design featured on the studio's website received attention on the web when it was featured on Slashdot on 14 July 2005, and afterwards for a few weeks on other technology websites. The original release date was "end of 2006", however production issues caused the Optimus mini three to be developed first, with the full keyboard delayed until the end of 2007. The keyboard was number 10 on Wired's '06 Vaporware Awards due to its numerous delays and feature reductions. The Optimus would allow for greater user interaction, by dynamically displaying the current function of the keys. For example, when the user presses the shift key, the pictures would change to upper-case versions. It would also make switching between different keyboard layouts (such as English and Cyrillic) rapid, and could make the switch to alternative layouts such as Dvorak or Colemak easier for people who only have a QWERTY keyboard with no possibility of rearranging the keys. To demonstrate this concept, there are computer renderings showing example layouts for Quake III Arena and Adobe Photoshop. A newly-revealed (as of January 3, 2008) patent application filed on March 13, 2007 suggests that Apple Inc. may be working on a similar dynamically changeable OLED keyboard.[1][2]

Optimus mini three

Main article: Optimus mini three

Art. Lebedev Studio has released a smaller three-key version of their keyboard, named Optimus mini three. Each of the keys is larger than a standard key. The mini three can be adjusted, through the configuration software, to either a horizontal or vertical orientation. Initial reviews have been mixed. The keyboard functions as advertised, but it has been criticized for inordinately high CPU usage, slow response time, and buggy configuration software.[3]

Production schedule

The Art. Lebedev Studio is accepting limited pre-orders since May 20 2007. Production schedule:

  • Beginning of December 2007—200 keyboards
  • End of December 2007—200 keyboards
  • January 2008—400 keyboards

Pricing

The current price is listed as USD$1564.37 (1256.86) (£788.25). Variations with fewer OLED keys (as few as one, on the space bar) are now listed at reduced prices; new 1, 10, and 47 programmable OLED key configurations are slated to cost $462, $599, $999, respectively.

Similar keyboards

A keyboard with similar functions, called the 205PRO, features 20×20 pixel monochrome LCD function keys is manufactured by United Keys.[1] The patent for this "Display Keyboard" (U.S. Patent 5,818,361 ) is held by inventor Elkin Acevedo.[2] However, the first programmable LCD keyboard [3] was developed in the mid-1980s in Germany. This keyboard, sold under the LCBoard name in the U.S. until 1999, contained many of the features of the Optimus keyboard including monochrome graphic icons on each keyboard key, macro programming, context sensitive and application dependent switching between functions.

Expected features

Art. Lebedev Studio is expecting to manufacture the keyboard with these features:[4]

  • A plastic body (width: 537 mm, depth: 173 mm, height: 38 mm)
  • Extra-durable polymer plastic keys (20.2×20.2 mm, visible area 10.1×10.1 mm)
  • 48×48 pixel screens, Highcolor mode (65536 colors)
  • OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) screen for keys
  • USB 2.0 connectivity
  • 4-5 year lifetime
  • A key-saver mode
  • Support for animation on keys at 10 FPS
  • Ability to form a mosaic using a combination of key images
  • OS independence
  • An SDK for complete display customization
  • Swappable keys and support for keys without displays
  • 32 MB SD card for storing basic layouts
  • Non-stop glow time at nominal brightness of 20,000 hours, after which display quality will diminish
  • An ambient light sensor which can be used to automatically adjust display brightness
  • A viewing angle of 160°

References

  1. ^ New Apple Dynamic OLED Keyboard, hrmpf.com
  2. ^ Optimus-like OLED Apple Keyboard?, MacRumors.com
  3. ^ Optimus Mini Three: OLED keyboard reviewed, tweakers.net

External links

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Optimus Maximus keyboard from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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