The Bastron Glass Keyboard is sleek and has an integrated touchpad, but it isn’t for everyone

Here’s the dilemma. I absolutely love tactility. I hate touchscreen keyboards just because they’re so difficult to use, but at the same time, I see a very conscious effort on the part of tech companies to move towards them. It won’t be long before laptops will come with touchscreen keyboards instead of tactile ones (Microsoft’s actually working on one right now), so it’s probably prudent to look into touchscreen keyboards, just because the tech world is undeniably moving towards that future.

The Bastron Glass Touch Smart Keyboard looks great and surely feels futuristic. I’m just not sure if, in the case of people who type a lot for a living, that’s necessarily a good thing. The wired keyboard, measuring at just 0.28 inches in height (that’s thinner than the average smartphone), comes with an aluminum base and a tempered glass upper with the key layout screen-printed onto it. The capacitive touch keyboard does have built-in vibration and audio feedback that chimes in every time you type, but they don’t really replace the joy of key travel and the clicking sound caused by physical keys striking down on a PCB as you type. Where the Bastron really offers something different is in its number pad, which also comes with the ability to transform into a touch-sensitive trackpad. In doing so, the Bastron offers the kind of one-surface productivity you’d get from laptops, but for a desktop. Moreover, I could rally behind the fact that it’s splash-resistant, dust-proof, and can be wiped with a single swoop of a microfiber cloth. That itself may appeal to a certain demographic of people, but it’s a difficult sell to people who still love high-travel, tactile keyboards. Maybe in a future where flat, touchscreen keyboards are more of a norm.

Designer: Bastron