I *think* the ones I prefer are therefore TKL in that nomenclature... I usually just call them "mini" or "compact". The ones that advertise as having an "embedded numpad" which I never ever use or need.
See --> Adesso or SolidTek ACK-595, pretty much my ideal keyboard. PgUp/PgDn/Home/End on the right edge, up against the cursor (arrow) keys, with the rest of the usual modifiers (etc) in weird places because that's where they fit. The one in front of me right now (part of a homemade laptop that is the inspiration for my previously-and-briefly-mentioned AnyTop project) has only one Ctrl key, the tilde is between left Alt and spacebar, Ins and Del are between the context menu key and the cursor keys. PrtSc, Scroll Lock (what does that even do?) and Pause are up in the upper-right corner squashed in after NumLock.
OFF TOPIC RAMBLING RANT because I'll explode if I don't.
I'm writing novels now (yes, plural, one's being edited as I write the sequel... there's a story as to how that all came about) and that homemade laptop is my writing box. Of course I corked it with a kernel update last night (ironically I was trying to get it working *better*), so I've got to torture it back into working somehow... that's not going very well right now... see, the system unit is one of those Z3735F based stick computers (think Intel Compute Stick, but generic... this one's a MeeGoPad T02) and on Mint the sound, WiFi, and BT don't work by default because the chipsets are effin' weird. The cherry on the whipped cream on the cake is that this 64bit system has 32bit UEFI because eff everybody (sorry for implied language, but I'm kinda foaming at the mouth here) so Mint's default installer goes "WTF IS THIS S***?!?!?!" and dies when it tries to install the bootloader. Of course that's not the absolute last thing the installer has to do, so I've got to try and torture it into working or find another OS, which I don't want to do TBH. Mint is freaking *fast*.
I think I'm going to just set it aside for now. There's an Australian bloke calls himself Linuxium who's working on a solution... I think I'll let him work this crap out before I go bald. The downside is that he's taking his bloody dang time to get it going, and I've writing to do.
Maybe I'll try Ubuntu. I hear it's a little more graceful in how well it installs on this hardware. Besides, I want to look at that new Budgie desktop environment, just to see what it's like and to play around with it.
OK I'm done.