Previously on “A Writing Workstation”
A couple months ago I put together a fairly lengthy post about getting an old MacBook set up to be a writing machine. It was pretty encouraging, the idea of having a machine that would just be for one thing. At the time of writing that post I was diving pretty deep into my work and I realized I was not in a “writing mode,” but I was also hopeful a little writing would happen with this new, old laptop.
I’m not going to blame it all on this one thing, but at the end of that post I said:
I hate the feeling of typing on this thing enough that I’m considering an inexpensive Keychron keyboard to sit on my lap while I write. That doesn’t seem conducive to actually writing, though.
I wrote once with that laptop and never went back.
So I’ve been on the lookout for a different option. My finger has hovered over the order buttons for both a Freewrite Traveler and a used MacBook One. With the Freewrite, I was hesitant about the lag between typing and the screen, and lets not talk about the price versus general utility. For the latter, I suspected I would dislike the keyboard as much as I dislike the keyboard on my old MacBook Air.
Then came the Neo. With the education price1, I could get the Neo for less than the Freewrite Traveler. I don’t mind typing on my work MacBook Pro at all, so I’m pretty confident I’d be happy with the Neo keyboard. No reviews thus far have suggested keyboard problems.
So I decided to give it a shot, clicking the trade-in button for that MacBook Air in the process. I initially felt like embracing the low end and rolling with an Indigo 256 GB with no Touch ID. In the end, though, I figured I’d save my future self a few headaches with the 512 GB.
TIL at checkout: Education savings: Available to current and newly accepted college students and their parents, as well as faculty, staff, and homeschool teachers of all grade levels.