![]() I found the MX Keys to be more comfortable during long writing sessions. ![]() The Magic Keyboard with Touch ID’s keys are a little flatter. The MX’s keys have an indented surface that cradles your fingertips when typing. When typing on the MX Keys Mini for Mac, the keys feel a bit softer than the Magic Keyboard, but the travel distance is about the same. Also, the MX Keys for Mac is available only in silver with white keys, while the universal version is available in Black, Graphite, Pale Gray, and Rose. And while this review looks at the MX Keys Mini for Mac, Logitech does make a version that works on both Windows and Mac, the MX Keys Mini, which is the same keyboard except it has Option/Start and Command/Alt keys instead of dedicated Option and Command keys instead. Like the Magic Keyboard, the MX Keys Mini for Mac is a compact keyboard-it’s essentially Logitech’s MX Keys keyboard but it’s just the main keyboard. I’ve found that a very good alternative to Apple’s Magic Keyboard is Logitech’s new MX Keys Mini for Mac-though it has one missing major feature that owners of recent Macs will want. I don’t like the way they feel while typing, so I turn to third-party keyboards. Even though I’ve been using Apple keyboards for decades, I don’t like them.
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