HP Keyboard
  home | services | products | resources | forum
 
about us | contact   
Particle
November 25th, 2024



www.theparticle.com
Main
Services
Products
Resources
Forum
About Us
Contact

Particle Revelation
Hardware Destruction
Quotes
Humor [alpha]
Murphy's Laws

Programming
Java
Java Data Structures
C# Data Structures
Database Design
Graphics Tutorial
Artificial Intelligence

Downloads
SQLRunner
Graphics Tutorials
Hacking Tutorials
Java Applets
MIDI Music
Gov & Misc Docs

Games
Chess Game
Asteroids
Tic-Tac-Toe
Tetris

Applets
DRAW!
FlightBox
pWobble 3D
pRunner
NYU HWs
Swarms
Geometry
Chaos
Machine Learning

Academic
CISC 7700X
CISC 7512X
CISC 7500X
IT Mngmt (old)
SW (old)
Networks (old)
OS (old)
AI (old)
App Dev (old)
C++ (old)
OOP (old)
Web (old)
Perl (old)
DBMS (old)
ProgLangs (old)
PHP (old)
MltMedia (old)
Oracle (old)

Misc
Privacy Policy
Publications
profphreak.com



HP Keyboard

In this episode, we will be destroying an HP USB Keyboard. Not exactly sure of the model (it only has serial numbers on the back). The keyboard originally came with an HP Pavilion PC, and was never used. (was replaced on day one by a Microsoft Natural Keyboard).

Here is our victim now:

Looks innocent, doesn't it? But this demon can cause ergonomic injuries if used improperly [and properly, but they won't tell you that!]. Hmm... Is breaking it considered an improper use?

Anyway, I won't blame my arthritis on this keyboard since I've never used it... Whatever.

This is a "Multimedia" keyboard, with all sorts of buttons (even for shopping! wow!), volume control, and even has two USB ports on the sides (probably to plug in the mouse we've totaled in the last episode).

  

For our adventure, we will require some tools. Our trusty 4-in-1 screw driver:

And by popular demand a ...hammer... Umm... No. Not a hammer, but something a bit more American... a baseball bat... (Yey! Office Space!!!)

We don't want to pointlessly destroy it without learning stuff about it. So lets begin by carefully taking it apart, unscrewing it...

  

As we shall later see, this is the most screwy keyboard ever. It took a good few minutes to take out dozens of these small screws that are holding this thing together. Once done, we can rip the keyboard apart.

The whole keyboard is just one small main board connected to two USB collection circuits.

  

Lets continue with our unscrewing...

 

This keyboard was designed to be very strong, and survive just about anything (except this assault). It has over 60 screws holding it together! (this is not an exaggeration, I actually counted them!)

The keys of the keyboard type on a thin, three layer, plastic circuit...

Wonder if it still works? ...

It does, it does work! It's pretty tough to type though. The plastic circuit is VERY sensitive.

Typing gets a bit easier with the plastic thingy on top...

Hate these keyboards with all the sensitive buttons; accidentally managed to touch something on that circuit that instantly shutdown the computer. Anyway, one last thing before we take our revenge on it...

This keyboard is a bit different from all other keyboards (not only in that it has 60 screws holding it together). The individual keys are part of a lattice that holds all of them together, so even if you take the keyboard apart, they don't fall all over the place (unlike some older keyboards).

 

Anyway, enough learning for one day. It's time for destruction.

Hmm... I wonder if it has any idea of what's about to happen...

BANG BANG BANG!!!

 

Well, not exactly BANG BANG BANG. The plastic tended to bend rather than to break, so it was quite a challenge to get these pieces to actually break.

That's no reason to stop the mutilation however... especially to those pesky Windows keys :-)

   

This is for all the times you've ruined my Quake game!!!

  

Nothing was spared. Not even that cool flat keyboard we've played around with earlier...

 

Anyway. That's it. Nothing more to break. We've reduced this wonder of technology into a pile of garbage.

Until next time...

© 1996-2024 by End of the World Production, LLC.