The new Archos Bluetooth keyboard for the iPad is tantalizingly close to awesome, which is part of what also makes it so frustratingly far from awesome.
First the good things. The Archos is super lightweight and almost paper thin. At a mere five millimeters thick and weighing only half a pound, it's considerably thinner and lighter than what I would consider the best iPad keyboard currently available, the Logitech Ultrathin Keyboard Cover. Despite its svelte profile, the Archos feels sturdy, and thanks to the aluminum backing, it doesn't flex and bend the way plastic backings might. The model I tested displayed some minor warping that caused it to pull off the iPad by just a hair when used as a cover, but that may well have been a problem with this individual tester.
Like most of its brethren, the Archos has a magnetic groove which neatly anchors the iPad in both horizontal and vertical orientations. But since the iPad only has magnets on its long edge, the vertical orientation is obviously less secure and makes the iPad prone to tumbling off your knees should you jostle it.
Its main claim to fame, or at least the feature that would help it beat the Logitech, is the adjustable kickstand which allows you to vary the angle the iPad sits at, meaning you can change the angle to best fit your current situation. It's a nice idea, but in practice, it's fraught with problems. Even if the little kickstand did function as intended, it really only lets you change the angle a few degrees. Worse, though, is that the kickstand simply doesn't lock into place. More than once, it outright collapsed out of the blue, dumping my iPad on the table. I ended up using the Archos exclusively with the kickstand fully extended at its most secure position, which offers a viewing angle more or less identical to the Logitech.

