When Apple released the bluetooth keyboard and the magic trackpad, it seemed quite obvious they could fit together quite well. Not least because they'd share a set of batteries so overall battery life should be longer. I made a mockup of what a wired version might look like but one important change I made was the key layout:

The ideas behind the layout change are the following:
- w,a,s,d and i,j,k,l keys are often used together so it makes sense that they are aligned
- a number pad is way more useful than the numbers in a row
- punctuation is easier to find when it's all in a row rather than scattered about the keyboard
- characters that are more commonly used with calculations are grouped near the numpad whereas punctuation is grouped near the letters
- pageup/pagedown (arrows near eject key) double as home/end and use the fn key to switch function. This way you don't accidentally hit home/end when doing a page skip
- there's a .com on the keyboard simply because people browse websites so much that it makes sense to have a shortcut for it, it's very useful on smartphones
- minimising redundancy was also important. On current keyboards, there are often multiple keys to do the same thing. The only redundancy here is with the command-key but it is used so much for shortcuts that it makes sense to have one on the right
The length of the keyboard would be about the size of the current wired keyboard minus the last 2 columns of keys on the right. Use of the trackpad wouldn't be mandatory, a mouse can be used too but the pad is there for gestures when you need it for zoom, rotate, swipe, pan, expose, spaces etc.
I also feel that instead of having a wired and wireless version, they should make a single model with a micro-USB connector and a sealed-in Lithium Ion battery using the same technology as their laptop batteries.
When it needs charged, you simply plug it into the machine. The USB ports typically on the wired model would just be unpowered when unplugged from the micro-USB so devices plugged into them would not power up. A Lithium Ion battery the length of the small rectangle at the back of the wired keyboard should last a good 3 months without a recharge.
I'd expect the price of this device to be $69-$99 and bundled by default with the iMac and Mac Pro. The Magic Mouse could be an optional extra but quite honestly, I think they need to stop making mice and just offer 3rd party options. The Magic Mouse improved on the last one but it's still not a great mouse. By contrast, Apple's trackpads are the best in their class.

The ideas behind the layout change are the following:
- w,a,s,d and i,j,k,l keys are often used together so it makes sense that they are aligned
- a number pad is way more useful than the numbers in a row
- punctuation is easier to find when it's all in a row rather than scattered about the keyboard
- characters that are more commonly used with calculations are grouped near the numpad whereas punctuation is grouped near the letters
- pageup/pagedown (arrows near eject key) double as home/end and use the fn key to switch function. This way you don't accidentally hit home/end when doing a page skip
- there's a .com on the keyboard simply because people browse websites so much that it makes sense to have a shortcut for it, it's very useful on smartphones
- minimising redundancy was also important. On current keyboards, there are often multiple keys to do the same thing. The only redundancy here is with the command-key but it is used so much for shortcuts that it makes sense to have one on the right
The length of the keyboard would be about the size of the current wired keyboard minus the last 2 columns of keys on the right. Use of the trackpad wouldn't be mandatory, a mouse can be used too but the pad is there for gestures when you need it for zoom, rotate, swipe, pan, expose, spaces etc.
I also feel that instead of having a wired and wireless version, they should make a single model with a micro-USB connector and a sealed-in Lithium Ion battery using the same technology as their laptop batteries.
When it needs charged, you simply plug it into the machine. The USB ports typically on the wired model would just be unpowered when unplugged from the micro-USB so devices plugged into them would not power up. A Lithium Ion battery the length of the small rectangle at the back of the wired keyboard should last a good 3 months without a recharge.
I'd expect the price of this device to be $69-$99 and bundled by default with the iMac and Mac Pro. The Magic Mouse could be an optional extra but quite honestly, I think they need to stop making mice and just offer 3rd party options. The Magic Mouse improved on the last one but it's still not a great mouse. By contrast, Apple's trackpads are the best in their class.








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They've probably thought of doing the same and met with similar resistance. Kind of like the "you can't make a smartphone without a physical keyboard because you can't touch type" resistance. In the end, that's all that key placement is for and it originally came from typewriters.
