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suddenlymatt

890 items sold
33 followers

About

Suddenly Matt, LLC. specializes in producing niche market technology products.
Location: United StatesMember since: Nov 02, 2002

All feedback (2,541)

pro-auto168 (29892)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past month
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
pro-safety2009 (103167)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended pro-safety2009
pickournos (17794)- Feedback left by buyer.
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Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
infusionkey (767)- Feedback left by buyer.
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Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
10gtek_transceivers_au (2627)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Good buyer, fast payment, good communicated. Thank you.
megan000188- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (14)
Nexus 6P Spring Clip Belt Holster - Case Free Design Encased® Lifetime Black New
Jun 05, 2018
Please read before you purchase this!
After wanting a simple phone clip to stop my phone from sliding out of my shirt pocket, this looked like the way to go. But I neglected to pay attention to a couple very important things: 1) it fully obstructs the charge port in any orientation. You have to remove the phone to charge it. 2) It fully obstructs the headphone jack in either position, too. If you're needing a clip that'll just hold the phone in place and don't care about charging port or headphone jack access, then it's not a bad holder at all. The clip rotates 90* either way (180* total, skinny-ways), it holds the phone solidly, and is reasonably simple to install or remove. But with just a touch more engineering (holes for the charge port, and the headphone jack), this could have been an awesome clip with no drawbacks.
Zoom Model 2949 56K Dualmode External Modem 56 Kbps, Dial-Up, Serial (RS-232)
Jun 05, 2018
Classic hardware!
This is a very standard modem with very standard features. It's external, requires a serial port, a power adapter, and a wired phone line. We used to use these back in the 90's for internet and multiplayer gaming. This modem is 56k v.90, so it's about as fast as a dial-up modem can be. Is this the BEST external modem? Probably not. Is it the worst? Far from it! This modem was relegated to fax duties with HylaFAX+ and worked very well for that.
***HOT DEAL**Logitech Wireless All-In-One Keyboard TK820 with Built-In Touchpad
Jul 18, 2016
TK820 hits and misses in key areas
TL;DR: Nice design, good range, expensive feel but a huge miss in "key" areas, due to the lack of a ins/del/home/end/pgup/pgdn cluster. I needed a keyboard for a media PC that is about 15feet from the sitting position. The bluetooth unified adapter works fantastic, and has yet to lose a connection. Very robust. The keyboard's design is nice, but it feels like it's trying too hard. I would have preferred to have 2 mouse buttons and a scroll wheel, along with the neat forward/backward buttons most media-oriented mice have. This has them, but they take priority over the function keys (laptop style; you have to hold Fn to get a function key to perform its original function.... odd. It makes accessing low-level functions like entering the BIOS into a game of finger-twister). Also, look as I may, but this board completely lacks page up/down, home, end, insert, and delete functionality, which I REALLY would liked to have had, even if they were Fn-bound to the 4-way arrows (which they aren't.) The board is sleek and thin (About 1cm at the thinnest, and about 5cm at the thickest portion, where the 4 "AA" batteries go. It is made mostly of a high-quality plastic/aluminum. The touchpad is needlessly large, and feels nice; like a cheap version of the ones found on MacBooks, it feels cool to the touch and is solid. The pad itself can be pressed down for a left-click, or the standard trackpad gestures to scroll, right-click, etc... Personally, I would have scaled down the trackpad about 30%, added at least 4 mouse buttons (right, left, forward, backward), and also added the inert/delete/home/end/pgup/pgdn cluster. In the spare space to the left of the newly-scaled trackpad, I would have moved the media function keys to their own special and intuitive cluster, and restored the Function keys' functionality. Also, I'd include a toggle for a laptop-style numeric pad. I can't comment on battery life, as I've only owned it for a couple of weeks. It goes into a seamless sleep-mode when not in use, and even offers an on/off switch right and up above the backspace key.