Maltron keyboard
Encyclopedia
PCD Maltron Ltd., d.b.a. Maltron, is a manufacturer of ergonomic special-needs keyboards, founded by South African-born inventor Lilian Malt, the namesake of the company, and manufacturer Stephen Hobday. Maltron specialises in making keyboards for the prevention and etiological (root cause) treatment of repetitive strain injury
Repetitive strain injury
Repetitive strain injury is an injury of the musculoskeletal and nervous systems that may be caused by...

.

Maltron manufactures several models of keyboards, in varying levels of adaptation. Lilian Malt's original invention and the company's flagship design (Types L and E) is the most highly adapted; it incorporates a curved surface for the keyboard, in which the keys' angles are staggered to compensate for the different lengths of the fingers. A trackball is a customer-selectable option, at additional cost. As well, for all Maltron two-handed keyboards, also including the Type J and the Executive, an alternative keyboard layout is inbuilt, with a key installed to switch between the two. Maltron keyboards are electrically compatible with IBM PC keyboard
IBM PC keyboard
The keyboards for IBM PC compatible computers are standardized. However, during the 3-plus decades of PC architecture being constantly updated, multiple types of keyboard layout variations have been developed....

s and Apple Macintosh keyboards, using either USB
Universal Serial Bus
USB is an industry standard developed in the mid-1990s that defines the cables, connectors and protocols used in a bus for connection, communication and power supply between computers and electronic devices....

 or PS/2
PS/2 connector
The PS/2 connector is a 6-pin Mini-DIN connector used for connecting some keyboards and mice to a PC compatible computer system. Its name comes from the IBM Personal System/2 series of personal computers, with which it was introduced in 1987...

 connectors; in the early 1990s, a DIN connector
DIN connector
A DIN connector is a connector that was originally standardized by the , the German national standards organization. There are DIN standards for a large number of different connectors, therefore the term "DIN connector" alone does not unambiguously identify any particular type of connector unless...

 was available, but has been discontinued.

History

Lillian Malt ran a secretarial training business from 1955. Based upon her experience of typing errors (having been closely concerned in the printing industry with the retraining of Linotype
Linotype
The Mergenthaler Linotype Company is a corporation founded in the United States in 1886 to market the linecaster invented by Ottmar Mergenthaler...

 operators to use computer
Computer
A computer is a programmable machine designed to sequentially and automatically carry out a sequence of arithmetic or logical operations. The particular sequence of operations can be changed readily, allowing the computer to solve more than one kind of problem...

 keyboards
Keyboard (computing)
In computing, a keyboard is a typewriter-style keyboard, which uses an arrangement of buttons or keys, to act as mechanical levers or electronic switches...

), she conceived the idea of a typewriter keyboard designed with the keys arranged to fit different finger lengths, but found no manufacturer who was willing to work with her. In 1974, Stephen Hobday came to her with a one-handed keyboard that he had designed for the handicapped. Malt made several suggestions for improvement, telling Hobday of her failure to engage the interest of any manufacturers in actually building her ideal keyboard. Hobday told her "You tell me what you want and I'll tell you whether I can build it or not." From the resulting collaboration, with Malt's expertise in keyboard design and Hobday's expertise in electronics, came the first Maltron keyboard.

The full name of the company, P.C.D. Maltron, Ltd, stems from Hobday's original electronics firm, Printed Circuit Design, Limited, based in Farnborough
Farnborough, Hampshire
-History:Name changes: Ferneberga ; Farnburghe, Farenberg ; Farnborowe, Fremborough, Fameborough .Tower Hill, Cove: There is substantial evidence...

, Hampshire
Hampshire
Hampshire is a county on the southern coast of England in the United Kingdom. The county town of Hampshire is Winchester, a historic cathedral city that was once the capital of England. Hampshire is notable for housing the original birthplaces of the Royal Navy, British Army, and Royal Air Force...

. The seeds of P.C.D. Maltron were sown when another Hampshire business had inquired about the possibility of custom manufacture of a computer keyboard. This led to discussions with Farnborough Technical College about the design of the keyboard, and in turn to the meeting with Malt.

Stanley notes that Malt was almost erased from history in the 1970s, with the only one of two 1979 articles in The Inventor (the journal of the British Institute of Patentees and Inventors) that even mentions the names of the keyboard's inventors at all, crediting it solely to Hobday. However, Malt did present a major paper describing her work: Malt, Lillian G., 'Keyboard design in the electronic era', Printing Industry Research Association, Symposium Paper No. 6, September 1977.

Models

There are several models of Maltron keyboard; three of them target most users, while another three are geared towards people with more pervasive disabilities. The original bent, retro-styled keyboard devised by Lillian Malt is one of the former three; although the general form has remained the same, the original Maltron has gone through several revisions.

Due to customer requests for a halfway house between a conventional Sholes keyboard and the bent Maltron, two keyboard models have been introduced: the Type J, offering the same retro styling and finger length-adapted key positions on a flat projection; and the Executive, a modern-styled keyboard in metal and Perspex adapted to the Maltron keyboard layout.

For individuals with more visible disabilities, there are the single-handed, headstick, and expanded models.

All Maltron keyboards use Cherry
Cherry (keyboards)
ZF Electronics GmbH is a German computer peripheral-device maker. The company has its roots in the USA. They also manufacture a large range of products including sensors, input devices and automotive modules...

 MX brand key-switches; this makes keys much more responsive and durable compared to membrane or dome key-switches, used on the majority of keyboards. Some exceptions are the Das Keyboard
Das Keyboard
Das Keyboard is a series of premium computer keyboards sold by Metadot Corporation, an open source software company located in Austin, Texas. Their most distinctive feature has been the absence of key labels, i.e...

, the Kinesis
Kinesis (keyboard)
The Kinesis line of ergonomic computer keyboards is an alternative to the traditional keyboard design. Most widely known among these are the contoured Advantage line, which feature recessed keys in two bucket-like hollows which allow the fingers to reach keys with less effort as well as a central...

 (both of which also use Cherry switches) and the IBM Model M (which is of the buckling-spring variety).

Layouts

Maltron 3D and Executive keyboards are produced with three different layouts:
  • QWERTY
    QWERTY
    QWERTY is the most common modern-day keyboard layout. The name comes from the first six letters appearing in the topleft letter row of the keyboard, read left to right: Q-W-E-R-T-Y. The QWERTY design is based on a layout created for the Sholes and Glidden typewriter and sold to Remington in the...

     layout
  • Simplified Dvorak
    Dvorak Simplified Keyboard
    The Dvorak Simplified Keyboard is a keyboard layout patented in 1936 by Dr. August Dvorak and his brother-in-law, Dr. William Dealey. Over the years several slight variations were designed by the team led by Dvorak or by ANSI...

     layout
  • Maltron layout


In the Maltron layout, the home row of keys are "ANISF" for the left hand and "DTHOR" for the right hand. This home row can be used to type many more complete words than that found on a Qwerty keyboard.

The Maltron layout has been derived from frequency of use (FoU) statistics, plus additional considerations, such as the most frequent two- and three-letter combinations found in words. As much as possible, such combinations need to be placed as non-blocking sequences.

Whilst the letter E is normally regarded as the most common letter in the English language, one should not ignore the Space character, as it is nearly twice as frequent; additionally, in punctuation, the comma and full-stop are more frequent than the letters KVJZXQ.

Directional or cursor keys have also been subject to changes in design approach. Whilst the earlier PC-XT compatible Model B featured opposing keys near each other such as PgUp and PgDn aligned vertically on the left little finger, and arrow keys arranged UP/DN and LF/RT on either thumb, later models were to introduce a complete design philosophy where such keys were split into left-right locations matching the former re-arrangement of such characters as "(" and ")" which had been moved to sit above the numbers 5 & 6 (as "< >","[ ]", "{ }" and "/ \" had all been respectively separated). This meant that any cursor or movement key which moved to the left or up in a document (Backspace, PgUp, Left etc.) were all moved to the left hand and those which moved right or down (i.e., forward or CR/LF) in a document were placed on the right hand.

Further variation in design has been a slight rotation of the key-bowl upward in the center which reduces the amount of pronation in the operators' wrists. Referring back specifically to the Model-B, the key-bowl required the hands, although separated from each other, still to be rotated outward as though operating a flat keyboard.

Newer evolutions include moving the pseudo-standard 12 Function keys into a new top row inside the bowl rather than a straight line along the back as can still be seen on the single-handed versions. The standard numeric row (1 through 0) has also been shifted one column to the left aligning "1" with "F1", "2" with "F2" and so on. The blank area between the two thumb keys has also been raised to a significant height in order to prevent "dropped-wrist" operation of the number pad, although because of its location and layout, continuous one-handed numeric data entry requires physical movement of the keyboard to properly accommodate the dominant hand (left or right) which increases the amount of desktop real estate that the keyboard occupies.

The more observant user will also note that there is only one key below the home row for the ring finger (made obvious by the gap in the next row). As the long finger and the ring finger share the same tendon along the back of the hand, removal of excess "under-reach" for the ring finger alleviates potential stress on this tendon thus contributing to the keyboard's overall success in reducing Occupational Overuse Syndrome (aka RSI) type injuries.

Design and Construction Issues

There has been much complaint about the cost of the Maltron Keyboard over the rival Kinesis
Kinesis (keyboard)
The Kinesis line of ergonomic computer keyboards is an alternative to the traditional keyboard design. Most widely known among these are the contoured Advantage line, which feature recessed keys in two bucket-like hollows which allow the fingers to reach keys with less effort as well as a central...

 which copies the same "bowl" design for each hand along with the thumb keys, but omits the numeric data pad which is embedded in the right bowl and activated by key or footswitch.

However, there are important differences: the Maltron is made by hand in a small business setting, while the Kinesis is mass-manufactured.

Technical support and customer service, also, are of different character; the technical support at Kinesis is more in line with modern practice, whereas that provided by Maltron hearkens back to the 1970s.

The Kinesis, however, is far more modern-styled, which is seen as an advantage by most; the Maltron is formed out of matte grey or black plastic "with a fine grained surface to give minimum [light] reflection".

Kinesis only offers QWERTY or Dvorak layouts as standard. Maltron offers several different layouts, with optional dual-engraved keytops available on request.

"Maltron keyboards are expensive by comparison and for many people represent a considerable investment. They are hand made from sheet materials which are formed and punched to make the shell or body of the keyboard. Individual Cherry MX key switch are individually fitted by hand. The switch contacts are wired up into a scanning XY matrix by hand. In fact everything is done on an individual basis by hand." -- Maltron Web site

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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