Who came up with the misnomer "tenkeyless"?
- zslane
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My understanding is that the difference between a full ANSI/ISO keyboard and a "TKL" (tenkeyless) board is the absence of the numpad keys. If so, the term "tenkeyless" is clearly a misnomer since the numpad consists of seventeen keys, not ten. Who came up with this term, and where did they learn to count?
- klikkyklik
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- Wild Duck
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Diatec for the Filco Majestouch.
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It goes way back to early adding machines. The numeric cluster where the number 1 to 9 are in three throws with the 0 at the bottom has long been called a "Ten key". http://retrocalculators.com/sundstrand.htm
- 002
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- zslane
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Hmm. You're probably right. It doesn't make any sense--whomever first put "TKL" on a keyboard model knew full well they weren't making ancient adding machines--but marketing names don't always make sense, I suppose.Engicoder wrote: It goes way back to early adding machines. The numeric cluster where the number 1 to 9 are in three throws with the 0 at the bottom has long been called a "Ten key". http://retrocalculators.com/sundstrand.htm
- seebart
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I wouldn't be surprised either, but I kind of like the phrase. In fact much better than the one IBM chose for theirs.
- Muirium
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Yeah, I also like SSK but it's a bit vague. "Space saving keyboard" says what it achieves, but not how. Tenkeyless is good and direct. You've got to be a real, card carrying, pedant not to understand it instantly. And it sounds sharper than Numpadless, or Wristsaver too.
@Engicoder: Where's the reference to tenkey in your link? I don't doubt you guys called it that. Over here I suspect they'd just be dull and call them calculators, or worse: tabulators!
@Engicoder: Where's the reference to tenkey in your link? I don't doubt you guys called it that. Over here I suspect they'd just be dull and call them calculators, or worse: tabulators!