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Logitech Desktop Wave Manual

Making of wave
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The Making of the Logitech Comfort Wave Design
The story behind Logitech's breakthrough keyboard design
eyboards. Around the world, we find these thin, rectangular objects in nearly
K
every home and office. For many of us, typing is so ingrained in our daily lives
that we don't even think about doing it. Like driving, we do it automatically. But
think of the role keyboards play in our lives. Consider for a moment just how many ways
we use them. E-mails. Proposals. Spreadsheets. Instant messages. Web searches.
Browsing the Internet. Video games. In fact, according to a recent study at Harvard, for
Logitech, the average person types more than 2 million keystrokes every year. That's
equal to five forty-hour weeks of sitting in a typing position.
While the rest of the world takes these input devices for granted, Logitech's Switzerland-
based keyboard development team has dedicated endless hours – even years – to
improving and reinventing keyboard design and features to provide the most comfortable
typing and best computing experience possible.
A Tradition of Innovation
When Logitech entered the keyboard market in 1998, the company had already
established itself as a leader in mouse innovation. And it quickly demonstrated that it
could deliver innovative keyboards as well, beginning with its creation of a mouse-and-
keyboard bundle, which Logitech sells under the Desktop® trademark.. Today, many
other companies sell keyboard-and-mouse combinations and they even have a
dedicated section in the keyboard aisle.
Since entering the keyboard market, Logitech has steadily challenged the accepted
function and design of keyboards. In 2003, Logitech introduced new comfort features:
Zero Degree Tilt™ to address wrist extension, two-handed navigation to distribute work
more evenly between the right and left hands, and a redesigned 5-pack (the Home,
Delete, End, Page Up and Page Down keys) to minimize the distance traveled from
keyboard to mouse.
In 2004, in response to the computer's increasing visibility in the home, the company
announced the highly designed Logitech® diNovo™ Media Desktop™. The recipient of
numerous design and technology awards, the keyboard incorporated sleek design with
advanced technology, such as a redesigned key mechanism, Bluetooth connectivity and
a separate MediaPad™ for controlling media on the computer. People who purchased
the diNovo desktop no longer had to hide their computer in a home office – instead, they
could proudly display it in common living areas.
Having worked since early 2005 on updating the diNovo design, in 2006, Logitech
announced the diNovo Edge™ keyboard, a significant evolution of the diNovo Media
Desktop. Another result of the Logitech Desktop team's successful collaboration, the
Creating Comfort:

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Summary of Contents for Logitech Desktop Wave

  • Page 1 Logitech, the average person types more than 2 million keystrokes every year. That’s equal to five forty-hour weeks of sitting in a typing position. While the rest of the world takes these input devices for granted, Logitech’s Switzerland- based keyboard development team has dedicated endless hours – even years – to improving and reinventing keyboard design and features to provide the most comfortable typing and best computing experience possible.
  • Page 2 What could Logitech do for the millions of people laboring at their computers with tired hands or wrists for hours on end each day, for the people who wanted more comfort but didn’t want to relearn how to type?
  • Page 3 Logitech could create a more comfortable keyboard by shaping the key frame to fit the variable vertical length of the fingers, by offering a key frame that mirrored the actual shape of the human hand.
  • Page 4 A wave-shaped key frame could reduce forearm pronation and finger static load. But what about wrist extension and ulnar deviation? To answer these questions, Logitech and Design Partners came together at the initial design identification (ID) exploration meeting to identify several options that could address all of the four pain points outlined by Sauvage: a curve, with an angle that would displace the key frame from the horizontal plane;...
  • Page 5 The Most Innovative Design Is the Right Choice In June 2006, Logitech presented a series of models to focus groups in California, France and Germany. Participants were presented with straight keyboards, curved keyboards, wave keyboards, straight-with-a-wave keyboards, and curve + wave + palm rest keyboards.
  • Page 6 Once molded, these key caps are collected into seven different bags and manually inserted on the product lines by operators, one by one. But the key stamping process wasn’t the only element that caused Logitech to alter the manufacturing process.
  • Page 7 For the research and development, and the design, manufacturing and packaging of the Wave keyboard, Logitech brought together the unique talents of people working in the U.S., Ireland, Switzerland, Taiwan and China. Their worldwide effort speaks to the ambitions for this project: To make a comfortable keyboard available to the masses of people around the world.