Monday, January 12th 2015
Cherry Unveils MX Board 6.0
Cherry, the company that revolutionized the gaming keyboard industry with its noiseless mechanical switches, announced the latest keyboard under its own brand, the MX Board 6.0. Featuring its latest, most refined switches, this keyboard features what the company calls RealKey Technology.
In addition to 100% N-key rollover, the RealKey technology relies on high bandwidth provided by USB 3.0, to reduce latency, making the key presses register quicker. The keyboard itself is aimed at professional typists, software devs, and gamers. With a standard 102-keyset, with macros and red key illumination, the MX Board 6.0 features an ingot-shaped metal body, to which an included palm-rest can be magnetically attached. Available starting this Spring, and backed by a 3-year warranty, the MX Board 6.0 will sell at US $219.
Source:
ThinkComputers
In addition to 100% N-key rollover, the RealKey technology relies on high bandwidth provided by USB 3.0, to reduce latency, making the key presses register quicker. The keyboard itself is aimed at professional typists, software devs, and gamers. With a standard 102-keyset, with macros and red key illumination, the MX Board 6.0 features an ingot-shaped metal body, to which an included palm-rest can be magnetically attached. Available starting this Spring, and backed by a 3-year warranty, the MX Board 6.0 will sell at US $219.
16 Comments on Cherry Unveils MX Board 6.0
It does look pretty tasty though.
I must say though that I rarely find myself needing a higher bandwidth keyboard to register presses faster, instead a faster brain to figure out what I need to press :laugh:
wish it would come with danish layout, that would be a killer :roll:
I could RMA it but i went through so many corsair RMAs with the K70 that ive spent enough money on shipping alone to have the faulty keyboard sent back to corsair to buy a brand new K70.
In Corsair's defence, they did sent me a cheque of about $50-70 to make up for it but not after i asked them to first.
The keyboards themselves arent at fault - its the switches they get from Cherry that are the problem.
Its frustrating having to deal with RMAs over and over again, but Corsair Support are really great.
Unless Cherry fix the issue with ESD then i wont be getting another mech keyboard unless its Corsair RGB or non LED'd keyboard.
Now that I said that I will probably end up with dead LEDs now haha.
Same here, 1 thought Newegg 2nd with ROCCAT thing is i have had 2 of them with failing LEDS and 1 with failing keys which i believe i am heading for my second with failing keys :(.
Strange part is that the ones that had failing LEDs never had failing keys :p. Some people give of more ESD than others. I my self get shocks that even make me jump a mile lol.
I dont want to send my keyboard back to my retailer for RMA because #1 id be out of pocket and #2 this particular retailer claimed never to have received my faulty keyboard and adamantly denied everything till i gave them tracking information.
I dont know what it is..... I had a Corsair K90 when they first available in the UK for a year and that never had any dead LEDs and it still doesnt according to its current owner.
Somewhere along the line - either Cherry skimped out and started producing junk switches, QC dept are slacking. or completely changed the design to something inferior because by now it cant just be a coincidence or an isolated issue - there is a genuine problem with LED lighting on Cherry switches and thats one of the problems that Corsair wanted to address with their RGB series of mech keys.
3 years warranty is good but its useless when all you do is rma it over and over again especially in here
I bet those 4.5ms do matter and are a great deal for marketing.
Do they provide a driver that will dive into the kernel and will make the OS scan the device more frequently?
If not, then their marketing section must contact their engineers before publishing BS.
Heck, the PS/2 port has a higher scan frequency than a USB 3.0 port if they don't alter the drivers in some way.
- No LEDs (they are only immature and break to soon)
- sub-€100 price tag
>>> Profit
it even has the same issue as other mechanical backlight boards, the lower half of the key gets less light. for this price they could've put another light below the switch for the keys which have 2 symbols.