Experience ultimate comfort and efficiency with the Microsoft 5KV-00001 Split Keyboard. Designed to enhance your workspace, this innovative keyboard features a split keyset that promotes a natural, relaxed position for your wrists and forearms, reducing strain during prolonged use. The cushioned palm rest offers essential support, helping to maintain a neutral wrist position while typing.
The unique domed keyboard design positions your wrists at an optimal angle, while the natural arc key layout mimics the natural curvature of your fingertips for a more ergonomic typing experience. Enjoy greater flexibility in your workspace setup with a separate number pad, allowing you to customize your arrangement according to your preference.
Utilizing a wireless 2.4 GHz radio frequency, the Microsoft Split Keyboard provides a reliable connection without the clutter of cables. Its sleek black finish enhances any office environment, making it not only a functional tool but a stylish addition as well.
Powered by 2 AA batteries (included), this keyboard is compatible with Windows 10 and requires a hard disk space of 150 MB for installation. Please note that it is not compatible with iOS 7 and iOS 6.
Enhance your productivity while ensuring your comfort with the Microsoft 5KV-00001 Split Keyboard – where ergonomic design meets innovative technology for an elevated typing experience.
Mat Sachs –
I love this keyboard. I’m a Mac user who typically uses the Apple wireless keyboard, and the keyboard on my macbook 2016. Sidenote: the keyboard on the macbook 2016 has gradually become more difficult to use with keys not registering when pressed.
I have various arthritis/RSI pain/swelling in my left fingers, wrist, forearm, and shoulder. I’ve been looking for a keyboard that would help straighten my wrists while typing so they don’t pronate like they do on straight keyboard layouts.
I’ve tried several keyboards including the Microsoft Surface Ergonomic Keyboard, and the Sculpt is much better in my opinion (and less expensive).
* The wrist riser makes a huge difference in getting my wrists, fingers, etc lined up and supported while typing. Why the Microsoft Surface Ergonomic Keyboard doesn’t have this feature, I don’t know?
* The lack of an attached number-pad to the right, which I don’t need, makes reaching for a mouse less stressful on the right shoulder. And it’s quicker.
* I have the keyboard on a lap desk, so not having the extra weight of the extended keyboard is nice.
* The key layout is also an advantage. The Microsoft Surface Ergonomic Keyboard has a function key between the left control key and the command (window) key, which messes me up when doing various key combinations.
* To remap keys for Mac I use Karabiner-Elements. On the left side I swap the command and option keys. On the right I swap the “application” and option key positions…assigning the “application” key to the command key. I use Vim so I remapped caps-lock to esc.
* I have no connectivity issues with the Sculpt, but the Microsoft Surface Ergonomic Keyboard kept losing connection to the point it was unusable.
* I like the tic-tac keys on the mac keyboards, and was worried I wouldn’t like the feel of the keys on the Sculpt. While not my absolute favorite, they still feel nice and are a pleasure to type on.
So, not only is the Sculpt better than the Microsoft Surface Ergonomic Keyboard in terms of both ergonomic and mac compatibility, it’s also just an overall great keyboard for ergonomic usage. I’m experiencing a lot less wrist pain than before.
Eric A Theis –
I am a software engineer, so I’m on the keyboard all day, every day. I touch type, including special characters, and am reasonably fast. I’m pretty picky about my keyboards.
I have a new favorite keyboard.
First of all, be aware this keyboard has a Quirk, that lots of folks seem to have run into:
The wireless works fine, as long as:
– The receiver dongle is not more than two or three feet away from the keyboard AND
– The receiver is in a direct unobstructed line of sight with the keyboard.
I have one at work and one at home, and for both I bought a USB hub which I keep on my desktop nearish the keyboard. Once I did this I’ve had no further issues. The one I have at work I’ve been using continuously and heavily since ~June 2017.
Once I worked out the above two things, I had no further issues, for going on four months now.
But if you violate either of the above two factors, the keyboard will work fine – mostly.
But occasionally you’ll encounter the keyboard going ‘dead’ – completely unresponsive – for a few seconds up to five minutes or so. Then it comes back, as if nothing ever happened. This had me looking for all sorts of system and network issues …
Occasionally the keyboard will drop key events, such as ‘key-Delete-down’ or ‘key-Delete-up’, or whatever. It’s inconsistent. When it starts, this will happen randomly, often enough to totally disrupt your work, for an hour or so.
Then it will stop happening, and be fine for 1 to 10 days.
Then it will happen again.
Basically I narrowed it down to a weak wireless connection between the dongle and the keyboard itself.
Whenever the dongle was further away, or the battery getting old, or there was a lot of wireless traffic in my area of the building, I might see issues. Changing the battery will make you think that fixed it, but it didn’t. The problem will return. (Once I figured out and fixed the above two factors, I put the old/original battery back in the keyboard as an experiment. The keyboard worked fine, and is still working fine on that battery.)
After six months of happy use, I bought one for my home system as well. It worked fine – for a couple months – then I started to see the above issues. I’d put the dongle in a USB port on the back of my computer, which put it about three feet from the keyboard in a direct line. But the computer case, parts of my desk et cetera were physically between the two.
I installed the dongle in a USB hub on top of my desk, about 1.5 feet from the keyboard, with nothing in between the dongle and keyboard, and all the issues disappeared, and have not returned.
So now this is my new favorite keyboard.
Overall it feels great and is at least as comfortable as my previous favorites (see below).
The keys are short throw, fast, and quiet, like a good laptop keyboard, but a little noisier. It’s definitely quieter than any other non-laptop keyboard I’ve ever used. It’s significantly narrower than any other keyboard I’ve used, a little wider than a standard keyboard with no number pad. I like this aa lot, as it lets me put my trackball comfortably close for the first time ever. That’s definitely a plus.
The arrow keys are in an inverted ‘T’ layout on the lower right, close enough that I quickly learned to use them efficiently without having to stop and look for them. I do occasionally hit the Left-arrow key when I go for the right Control key (which I use a lot). But that’s probably my lack of precision.
The PageUp/PageDown etc keys are definitely in a new and unique arrangement. I wasn’t sure I liked it at first, and worried that their proximity might mess up my use of the Enter, backslash, and Backspace keys, but that didn’t happen. The Delete key is large, is two rows tall, and is just to the right of the Enter and Backspace keys. I figured I never use those keys, so I didn’t really care.
To my surprise, once I got comfortable with the keyboard, I found I -was- starting to use those keys. The layout is actually great, and I use them constantly now where I never did on previous keyboards.
As others have pointed out, the function keys are somewhat mushy buttons, definitely not the same mechanics as the other keys, with minimal tactile feedback. I rarely use them – EXCEPT for the Esc key.
If you are a heavy UNIX/Linux vi or vim user, you’ll find the Esc key pretty annoyiing. It will slow you down. (Time to switch to emacs!)
The wrist rest is comfortable, with minimal give. It will start to show a bit of wear marks after 6 months or so of use, but nothing significant.
I’ve never used the number pad thingie, and probably never will.
Formerly my favorite keyboards were:
– Fellowes Microban Split Design Keyboard, Black (98915)
Still like, have a few.
Dislikes: Largish, noisy to type on, left alt key is not -quite- in the expected place, arrow keys are not in a ‘T’ layout, /page up/down etc keys are not in a ‘normal’ 3 wide by 2 tall layout. Definitely still usable.
Likes: Best, most comfortable long-term layout (until the Sculpt).
– Microsoft Natural Keyboard Elite USB (the original, NOT the 3000, 4000, ‘comfort’, etc.)
Still like, have a few (including the very rare black version).
Dislikes: All the same as the Fellowes, except the alt keys are in the correct place here. For gaming, this keyboard doesn’t handle chords or very fast keystrokes well – sometimes doesn’t ‘see’ some. But never had an issue in any other situation. A little noisier than the Fellowes (to where coworkers have commented on it). This annoyed me enough to try the Fellowes. Also, they are generally very robust – But don’t spill any liquid into one, even a little. The ‘b’ and some keys nearby will stop working – permanently. No amount of drying, cleaning, disassembly and cleaning will restore it. It’s dead. By contrast the Fellowes keyboards seem to shrug off such accidents.
They come in ivory only, unless you manage to find one of the very rare black ones. (I didn’t know they existed until I stumbled across one on Amazon Warehouse Deals).
Likes: The ONLY Ergo keyboard for many years I found to be an improvement over a ‘standard’ layout. And it is definitely much better, much more comfortable for me. I bought several as backups, used them at home and work. They’re robust: I’ve used the same ones for years with no issues, and I have a heavy touch (learned on a manual typewriter). Relieved a bunch of minor complaints, mostly muscle tension.
Happy typing.
Update: 04/12/19
I have the same keyboard at work.
I’ve used the original batteries since I got it. (I replaced them briefly while debugging the wireless issue, but then put the originals back).
I have finally had to replace them (red light flashing on the kb for weeks, but finally it just quit).
I got it about 4/18. So the batteries lasted exactly a year.
I’m a software engineer, and use the keyboard heavily all day, almost every day.