Editors’ rating: 8.5

Logitech Cordless Desktop Wave Laser

By Rich Brown on 24/09/2007 Tagged with: cordless, desktop, laser, logitech, wave

The bottom line: Logitech's Cordless Desktop Wave stands out for its comfortable ergonomic touches, an easy learning curve, and its affordable price. We have minor issues with its hot keys -- the media controls get short shrift -- but heavy typists will like what Logitech has to offer here.

RRP: AU$179.95

The Good
  • Unique, comfortable key layout
  • Easy to get used to
  • Affordable compared to other ergo-minded keyboards
The Bad
  • Inconveniently placed media keys

If, like us, you're a hater of split keyboards, Logitech's new Cordless Desktop Wave offers a more palatable alternative if you want a little more comfort in your day to day typing. A cleverly designed key layout gently angles your wrists towards a less stressful typing position, without asking you to relearn how to type. The AU$179.95 price tag for the complete wireless keyboard and mouse set feels like a fair deal, especially compared to the traditional split keyboards that can run to AU$200 or AU$250. A few back steps in hot-key layout make us wish that Logitech had taken a more all-around approach in the Cordless Desktop Wave, but for its stated purpose, we found it easy to adjust to and comfortable to use.

Logitech incorporates two design elements into its Cordless Desktop Wave keyboard that make it stand out. The first is the so called "wave" design, which angles the edge keys, and the two rows in the middle up towards your fingers, and pushes the keys in the W, E, R, I, O, and P rows lower. The idea is to accommodate the different lengths of your fingers. The varying height of the keys is supposed to match up with each digit in a more natural fit.

The other unique twist is the keyboard's curve. It's similar in shape to Microsoft's Digital Entertainment Desktop 7000 and 8000, although with one major difference. Unlike the Microsoft keyboards, the letter keys on the Logitech Cordless Desktop Wave are all the same size. That means there's no stretched out G or H key in the middle row to get caught on. Such a simple design step actually makes a huge difference in how quickly you become comfortable with Logitech's board. With the Microsoft design, it takes much longer -- for touch typists, especially.

Those two features really form the bulk of what makes the Cordless Desktop Wave special. A semicushioned, nondetachable wrist rest also helps keep your wrists supported. And unlike either of Microsoft's Digital Entertainment Desktops or its recently revamped Natural Ergonomic Desktop 7000, all of which cost AU$190 or more, the AU$179.95 Logitech set has a reasonable price tag. It uses standard USB-based RF for its wireless connection and two regular AA batteries in the keyboard and the basic five-button laser mouse.

The only thing we'd change about the Cordless Desktop Wave is its media control keys. Rather than emulate most current digital media-oriented keyboards and put the play controls along the sides, Logitech went old-school on this model and ran the media keys along the top edge instead. We'll grant that the focus on typing might make the Cordless Desktop Wave best suited to an office environment (and Windows Vista, by way of an oversized Flip 3D hot key) but since Logitech went so far as to make the keyboard and mouse wireless, it might as well have taken the extra step and made the media keys easier to use when you're leaning back in front of your PC with the keyboard in your lap.

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