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TAPWITHUS Tap Strap 2 - Wearable Keyboard, Mouse & Air Gesture Controller (Small-2021)

  • Based on 173 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Monday, Nov 25
Order within 4 hours and 25 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Size: Small


Features

  • All-In-One, Plug & Play Wearable Keyboard, Mouse & Air Gesture Super Controller
  • Pair to Any Bluetooth 4.0+ Device - VR/AR/XR, Smartphone, Tablet, PC, SmartTVs, and More!
  • Ambidextrous - Works the Same for Right and Left Hand
  • Fully Customizable - Personalize your Tap using the TapMapper Tool
  • Use Existing TapMaps to Type in Other Languages, Play Games, Edit & More
  • USB C Fast Charging Port - Charges from Dead to Full in 2 Hours!

Brand: TAPWITHUS


Color: Black


Connectivity Technology: Usb


Special Feature: Wireless


Compatible Devices: Projector, Personal Computer, Tablet, Smartphone


Package Dimensions: 7.76 x 3.11 x 2.64 inches


Item Weight: 11.7 ounces


Batteries: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: March 18, 2020


Manufacturer: Tap Systems, Inc.


Country of Origin: USA


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, Nov 25

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Please read review including update. Initially was 1 star
Size: Small
I have ordered 2 straps. The first one arrived and worked for the test run so I put it away and charged it. When I pulled it out of the charging case to actually try the device it just vibrates for an extended period of time and only had the thumb tap (all other fingers no longer worked) I contacted the company and they are sending out a replacement. I decided to just order another one because the initial set up felt amazing and I figured why not have 2 in case this situation happens again. Well, immediately out of the box this strap didn’t work and did the same vibration as the first strap. I am currently waiting on the replacement to see if this is just going to be an ongoing thing. I will be sending back this second strap because you can’t depend on this item especially at that price! I will update when I receive my replacement. **UPDATE** The company was very quick to replace the non working Tap strap 2. The replacement they sent has worked beautifully. I have updated to 5 stars mainly because of the company being willing to work with me and exchange the item for a working item. The Tap strap itself gets a 4 star review, because sometimes it doesn’t register when making the exact finger gestures. I am missing some finger and hand functions from being c6/7 quadriplegic so there are actual gestures I’m unable to do, but there are ways to create gestures that work with your abilities. I’d say it’s not really disability friendly. It is extremely fun to learn though. I think there are pros for different people in different situations. I was mainly getting it thinking I could use it with my tablet so I’m not dropping my mouse constantly, but like I said it’s not really disability friendly. It’s more of a physical therapy game at the time and I think it is a great item when working properly. My conclusion is to purchase from the company themselves because all the straps I’ve ordered from here have not functioned properly. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2022 by Alicia Kessler

  • Definitely Shouldn't be sold as a Keyboard.
Size: Large
I'm a lifelong wearable computing enthusiast, and I'm old enough that most of my life the outlook has been bleak. This device is amazing...ly close to being usable. I'm a moron, and I was able to memorize the alphabet using their great tutorials and mnemonics in just a few days of 15-minute sessions. And then I ran into the wall, because this device cannot be used as a keyboard. If you double tap e, it inputs e, backspace, exclamation mark. If I am using a program that's not a word processor, which treats e, backspace, and exclamation as different commands, this will severely mess things up and be fundamentally unusable. I'm not smart enough, nor interested in trying to memorize a new set of taps for every single program, and even so, that doesn't solve the issue. And without double-tap and triple-tap working as they should, you don't have enough chords for the entire keyboard. The developers have been repeatedly told of this problem for literally years, and they just ignore it, claim it must work this way. If you don't like it, they say, disable double-taps and then you have a device that also isnt' a keyboard, because it hasn't even got most of the characters available. Can you imagine if your mouse had to perform the single-click action on every double-click? It wouldn't be useable except in EXTREMELY limited circumstances. This device is exactly that. If you imagine yourself using this to type in a word processor or messaging app AND NOTHING ELSE you'll love it. It's super cool and it's actually fun to type on. It makes me so sad that I can't make it my daily use keyboard because it's just ... not one, and the devs could fix it with one very tiny optional setting they steadfastly refuse to add, for *years.* Honestly. I'm only writing this because I'm super sad at what a useless device it is, and how much potential is just squandered. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2023 by CJ

  • Hard to learn, needs surface like youd have a keyboard on anyways.
Size: Large
I'll start with a quick positive, this is the most portable keyboard and mouse you can find. This is not an air keyboard by any means which I still somehow thought after watching a few videos, that's on me. This dramatically ruins the AR experience. You need a hard flat surface like a desk to use this on. If you're going to have a surface you might as well have a keyboard and mouse in most cases. If you had only one usable hand (or needed to free up one) this might be neat. That's the only circumstance I can see. However, you'd still likely be better off with a keyboard and mouse operated with one hand, even switching between the two...unless you're mobile! (You'll still need to find a surface to tap on) I don't often use my phone with still fixed ergononical surfaces, so it's useless there; and I always use my computers with still surfaces, where there are far more positives to a keyboard and mouse. The air mouse is impossible to use, as to click you move your wrist which is also how you move the pointer. The surface mouse is pretty cool, but requires more cooridination than a regular mouse, as your thumb indepentdantly is the x,y input. Your cursor/thumb is prone to move (not unlike in air mouse mode) when you move any of your other fingers to click, as your hand is all well connected together, unless you keep consistent pressure down on your thumb. This get tiring quickly, unlike a mouse meant to let your hand rest precisely a-top, not moving when you lift your hand or click a button. If you could disengage the mouse movement from your hand before clicking with an extra gesture it might work, but then you've gotta do multiple gesture to click once... Still works alright as a one handed keyboard once you learn it, with surprising accuracy (still less convenient then typing with one hand with fixed position hard keys if you can have space for a keyboard.) Other than for fun, there's just no real point in learning a less accurate, slower, less convenient device. It's a step in the right direction, but there's a few miles to go. Inputs devices can only be made better with consistency/accuracy#1, memorability/speed#2, ergonmics#3, features#4(extra function(fn) or macro buttons),Style#5 This device hits misses #1 Might actually win number #2 if I spent enough time (as I already know how to type, comparitively) Is uncomfortable after short term use so likely missing #3 for most people (experience may vary) #4 Has a world of possiblities if they provision the right type of macro software with a slick interace, not fully applicable yet #5 Looks Awesome, you could wear this around anywhere in this day and age and it would inspire only curiosity, it's very exciting product. (too bad it doesnt work just anywhere you want i.e. walking, at least just yet) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2022 by John Agbey

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