Just picked up a Filco Majestouch Minila R with Red switches. It's a convertible Bluetooth mechanical with multi-pairing and the option to run corded. It takes two AAs for power (battery life is 6 months, apparently), and it has a DIP switch on the back to change some of the key configurations around.
Switch options: Cherry MX Brown, Blue, Black, Red, or Silent Red.
mechanicalkeyboards.com
They come in three colors. Black with gray keycaps, a gray one with cyan-edged keycaps, and one with a cyan frame.
It has a fantastic key feel. Really solid, heavy keycaps and a very heavy frame. It just
feels dense, and each keystroke makes a satisfying "thwock" if you bottom out. The lack of arrow keys (You have to hold FN + ESDF or FN + ALT, WIN, DEL, /) is annoying, as is the very tiny space bar. The key profile is very DSA-like. The keycaps themselves are absolutely bizarre. Filco has come up with their own keycap style with interchangeable legends.
"Yo dawg, I heard you like keycaps, so we put a keycap on your keycap so you can type
while you type."
I fast-forwarded this video to the good part so you don't have to hear this bearded wacko with vitiligo on his hands yammer on about his sponsors.
Listen to how dense the plastic in this thing is. It's heavy. Even with the tiny layout, it tips the scales at a massive 782 grams. This "travel" keyboard could be used as a bludgeon in an emergency. The weight may be a drawback for some. Toss this in a backpack with all your other shit and watch as you slip a disc.
10/10 on build quality and overall presentation. 8/10 on usability. Would be 10/10 if they opted for a slightly larger layout with actual arrow keys and a full-size space. Like the original Minila, the DIP switch on the back lets you disable the function keys and convert them into extensions of the space bar, but that just feels weird and wrong, and you lose a lot of functionality that way. It would be nicer as a 65% keyboard than a 60%, IMHO.
If they did a full-size keyboard like this, I'm pretty sure I'd get that, too. Actually, there is a glaring lack of quality full-size Bluetooth keyboards out there.
They certainly exist, but honestly, we need more of them. Wireless boards have gotten good enough and low-latency enough that there's no excuse not to cut the cord even with your desktop and do away with some clutter. A lot of newer mobos have onboard Bluetooth, so you can free up some USB ports and simplify your cable management without even having to plug in a 2.4 GHz USB dongle. Changing batteries every half a year? Who gives a shit? Just pop in some Eneloop rechargeables and pop the dead ones into the charger. Done and done.