💻 Elevate Your Workspace with JOYACCESS!
The JOYACCESS Wireless Keyboard is a compact and stylish solution for professionals seeking efficiency and comfort. With a slim profile, responsive scissor-switch keys, and a long battery life, this keyboard is designed for seamless use across various devices, making it the perfect addition to any modern workspace.
Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
Button Quantity | 86 |
Is Electric | Yes |
Keyboard Backlighting Color Support | Single Color |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Switch Type | scissor-switch |
Compatible Devices | Laptop, Smart TV, PC |
Connectivity Technology | USB-C |
Special Features | Ultra Slim |
Number of Keys | 86 |
Style | Contemporary |
Theme | Office |
Color | black |
Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 14.5"L x 5.6"W x 0.8"H |
A**R
Modest.
LOVE this keyboard. Super cute, very modest keys and I put batteries in it when I bought it back in March and have not had to change them lol! Highly recommend. :)
J**S
Great price - keys popped off after 3 years - will purchase again
This lasted 3 years and 3 months. Love it for this price point. The only reason I need a new one is because a few of the keys have popped off and won't stay on any longer. I take it in a out of backpacks often and I haven't been as careful as I could have been. Will be purchasing again!
M**Z
Good for the Value
I bought this model to replace a Logitech K360 for use on my Mac Air. The K360 lasted about three years before one of the little plastic legs on on the bottom finally broke off. I really need to have a keyboard just slightly tilted at the top, and that was a requirement of mine as I shopped around for a replacement (curiously, I discovered that the majority of the higher cost brands/models are completely flat with no "legs" or any tilt offered). I do like that the design of this model has a slight tilt offered to it by virtue of its front design rather than potentially brittle "legs" on the bottom.The installation was all plug-n-play perfect. I had no real issues in getting my Mac to accept it.Two criticism from other reviews that I've read here are valid: (1) the space bar is smaller than on conventional keyboards, and (2) the same can definitely be said for the backspace key. I'm not troubled at all by the former, but I am finding myself struggling a bit with the latter. However, the more I use the keyboard the more comfortable I am getting with these two deficiencies. Hopefully I won't even notice this with continued use.Other reviewers complained about keyboard clicking noise, but honestly I just don't feel it's an issue. It's pretty quiet and in no way at all like a mechanical keyboard sound at all.Another criticism I read in a few reviews is that it's cheaply made and feels "flimsy." I guess that's in the eye of the beholder, but my own feeling is that it has "substance" to it and is sturdy to at least my touch. The four rubber grips on the bottom front and rear hold it nicely in place on the desk.The function keys are a little funky. I'm not a big user of them, but I did see where another reviewer on here gives instructions for how to enable them for use on a Mac. The only ones I do use are for speaker volume; from yet another reviewer, I learned to press the "FN" key at the bottom while also pressing the specific speaker function button (F2, F3, or F4). That's a slightly clunky usage, but I can live with it. I can also just reach up to the same buttons on my Mac Air's keyboard too.The Mac "Control" button at the bottom seams to work normal for all the reasons I usually use it (mainly with the arrow keys to get to the beginning or end of a sentence).Finally, I love its silver and white color. If I can help it, I will never have a black keyboard again -- the constant cleaning so that it doesn't look gross got old.I will update this review if I encounter problems later. But so far so good anyway.
B**.
REALLY close to the ideal keyboard for a 'text' computer user like me.
I recently bought a series of different wireless keyboards because the one that I had before, one that I liked a lot, went crump and I needed a replacement. Six or so keyboards down the research path, I think I've found one that I can live with VERY easily. All of the keyboards leading up to this one were semi-OK, but ultimately unsatisfactory in some disqualifying way.I wanted wireless (Bluetooth or dedicated USB thingie) because my desktop is a busy place and the cord from a much earlier corded, USB full width keyboard was pretty much always in the way. I didn't think I cared about replaceable vs not batteries, but the unit that crumped had an embedded rechargeable Li-Ion battery that was rechargeable via a mini-USB jack. It was THAT non-replaceable battery that was unable to charge that caused the keyboard to become unusable.I determined VERY early on that I wanted rectangular keytops because my finger-to-key aim was better than with round keys of really close to the same size. I thought I wanted Bluetooth, but after experiencing what I call 'resync delay' on several of the candidates, I determined that I probably wanted a more basic unit, maybe a more-or-less dedicated Win (PC) unit. I wanted low-travel keys because the keyboard that went kaput had them and not only did they feel much better, but I typed with fewer errors and I think a bit faster as well. I wanted those low-travel keys to be pretty quiet too; as close to noiseless as can be reasonably expected.Several of the keyboards I tried and rejected were of the 'Bluetooth for Win, IOS, or Android' flavor and I ultimately realized that not only did I not care one way or another for that flexibility, but that it also introduced the previously-mentioned Bluetooth 'resync delay'. I wanted a less-wide keyboard, preferably without the numpad and those other keys that are customarily between it and the 'proper' letter keys. I wanted frequently-used text-editing keys to be single function keys, not invoked by having to ALSO press the Fn key or whatever other 'shift' mechanism was employed. I wanted an additional column of my most-frequently-used editing keys just to the right of the letter keys and return. I was willing to overlook an 'also' numpad if that additional column had End, Home, PgUp, PgDn, and Del, assuming that BkSp was not too far away. I wanted the F keys on the topmost row to do what they usually do, without having to use Fn or some other 'shift-like' key.So, you may ask, how does this latest unit measure up. First, it's too wide (14.5 inches overall L- R) since it has the numpad, but because it has the extra column of my favorite editing keys, I already been able to erase from my mind that the keyboard is wider than it needs to be by a full 3 inches. The keys are rectangular, low travel, and delightfully quiet. It uses a dedicated USB dongle-ish receiver that needs no configuration, pairing, or other involvement by me. The driver auto-installed as soon as I plugged it in. As far as I'm able to determine, it is an exclusively Windows keyboard, and I'm using it with W7 Pro on a homebrew mITX system. Right now, drawing near to the end of it's first full day of use by me, I have only one suggestion for change - make this same keyboard without that (to me) unnecessary numpad.Until that suggested unit appears, I'll be happily typing on what is probably the best keyboard I've ever used. I'm REALLY happy with this unit; happy enough that I don't regret the time or expense associated with finding it. As Edith Ann used to say "And that's the truth"
TrustPilot
2 个月前
2 周前