Osler: “One finger in the throat and one in the rectum makes a good diagnostician.”
I looked up Rhodes piano at Wikipedia, and found a dismissive reference to Roland “digitial pianos”… but I could have sworn that the one I remembered was actually a Roland branded item. One of the things I liked about it was that you could actually play it (quietly) with the power turned off. And the action of course.
I have a signed print of the painting of Ned Overend that was done when he won the first UCI mountain bike world championship and was inducted into the mountain bike hall of fame in 1990. In 1992 some friends and I put on a mountain bike race to raise funds for a local scout group. We contacted the artist, contacted Ned, and he agreed to autograph 500 of them that we could sell and use as prizes. I have number 7 of 500.
I am a computer nerd and all my computers have this keyboard. If it has to be explained to you then you won’t understand. Nothing beats the original IBM buckling-spring keyboards. I have another one in the closet just in case.
One of my dearest friends was the equivalent to king of his Mardi Gras krewe and brought me as his date to a few hoity-toity dinners that year. As party favors, I received two one-of-a-kind pins that Mardi Gras collectors would beat down my door for.
I have (had?) a Muhammad Ali autograph I got when he came into the restaurant in NYC where we were having lunch - I was in college, probably 1982 I’d guess…it’s been years since I seen it…but I guess that’s a topic for another thread…
I have the one I bought as a freshman in college - 1980. When I started at the small chemical company where I now work, I was pleased to see the small library contained the founder’s CRC from the 1930’s (don’t remember the exact year.)
The keyclick is amazing, guaranteed to annoy everyone around you, and the feel is absolute perfection.
On top of that, you get serious geek cred when you show somebody your totally blank keyboard.
An unexpected coffee-in-laptop emergency the other day prompted me to go to the main office to get my computer fixed, and they finally gave me a docking station, so my Das Keyboard is back in action after a year hiatus.