Comparisons & Concluding Remarks

The pros and cons of each of the keyboards being considered today have already been outlined. In order to make comparisons easier, we have drawn up the table below comparing the features and specifications of each unit. I usually prefer to include hard benchmark numbers while presenting reviews, but evaluating input devices is more of a subjective exercise. Hence, the various keyboards are given some subjective scores for certain metrics.

HTPC Keyboards - Specifications & Features
Aspect Logitech K400 IOGEAR GKM561R SIIG JK-WR0412-S1 SIIG JK-WR0312-S1
Device Type Keyboard + Touchpad / 2-button Keyboard + Trackball / 2-button + Scroll wheel Keyboard + Trackball / 2-button + Scroll wheel Keyboard + Touchpad / 2-button
Dimensions 13.94" x 5.35" x 0.94" 14.125" x 6.5" x 1.5" 13.6" x 6.3" x 1.8" 12.125" x 8.75" x 0.625"
Weight 0.79 lbs / 360 g 1.26 lbs / 572 g 1.2 lbs / 544 g 1.4 lbs / 646 g
Power Source 2x AA 2x AA 2x AA 2x AAA
Communication RF 2.4 GHz / USB Receiver RF 2.4 GHz / 78 channels (auto channel hopping) RF 2.4 GHz / 80 channels (no explicit channel hopping) RF 2.4 GHz / 80 channels (no explicit channel hopping)
Power Saver Explicit On / Off Switch Explicit On / Off Switch Auto Sleep Auto Sleep
Extra (Multimedia) Keys 4 8 14 8
USB Receiver Storage Compartment Yes No No Yes
Backlight No No No No
Keyboard Layout 8 / 10 6 / 10 5 / 10 6 / 10
Ergonomics 6 / 10 7 / 10 7 / 10 7 / 10
Build Quality 7 / 10 9 / 10 7 / 10 7 / 10
MSRP (USD) $39.99 $49.95 $59.99 $69.99
Warranty 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years

As evident from the table above, it is difficult to declare one particular unit as the best HTPC interfacing option out there. All of the presented units could do with an upgrade to operation in the 5 GHz band. The IOGEAR GKM561R could really do with a better keyboard layout and proportionately sized keys. It also needs a left click button on the top frame near the trackball. The SIIG JK-WR0412-S1 and JK-WR0312-S1 need to both improve upon the keyboard layout (particularly the location of the Ctrl and Fn keys). Automatic channel hopping could also help with range issues. The trackball version (JK-WR0412-S1) needs standard sized keys and a trackball of better quality. The touchpad version (JK-WR0312-S1) needs quieter mouse buttons as well as a larger touchpad area. The units missing an explicit on/off button would do well to integrate one.

Moving forward, we are looking to reviewing more options in this particular niche. If there is any particular model that you would like us to review, please sound off in the comments.

 

SIIG JK-WR0312-S1 - Features & Usage Impressions
Comments Locked

74 Comments

View All Comments

  • username609 - Tuesday, March 4, 2014 - link

    I had the IOGEAR keyboard for a couple years. The biggest problem was the mechanical trackball attracting and retaining dirt. The keyboard had to be disassembled every so often and the inner wheels cleaned in order to keep it functioning. I finally replaced the board with a K400 when the keys began to delaminate.

    One definite advantage to the IOGEAR: all of the Media Center buttons work out of the box. There's a lot of functionality that has to be programmed into the K400 in order to get it to the same level of user-friendliness.
  • zyk - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    The fact that you have to use keyboard combinations or SetPoint software to access F1-F12 keys keeps me away from most of Logitech's new portable keyboards. I would imagine this is a determining factor for many users and functionality caveats like this ought to be in the comparison chart.
  • Kobaljov - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    Another interesting smaller option can be the Sony Android TV's remote controller with full qwerty keyboard, but unfortunately it had compatibility issues on other OSes
    http://www.amazon.com/SONY-NSG-MR5U-BLUETOOTH-REMO...
  • Penti - Monday, March 3, 2014 - link

    Do Motorola/Arris still sell their RF-based qwerty remote/keyboard (NYXboard) any more? Pulse-eight discontinued theirs/it. To bad as I have yet to see a replacement.

    Lot's of smaller options around though.
  • andy o - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    I'm using the Rapoo Blade E9180P, after using the Logitech K400 (first edition) frustratingly for years. I'm happy overall. It operates on 5GHz, and has the same kind of "nano" USB dongle that Logitech has. Only gripes: can't triple-click, and the mouse acceleration is not very customizable (basically only the Windows on/off option).

    Pros: can actually DO gestures, even middle click with 3 fingers and pinch to zoom, not like the Logitech K400 which its first edition was multitouch but for some reason Logitech never enabled any other gesture than two finger scroll. Also, full size keys, not reduced like the K400, and shorter but just a bit longer.
  • inkz - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    Ganesh, thank you for the keyboard reviews.
    Would you please identify any idiosyncrasies in the HTPC keyboards reviewed, such as behaviour when falling out of range, battery drain, sync issues, BIOS usage. Some examples I have experienced:
    Old keyboard that looked like Grandtec KEY-3000 - would drain rechargeable batteries monthly, following each battery change - required resync
    SIIG JK-WR0412-S1 clone - whenever the link dropped, the last key press would become stickyyyyyyyy
    MC-7126 from dx - trackball would intermittently drop out, receiver fails on exiting S3 mode
    Logitech K400 - trackpad fails when a damp finger is used (overly sensitive to water droplets)
    Rapoo E2700 - trackpad sensitivity set ridiculously low (problematic when you connect multiple keyboards without keyboard profile support), and trackpad cannot wake from sleep

    One or two of them also didn't work in BIOS, don't remember which.

    I look forward to more HTPC keyboard/trackball reviews & other readers' recommendations. I still haven't found a perfect keyboard (the SIIG JK-WR0412-S1 clone I had would come close, except for the poor behaviour during dropouttttttts).
  • alphaod - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    I use the Logitech KT820.

    It's got good tactile feedback and the trackpad is buttonless. It also looks sleaker than the K400. The only issue is on OS X (connected to my Mac mini), it doesn't support multitouch gestures like three finger swipe and whatnot.

    And it's pricier at $80, but I think it's worth it.
  • meacupla - Sunday, March 2, 2014 - link

    It's not in the same price range at all, if purpose bought, but it would be nice to see the alternatives.
    Wii-mote, PS3 BD remote, nexus 7 or a spare smartphone which have support in remote controlling windows, XBMC remote, powerdvd remote, etc.
  • cjs150 - Monday, March 3, 2014 - link

    Maplin used to do a combined keyboard and trackball that was the size of an Xbox controller. The build quality was a bit dubious, it tends to take a while to wake up but for sofa surfing it is ideal. From memory the cost was about £15 or $22.

    If someone could remake but with better build quality that would be an absolute winner - typing was easy on it as long as it was limited to web addresses, short emails and similar
  • nos024 - Monday, March 3, 2014 - link

    I'm using my tablet + PowerDVD 13 Ultra and it works great.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now