My recent job brought me - in a session of procrastination - to the tool that changed my life for the better: Logseq. You may wanna checkout Obsidian, too. Both are pretty similar tools with a few differences in style.
Imagine your own Wiki with the addition of a daily journal and other handy features. You can take notes to organize your whole life and everything is crosslinked.
What you are looking for is tactile feedback. There are switches with a tactile bump - which are more on the silent side - and there are clicky switches - which are pretty loud, but they also offer even more tactile feedback.
The switches with only a tactile bump behave almost like linear switches, but you can feel a little bump (higher resistance) when pushing down a key.
Clicky switches have a so called click bar. They are spring loaded and they trigger themselves right after their "tactile bump". This behaviour comes close to your keyboard. However, clicky switches are very loud because of their click sound.
I have tried the K5 Pro (tactile), recently. It feels good, but you may accidently miss-type during the first hours of using. The spring force is a little weak.
Because that's always been my primary browser. But I like to use different profiles for each web service I registered at. Switching profiles on Firefox takes some extra steps, so I used Chromium and now Vivaldi.
My recent job brought me - in a session of procrastination - to the tool that changed my life for the better: Logseq. You may wanna checkout Obsidian, too. Both are pretty similar tools with a few differences in style.
Imagine your own Wiki with the addition of a daily journal and other handy features. You can take notes to organize your whole life and everything is crosslinked.