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"Plugging anything in required caution; a hasty, blind reach behind the tower to reconnect the keyboard could easily bend the fragile pins inside the round PS/2 connector, leading to delicate surgery with the tip of a pencil."

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PS/2 connectors were actually not bad in terms of durability... The big plastic key in the centre prevented you from jamming it in with the wrong orientation and then twisting, which would have bent pins for sure. Finding the correct orientation was an issue however.

PS/2 connectors can still be found on many brand new motherboards, which is a boon for those of us still using Model-M's.

> Disclaimer: I wrote this on a basic text editor which has spell and grammar check, presumably powered by some sort of AI/LLM tech. The ramblings, and run-on sentences, are all mine.

I think I want this at the bottom of the article, “Words are my own; spell checking and grammar tools probably had AI.”

Guys, these AI disclaimers are ridiculous. If you don't like it, don't pay for it. Oh wait...
Fair enough. I've read a bit too much LLM written non-tech posts these year that I'm a bit fatigued. I figured people would just want to know this upfront. Moved it to the bottom now.
Technically a 666.66666... mhz machine, but that's being pedantic.
Of course, the 266 (and others) had the same fraction, but didn't have the disadvantage of abs(mhz) being a magic number that might offend some religious types.