Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black
Original price was: $69.99.$21.99Current price is: $21.99.
Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black Price comparison
Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black Price History
Price History for Logitech - Keys-To-Go Keyboard for iPhone, iPad, and Apple TV with Durable Spill-Proof Design -...
Statistics
Current Price | $21.99 | January 8, 2025 |
Highest Price | $21.99 | October 15, 2024 |
Lowest Price | $21.99 | October 15, 2024 |
Last price changes
$21.99 | October 15, 2024 |
Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black Description
- Ultra-portable wireless keyboard for all iOS devices including iPad, iPhone, Apple TV and more: Ultra-slim, light, go-anywhere Bluetooth keyboard fits easily in a coat pocket, purse or briefcase
- Durable and spill-resistant: Wipe able Fabric Skin protects the keyboard from spills, dirt and drops
- Comfortable typing: Well-spaced, full-size keys with iOS shortcuts for fast, familiar, accurate typing on iPad
- Long-life rechargeable battery: Type for up to 3 months between charges (Based on 2 hours average usage per day)
- Simple setup: Pairs quickly and easily with iPad via Bluetooth connection
Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black Specification
Specification: Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black
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Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black Reviews (8)
8 reviews for Logitech Keys-To-Go Slim Bluetooth Keyboard – Black
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Larry B –
Very good but just a few little issues compared to my other Logitech K811 keyboard that’s better in lots of ways.
Pros:
Super slim and lightweight.
Long life per charge.
Great responsiveness.
Impressive key feel in spite of the small (slim) form factor.
Easy and accurate pairing.
Great standby performance. โ Other Bluetooth keyboards I’ve used take several seconds to reconnect when they power down to save battery, but this keyboard is always immediately responsive. Logitech does Bluetooth keyboards BEST!
Cons:
No “esc” button.
Can’t turn off the iPad screen from the keyboard.
No CapsLock LED.
Strange choice of iOS function keys. โ The first function key is like a home button. Fine. The second function key is a double-press version of the Home key. Really? That makes as much sense as having a “77” key for those times you need to type seventy-seven, but just want to press one key. Why no esc function key? You know how to program an esc key because I have one on my other Logitech keyboard.
My favorite Bluetooth keyboard is my Logitech K811. It can pair with my iPad, OR my iPhone OR my Mac by just pressing the appropriate button to switch between Apple devices. AWESOME! And it has an esc key which allows me to turn off my iOS device screens from the keyboard. The reason I bought keys-to-go too, is the super small form factor for travel with my iPad, and so I can take my iPad and keyboard on the road and still have a keyboard with my Mac.
But when all my iOS devices are on my desk/workspace at the same time, I can use the Logitech K811 and easily, quickly switch between devices with a simple button press.
Fabiola Dรญaz –
Muy buen producto, es cรณmodo, fรกcil y rรกpido de conectar, ligero pero resistente. Lo puedes llevar a cualquier lugar. Me encantรณ ๐ฅฐ
CBL –
Super slim. Hard to find ones this minimal if that’s what you’re after. Works well with iPad pro. Used over a week and haven’t needed to charge it once yet not even when I got it. Most Mac shortcuts are on here, not all though. Too bad there’s no ‘updatable software’ to help with that, but the search function button and the languages function button both bring up the same ‘search everything’ on iPad feature. Love the home button function key, and the shift+left/right arrow keys are perfect for selecting character by character. Also has a screenshot function key to use instead of holding down your iPad home button and lock button while attempting to use it almost ‘laptop style’ – avoids awkward way of taking screenshots. Connects to iPad in a split second every time. Very rarely lags, usually only when I’m typing like a mad man. It’s quite responsive. I got used to the size of keys (originally use Mac keyboard) very quickly. Only had it a week and don’t often make typos. I’m sure I’ll get better. I also has a function key to switch back and forth between itself and the on screen iPad keyboard, which actually comes in handy. Extremely light weight. Don’t notice it at all, soft maybe microfibre keys so they don’t scratch anything. Very quiet when pressing down. Quieter than tapping on screen keyboard. I love that I didn’t buy the Apple iPad pro keyboard with case, but instead separated the keyboard and case, so I can choose whether or not to bring keys-to-go with me depending on where I’m headed, and if I bring the keyboard it slips into the bag and its millimetres thick.
Sirocco –
These keyboard reviews have a very limited value because theyโre all so unnecessarily subjective. For example, the distance between the center of adjacent keys is never mentioned, even though this particular measurement is what determines whether or not a keyboard will provide maximum typing agility as provided by the standard size keyboard. This distance is 19.5 mm on the standard keyboard. The term โmini keyboardโ has been introduced to connote โportability,โ where the numeric keypad has been removed, AND where โ in some cases but not all โ the keys are also smaller. Removing the numeric keypad, and the keys to the immediate right of the letter keys, significantly reduces the size of the keyboard, but taking the extra step of making the keys smaller seems to offer little more advantage in portability while at the same time creating a big DIS-advantage: a cramped, compromised typing experience. I would expect โminiโ keyboard to exclusively describe this inferior, cramped experience, but unfortunately โminiโ is also used to describe keyboards having keys that are the full size and distance apart, 19.5 mm. This makes shopping for a keyboard almost impossible, if one is to realize their expectations of typing nirvana, without any buying and returning. It would make more sense if the industry simply described keyboards with full-sized keys but without the numeric keypads as portable, in which case โmini portableโ would have the additional meaning of the keys being reduced and therefore cramped, which would be useful to those whose priority was extreme lightness, where one simply can not afford the extra baggage. In which case a portable keyboard would be useful to anyone who simply wanted to reclaim some desk space without sacrificing typing agility โ which is a lot of us โ while at the same time being compact enough to pack in a small bag. In fact it seems that such a portable keyboard would be small and lightweight enough even where extreme portability is essential โ in which case the โmini portableโ keyboard would be relegated as useless to literally anyone. Because no matter how big or small the keyboard is generally, I need full-size keys. And itโs amazing just how small the keyboard can be while maintaining full-size keys! But without a standardized way to indicate these properties of a keyboard, what should be a simple thing becomes a journey, in which one needs to buy several keyboards to try for oneself.
Along this journey I discovered that I might actually prefer a keyboard with keys as close as 17 mm apart (measured from the center of adjacent keys), as found on the Logitech Keys-to-go. This is still much further apart than on all of the โmini portables.โ But it makes me think that even the standard keyboard should come in different sizes, since the size of our hands plays a big part in keyboard ergonomics. This is ironic because I was the fastest typist ever in my high school, including my typing class and all previous years. So you would think that the IBM Selectric was designed for someone with exactly my hands, but now I discover that 17mm is just as good or better? Note that I wear a large size glove, and my hands are 19.2 cm, exactly average for an adult man (measured from the tip of the middle finger, across the palm, to the right side of the wrist).
Now that keyboards come in different sizes, with no standard key size or spacing, other factors determine success with any one model: size of hands, Typing skill, the keyboard one is already accustomed to, and the extent to which a keyboard would be in the way when itโs not actually being used.
With that in mind Iโd like to compare 3 keyboards that I recently bought to use with my new iPad mini 4. They all worked for the few days I was testing them side by side. I kept the Logitech Keys-To-Go and returned the other two, mainly because the โkeys-to-goโ offers a full-size typing experience but is also whisper quiet. Itโs also practically weightless but that was not a factor in my decision to keep it, since my priority was whatever keyboard provides the best typing experience with my iPad mini 4.
1. The Logitech Keys-To-Go Ultra-Portable Bluetooth Keyboard for iPad, Black (920-006701). The keys are 17mm apart and is WHISPER quiet. If youโre typing in bed and your spouse is already asleep this wouldnโt wake them. This offers a โfull-sizeโ keyboard experience and also EXTREME portability. Only if you have thick fingers might this not be a good choice, unless extreme portability is the priority. The keys move downward about 1mm, but with no clickity-clack, more like a click as it might be heard through a layer of thin rubber, which is the case, so there is both a tactile and an auditory feedback, just much less than with a regular keyboard. Due to its unibody construction itโs quite durable and can be casually put on a bookshelf or in a backpack or suitcase, ready to grab when you need to do some real typing. Note that itโs not intended to replace the full-size keyboard you already use with your desktop computer.
2. Logitech K810 โ 19.5 mm between the center of adjacent keys, which lends itself to the FULL typing experience. This is as noisy as, and possibly more than, a regular keyboard. Nothing special, but it does look nice, so if noise isnโt an issue this would look very nice on your desk. I would consider this to be a full-size, regular keyboard but that uses Bluetooth. Could be a desktop replacement.
3. Anker Ultra Compact Slim Profile Wireless Bluetooth Keyboard for iOS, Android, Windows and Mac. 19.5 mm between the center of adjacent keys, so calling it โultra compact slimโ is outrageously misleading, hence my call for a less subjective and more standardized nomenclature among keyboard manufacturers. This is twice as noisy as the Logitech K810. This is a noisy keyboard. It made a thumping sound on the kitchen countertop. If someone is typing on this in the next room you will hear them. You canโt use this if someone in the house is trying to fall asleep or is sleeping. Even the Logitech K810 makes above average noise for all keyboards but the Anker is twice as loud as this!
The biggest difference among these three keyboards is the clickity-clack noise they make. The Anker is just plain noisy.
Of the three I kept the Logitech Keys-To-Go and returned the other two. I would even consider getting a second Keys-To-Go, for the sake of being future-proof. At $49, this seems like a very good price, considering it retails for $69 and higher elsewhere. It seems like a โvery goodโ keyboard for anyone who wants the full-size keyboard experience in a reduced form factor, and a โmust haveโ if you travel a lot or only use a keyboard infrequently and prefer a really clean desktop.
Hopefully this will make your keyboard buying decisions easier.
Siddhita s. –
I love how this keyboard is easy to connect and didn’t drain its battery as fast as others. Easy to use and the right size. You dun need to bring big of a bag to carry this keyboard.
suareznd –
This keyboard is perfect for exactly what I and likely youโre hoping it will be! A great portable keyboard to use when you donโt want to have to take your laptop with you. I have an iPad mini, and was wanting a keyboard I could use poolside, on the beach, or even in the office when Iโm also using my laptop but need another work station. This thing is really great. Itโs made of a rubbery plastic so nothing can get โinsideโ of it (say sand, water, etc). It seems pretty indestructible. You can wipe it off with a cloth to clean it. The keystrokes are always reliable and I NEVER make mistakes on it. Other people have commented that you do need to push a little harder than a normal keyboard, but honestly, itโs not a big deal. It does exactly what I hoped it would, and it does it well. The Bluetooth is always reliable and instantly connects when I turn it on, every single time.
Siddhita s. –
Love this keyboard ๐. IT IS AMAZING! Very thin, 100% spil proof, though I brought one for iPhone (ios) I can still use it for android tablet and phone. And it is even smaller than my Samsung s6 lite tab. 10,000 rs worth it! Very portable also. And comes with a stand for phone and tab.
Nuris –
This is the third one of these keyboards I’ve bought. Some of the keys on the first one became unresponsive, and the on-off switch on the second one died. In my view, neither of them lasted as long as they should have before developing mechanical problems. Neither had been abused in any way – I tend to look after my devices.
Shortly after I bought the third one on impulse, I did a bit of research and decided that the iClever folding keyboard might be a better fit for my purposes. I’ve been using the iClever keyboard since it arrived in lieu of the Logitech one, and the Logitech one is sitting unloved in its box in a drawer. If I’d done my research before buying it, I probably wouldn’t have bought it. Maybe I’ll sell it on eBay, or maybe I’ll just keep it as a back-up if the iClever one gives me grief.
The iClever device folds down to a smaller footprint, is much sturdier, and the keys are much more responsive – like the keys on a real keyboard. It is, however, a bit bulkier and you can’t sit it on your lap like the Logitech device. Whether you pick one or the other will depend on your circumstances.
If the Logitech device hadn’t been so prone to failure I may not have bothered to go looking for alternatives. It’s a pity, because, generally, it’s been a useful little device that I carry with me when I’m travelling light and need to be able to type something more than a few words on my phone. Its all-too-ready inclination to fail has been its downfall.