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Televideo 995-65 keyboards
The Televideo 995-65 is a computer terminal released in 1994 that used various “personalities” for compatibility with ASCII, ANSI, and PC terminal applications. It was used in bank teller, fast food, and point-of-sale applications. 1)
Description
The terminal came with three different standard keyboard layouts - an “AT” keyboard, an “ASCII” keyboard, and a “DEC Style VT-320” keyboard. 2), along with the AT and DEC style keyboards advertised as having layouts for US English, UK English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Danish, and Swedish. 3) It is presumed that all keyboards shared the same construction and switches.
All documented examples of these keyboards used linear Hi-Tek Series 725 switches - with white sliders for main keys, and a neon-green slider for the space bar; and were fitted with thick PBT keycaps with dye-sublimated legends.
Documented examples of these keyboards lacked labels or stickers on the bottom case. The top of the PCB is branded “TELEVIDEO ANSI SCAN” and lacks any other branding; but it is presumed that NMB Hi-Tek manufactured these keyboards.
Construction
Case and Internals
The keyboard case is a two-piece design, with a top and bottom case. Both parts are made out of ABS plastic. The bottom case has flip-out feet that clip into pegs in the bottom casing. The two halves are secured by two screws and eight plastic clips in total. The screws go into brass sockets located on the left and right sides of the top case; whilst the top and bottom edges of the keyboard each have four plastic clips from the top case that hook into ledges on the bottom case.
The case includes a forehead that provides space on the PCB for the attached cable and the keyboard's microcontroller. Externally, the forehead provides space for either a Televideo badge - with a rectangle insert indicating the location of said badge - or a plastic write-on strip that allows the user to write down various program functions on the function keys, both on their own and when pressed whilst holding the Shift key.
The keyboard assembly consists of a single-sided PCB with a black steel mounting plate. The assembly sits on top of posts along the surface of the bottom casing, and is secured using pegs on the left and right side that interface with notches in the mounting plate. Documented examples have three switch types present in the assembly - a standard switch for the alphanumeric keys that uses a white slider, a standard switch with a different bottom housing to integrate a stablizer wire that clips between the switch and mounting plate, and a spacebar switch variant with a neon-green slider and a heavier weighting.
AT
The AT keyboard uses the “Asian” 101-key layout. The keyboard could be ordered with layouts for US English, UK English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Danish, and Swedish.
ASCII
The ASCII keyboard uses a variation of the ASCII layout. It features 16 function keys lined up in a row, a bank of 10 “Editing keys” in a grouping of two rows, each with 5 keys.
DEC Style
The DEC keyboard is based off of the layout of the DEC LK201 keyboard 4); but is modified with dedicated buttons for Escape, Backspace, Line Feed, and two dedicated Alt keys. This keyboard was available with US English, UK English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Danish, and Swedish layouts.