
How To Select Right Snap Dome Switch For Your Application
There is something oddly satisfying about a good button click. You know the feeling—it is crisp, responsive, and lets you know immediately that the device did what you wanted it

There is something oddly satisfying about a good button click. You know the feeling—it is crisp, responsive, and lets you know immediately that the device did what you wanted it

There is something oddly satisfying about a perfect “click.” It’s a small mechanical event, really, just a piece of bent steel snapping down and popping back up, but it communicates

When you pick up a TV remote, it doesn’t really matter if you have to press the volume button twice because the first press didn’t register. It’s annoying, sure, but

We live in a tactile world. Every day, your fingers interact with hundreds of interfaces. You unlock your car, you start the microwave, you adjust the volume on your headphones,

Building a gadget is one thing; making it feel good to touch is another. You can write the best code in the world, but if the buttons on the front

You probably pressed one five minutes ago. Maybe it was on your microwave, your car key fob, or the volume button on your headphones. We live in a world of

We have all been there. You are trying to change the channel on the TV, or maybe punch in a code on a security pad, and you just… aren’t sure.

It is a sinking feeling for any electronics designer. You get the prototype boards back, you assemble the unit, and you go to press the power button. Nothing. Or maybe

Open up a component catalog for tactile switches, and it can be a bit overwhelming. You see pages and pages of essentially the same silver disc, just with slightly different

In the world of electronics manufacturing, everyone is obsessed with shrinking things down. Phones get thinner, watches get smarter, and medical devices need to be portable enough to carry in