The most insane iPhone 15 Pro Max accessory ever is here،
You can easily slide your iPhone in and out of the keyboard case, which is a good thing because it makes your phone look huge. After all, you're literally adding a full physical QWERTY keyboard to the height of the phone.
Clicks introduces a full portrait physical QWERTY keyboard to iPhone in a world that has long moved away from physical phone keypads. Can we get used to pressing real, albeit tiny, keys again? Honestly, I do not know. I tried the Clicks keyboard and immediately found myself making a ton of errors, far more than with my usual typing on the virtual keyboard. It's safe to say that while Clicks has the potential to improve typing efficiency, you'll need at least some time to adjust to the cramped realities of physical QWERTY.
Clicks has those special touches that make a trivial product great and remarkable. Besides that striking bumblebee color (yellow), this keyboard also features standard iOS/Mac modifier keys like CMD and Globe. This allows you to enable keyboard shortcuts at the iPad/Mac level, such as CMD+H to go to the Home screen/minimize an app, CMD+Space to go to Spotlight search, Globe+N to open the notification shade or simply press Space or Shift+Space to move down or up on a web page.
The case itself is very lightweight, which is great because you don't want it to add unnecessary grams to an already quite heavy phone. Still, holding and tapping with Clicks doesn't seem to make the phone too heavy.
Let's be real: there is some original thinking involved in the creation of Clicks, and that, I think, is to be admired. The big question here, though, is whether typing on the tiny physical keys will ever be as quick and convenient as with the on-screen keyboard. Remember, we live in a very different and arguably faster-paced world than we did 10-15 years ago. Things have changed, our habits have changed and virtual keyboards have become much more intelligent and practical.
It's true that each of the Clicks' 36 small keys has been tuned to provide a balance of click, resistance and feedback to provide a pleasant typing experience, and it seems to me that the creators behind this particular keyboard have largely achieved their goals Design. However, for the short time I spent with it, I really thought I'd be better off sticking with my 21st century virtual keyboard. But I could be wrong. Perhaps, with more time, one would adapt to the small physical keyboard and begin to reap the benefits of typing quickly and seeing all of one's content on screen, unobstructed by a virtual keyboard. Perhaps we can even learn to live with the extra-long footprint the case requires.