Logitech Wireless Keyboard K350
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| List Price: | $54.99 |
| Price: | $49.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
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Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
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Average customer review:Product Description
With its distinctive Wave design and Constant Curve layout, Logitech Wireless Keyboard K350 guides your hands into just the right position. You’ll type with ease and confidence, but without having to re-learn typing on an unfamiliar layout.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #346 in Consumer Electronics
- Brand: Logitech
- Model: 920-001996
- Dimensions: 2.00" h x 10.00" w x 20.00" l, 3.75 pounds
Features
- Wave design with Constant Curve layout: Curved layout guides hands into just the right position
- Ease and comfort: Cushioned palm rest makes work easier and fun more fun
- Longer battery time: This feature gives you up to three years of battery life. (Battery life based on a calculation of an estimated 2 million keystrokes per year in an office environment. User experience may vary.)
- Logitech Unifying receiver: The tiny Unifying receiver stays in your notebook, so there's no need to unplug it when you move around. And you can easily add compatible wireless mice and keyboards to the same wireless receiver
Editorial Reviews
From the Manufacturer
![]() | ![]() | Logitech Wireless Keyboard K350—a comfort curve without the learning curve With its distinctive Wave design and Constant Curve layout, Logitech Wireless Keyboard K350 guides your hands into just the right position, allowing you to type with ease and confidence. It features a cushioned palm rest, up to three years of battery life, and reliable wireless connection. |
![]() | ![]() | Different setups. Different locations. One tiny Logitech Unifying receiver. The Logitech Unifying receiver is part of a new family of products that brings you wireless freedom and convenience without the hassle of multiple receivers. It's easy to pair up to six Unifying compatible devices, all to the same tiny receiver that never needs to leave your laptop. Now it's even more convenient to move around and work at the office, at home or on the road.
Create The Combo That Works For You. |
Key Features
![]() | ![]() | A place for your palms A cushioned palm rest helps position hands comfortably and properly on the keyboard.
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![]() | Go for up to three years You'll get up to three years of battery life, practically eliminating the need to change batteries, as well as the hassle, expense, and waste that go with it. An indicator light helps you keep an eye on your charge level.
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![]() | Plug it. Forget it. Add to it. | |
![]() | Advanced 2.4 GHz wireless Logitech Advanced 2.4 GHz wireless connectivity gives you the reliability of a cord plus cordless convenience and freedom. It also offers fast data transmission, virtually no delays or dropouts, and 128-bit AES encryption.
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Which Logitech Keyboard Is Right For You?
| ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||||||||
| diNovo Keyboard for Notebooks | Illuminated Keyboard | Wireless Keyboard K350 | Wireless Keyboard K340 | Compact Keyboard K300 | |||||||||
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| Product Information | |||||
| Keyboard | Wireless | Corded | Wireless | Wireless | Corded |
| Integrated Number Pad | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Connection Features | |||||
| USB Support | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |
| Wireless Protocol | Advanced 2.4 GHz | N/A | Advanced 2.4 GHz | Advanced 2.4 GHz | N/A |
| Wireless Security | 128-Bit AES Encryption | N/A | 128-Bit AES Encryption | 128-Bit AES Encryption | N/A |
| Keyboard Design | |||||
| Enhanced Comfort | ![]() | ||||
| Ultra-Thin Profile | ![]() | ![]() | |||
| Palm Rest | Integrated | Integrated | Integrated Cushion | Integrated | |
| Backlighting | ![]() | ||||
| Adjustable Height/Angles | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
| Operational and Navigational Controls | |||||
| Enhanced F-Keys | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Launch Calculator Key | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
| Search Web | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |
| Communication Controls | |||||
| Launch E-Mail | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |
| Launch Web Browser | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
| Launch IM / VOIP | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
| System Support | |||||
| Certified for Windows Vista | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Windows XP | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Mac OS X | ![]() | ![]() | |||
Create The Combo That Works For You
Logitech has a range of products that you can connect via a single, tiny receiver you leave plugged in to your notebook. Mix. Match. Unify. Now you can create your perfect laptop workstation, wherever you work.
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |||
Logitech Wireless Keyboard K340 | ![]() | Logitech Wireless Keyboard K350 | ![]() | Logitech Wireless Mouse M505 (Silver) | ![]() | Logitech Wireless Mouse M505 (Red) |
![]() | ![]() | What's In The Box?Package ContentsSystem Requirements Windows-based PC only |
Customer Reviews
feels great! lots of programmable options (w/ software)
My K350 came yesterday and I'm quite pleased, in contrast to the other review. I've been using PCs since 1980, so I've typed on a bunch of keyboards, all the way back to the original IBM PC and a handful of DEC and other terminal boards. This is the first "wave" keyboard that I've used, but not the first with an attached palm rest.
GENERAL:
The feel of the entire unit is solid, and the keys seem to have a good response. (It's not as solid as my Northgate OmniKey, but nobody has made mainstream metal keyboards for over a decade.) The keys seemed to be spaced and sized much like any other keyboard, then I measured. The keys on my basic Dell keyboard are 3/4" square, nearly flat, and touch each other. These keys are separated, deeper like an older keyboard, and just about 5/8" square, though there is enough space between them that they are almost 3/4" from center to center. My conclusion is that these keys are, indeed, typical in size and spacing. The wave shape makes the positions a bit different fom what I'm accustomed to, but not enough to cause me problems.
The palm rest is lightly padded and I find it quite comfortable, though for me it is a wrist rest as I have small hands -- 6 1/2" from base to fingertip. There are two feet on the back for either a 4° or an 8° angle lift. BTW, when the keyboard is flat on the desk the front edge of the palm rest is 7/8" off the desktop in the middle where you wouldn't have your hands. Where your hands go, it is 5/8" off the desktop. I must also say that my wrists are beginning to feel a wee bit chaffed, but, since I don't do that much typing any more, my habits have become lax, and I know I'm moving my hands around when I should be leaving them in place. Looking at the bottom, I'd say that the palm rest could be removed and recovered with other material, but you would have to put it back on or the base of the keyboard would stick out.
DIMENSIONS: about 19" by 10 1/8" at the widest part of the wave.
POWER: 2 AA batteries, included; on/off switch on the underside; battery monitor when you press a function key, but the picture is misleading. The picture looks as if the battery light shows you the level of power, which it does not. However, there is a tab in the SetPoint software that will at least tell me that my brand new batteries are "good." Right now the battery light is green. When you first power up the keyboard, the battery light will turn green if the batteries are good. I tried putting in a couple used batteries to see if the light has another color to tell you the batteries are low, but I couldn't find a combo that gave me anything but green or no light.
PROGRAMMABILITY:
The black set of keys at the top center that control volume and pause/play/stop/ff/rev cannot be reprogrammed.
Ten of the 12 function keys (document, spreadsheet, calendar, 3 unassigned, browser, messaging, e-mail, search) can be reprogrammed using the SetPoint software; only F11 (battery light) and F12 (CD/DVD eject) cannot. You can program the keys to: launch a program; open a file, a folder or a web page; show a custom menu; perform a keystroke combination; do nothing (very useful if you don't want to perform the default action but haven't anything else to assign to the key); or perform another of the preprogrammed actions. When you launch a program with a function key, the name of the program flashes on the screen briefly to tell you what you just started. The original set up is that you have to press the "Fn" key at the bottom right with the function key to get the special, programmed function; however, you can change it so that you press a function key alone to get a special function and have to press Fn to get the normal function key.
Of the 8 silver specialty keys, only the zoom key on the left cannot be reprogrammed. The silver "PC" key on the top far right can be changed, but in a more limited fashion. It will sleep the PC, restart, shut down, log off, or do nothing. The other 6 can be programmed the same way as the 10 function keys. That gives you a total of 16 keys that can be very flexibly programmed. I find that quite useful.
You can choose to disable the caps lock, num lock, scroll lock, Windows start, and insert keys so that you can't accidentally press them. You can also choose to have a sound play when you do press any of them, and/or have a notice flash briefly on the screen to tell you what state they are now in. There are no num lock or caps lock lights on the keyboard itself to tell you when they are on.
RECEIVER EXTENDER CABLE: I wondered about that one and couldn't find info on Logitech's site. It's a 5' USB cable that you can use to extend the range of the receiver plug. Plug the receiver in this cable, then the cable into the PC, stretch out the cable and your PC is now that much closer to your keyboard. On the other hand, I walked to the end of my room, about 15', and reception was still fine without the extender cable. I presume it's intended for use with large screen TV setups in big rooms or projection/lecture setups, because by the time you get far enough away to need it you can't see a normal PC screen. Well, *I* can't, anyway.
"UNIFYING": If you actually read the info about the devices with "unifying" technology on either the Amazon pages or the Logitech site, you will quickly realize that Logitech's "unifying" technology is new and does not work with older mice and keyboards, and that there are only a few keyboards and mice out for it at the moment. Oh, well. I guess I wasn't surprised at all that because I already had two Logitech wireless mice and neither worked with the other's receiver. I thought that was dumb till I realized that if they did speak to each other's receivers and you had two PCs in the same room using those mice, might both mice be controlling the cursors on both machines? No doubt the new tech has a way of identifying the devices and linking them to a particular machine to prevent a problem like that. I have an Anywhere mouse on order, which is one of the ones that has "unifying," so I'm delighted with the idea. Not only fewer cords, but also fewer USB dongles. Life is good.
Still one of the best keyboards you can buy
I've probably used hundreds of various types of keyboards over the years and to this day, I still find the Logitech keyboards to be the best overall in value and performance. This is also why most of the keyboards I use on my systems are usually Logitech branded. The K350 is of course no exception. This particular model would be the 4th one I have ordered, including the wired, wireless, and wireless keyboard/mouse combo model. Logitech has just about any version or combination you are looking for.
Unlike the original split "ergo" style keyboards, the new ergo keyboards tend to have more a curve as this one does. Logitech stays with this new trend, except they have added a "wave" across the keys. I'm not sure how much this adds to the ergonomics or typing experience, but I've found I can type for hours without getting tired or finding that I have to take a break. So I'm going to assume that it works.
All of the keys are exactly where you'd expect them to be and are easy to find. This includes everything from the Delete key to the various multimedia keys to adjust volume, and even Windows Aero 3D Task hotkey. The keys have a nice solid feel to them and are very response. With one of the keyboards, the top row of multimedia keys did get stuck a few times, possibly due to not being used enough. This still shouldn't happen and hasn¡¦t been seen with any of the other 3 keyboards. There is also a rubber type material on the palm rest which is a nice touch. Although after extensive use, it does tend to get a bit shiny from the grease in your hands and will require cleaning. I still haven't been able to clean it 100%.
The only other problem I've noticed with the last 2 K350 model keyboards I purchased, including this one, is that they were "warped" out of the box. I had to grab the keyboard at both ends and twist it so that it would sit level on the desk. That is certainly not the quality I've come to expect from Logitech. Hopefully this is something that has been or will soon be addressed in future builds.
Pros:
* Very comfortable keyboard
* Handy multi-media controls
* Good value for the features you get
* Logitech's reliable 2.4 GHz wireless connection
* Keys have a solid feel
Cons:
* Some potential build quality issues
* Stain prone palm rest
Overall I rate the K350 4 out of 5 stars due to some recent build quality issues. Otherwise I do consider it highly recommended.
Be wary of "unifying" (UPDATED WITH FULL(er) REVIEW)
I've ordered this product and haven't received it yet, but I want to give a warning to folks. The "unifying" function only works on a select few devices. Although the Logitech website and the product descriptions everywhere say that it will work with a huge number of Logitech's wireless devices (certainly the older ones, right? WRONG), it only works with a small handful of products--all of which are new.
As of this writing, the K350 is the only wireless keyboard that works with unifying. I found this out the hard way when I was unable to use my 3200 MX cordless keyboard with the unifying receiver that came with my Performance Mouse MX. Total bummer. Especially since the 3200 MX is a great business keyboard. Obviously if you buy this keyboard, the unifying receiver won't work with your non-unifying mice. Check out the Logitech website BEFORE you buy to make sure you know what works and what doesnt.
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UPDATED BELOW AFTER RECEIPT:
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Well, I received the keyboard and have been using it for about a week (see previous "review" re unifying).
The keyboard is, quite simply put, largely an ordinary keyboard. The "wave" form is not very pronounced, and it is not close enough to overcome the letdowns over my MX 3200 keyboard.
The keyboard looks and feels like a slightly-better-than-cheap keyboard. The typeface on the keys does not give it a professional, business look, unlike the MX 3200 keyboard's typeface, look, and design.
One of my biggest gripes is the height of the wrist rest. Its slope does not taper down gently to the desk, but instead starts seemingly over a full inch from the desk (take a peak at the 4th and 6th Amazon photo of the keyboard to get a sense of it). The thing is really quite high and takes much getting used to. The MX 3200's wrist/palm rest, by contrast, slopes all the way down to the desk nicely and evenly, connecting with the desk in a fluid slope, and its profile is much lower, making it ergonomically much better feeling, not to mention better looking.
The change from the sensor zoom to the push-button zoom on the left side of the keyboard is a welcome change, as simply letting a sheet of paper tough the left side of the keyboard on the MX 3200 will result in your document zooming in or out--way too sensitive to the point that it's better to disable it. But I found using the zoom on this keyboard actually quite useful.
As I mentioned in the prior post, I bought a Logitech Performance Mouse MX. My desktop-replacement laptop has only 2 USB ports, so I really had to purchase a Unifying-compatible keyboard so as not to use up both ports. If there were actually any choices for cordless keyboards that worked with Logitech's new "Unifying" receiver, then I'd consider buying something else. There will no doubt be an actual business keyboard that looks good coming out over the next year or two as Logitech expands its Unifying line. But since there is only one other wireless keyboard that uses the Unifying receiver--the K340 (which actually looks better than the K350 but doesn't appear to have any dedicated media keys)--the K350 is, unfortunately, the only choice.


























