![]() Unlike flat tops, your fingers can predict necessary finger travel based on where each finger hits the key. The best for typing is going to be your Lenovo ThinkPad X, T, or W series with the smiley chiclet keys. You want something with a good keyboard, has solid balance, and designed for minimum finger travel (while maintaining good key travel). If you're going to be typing A LOT, you want to skip the typical cheap consumer laptops: Lenovo (except ThinkPads), Acer, HP (except HP Elite), ASUS and Dells (except Latitudes). Do you want to LOVE your laptop? This is one you will love: Unless you are a typist who never looks at the keyboard, this will soon be must have for you. It has some things you will tell me: I don't need that feature. This next is an excellent laptop that will last you an insanely long time. This is more something I would feel confident recommending to someone I love:ĪMD is generally cheaper then Intel so there's some savings there. I would really prefer someone buying on my recommendation get an i5 processor, but that one has a 10th Gen i3. Ok, so this really isn't bad for under $500: ![]() $600 being the sweet spot for the non gamer. $500 is the bare minimum I recommend to anyone, no matter what they use the laptop for. If you want quality even "just for typing" please, spend a few bucks. I get a phone call in 3 months: "This thing is kind of slow, can you look at it?." Here's the thing I see all the time: I just want something cheap for just one *insert one thing here*.
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