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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 20th, 2023

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  • I’d second this. Buy a switch tester, and have a play to see what you like. Some computer shops even have them in store to ‘try before you buy’. Next thing is the keyboard typo. Ortho? Split? 100% or 40%? FWIW I started out with an ErgoDox, and then played with layers and key layouts until I found something I was happy with. Then you can simply stay there, or if you’ve reduced your keys to something like 36-keys, there are a wide range of boards to choose from with slightly varying layouts and designs.





  • Andy@lemmy.mlOPtoErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.worldNew PCB Arrived
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    1 year ago

    Once it’s up and running, I’ll be sure to post. It’ll be a Dvorak layout, as that’s what I’m comfortable with.

    As an example though, take the left index finger. When resting over the home row on a standard keyboard it would be on the U key. The P key directly above and the K key directly below (QWERTY would be F with R above and V below). I’m planning to remove the home row. So the left index finger would have the two buttons - P & K. If I wanted to press U, I would simply press both buttons, so P & K together.

    In all honesty, I have a concern that pressing both buttons will be double the spring weigh, and that might not be ideal on the home row where I spend most of my time. But, I’m currently using choc whites which have an operational force of 50g, and planning to use sunsets on this which are 40g. So while 80g across two switches is obviously more than 50g, it’s not double, and I’m hoping it’ll be workable. We’ll see!


  • Andy@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlLinux From Scratch
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    1 year ago

    Agreed in part. There are reasons there are distros, but I don’t think Op is suggesting to run LFS as a daily driver. More that they want to install it to show they can. And on that front, I’d disagree. Go for it! The book is fairly self explanatory. It does call out some choices early on with respect to package management. Stop and think at that point. Make a choice, then move forward.




  • Andy@lemmy.mlOPtoErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.worldNew PCB Arrived
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    1 year ago

    If you scroll down a couple of posts, you’ll see the daily driver I’ve been using for a year or so. This is the next stage in the journey.

    I’ve made it a single board, as I got annoyed with the two side moving independently. It might have been fixed by simply adding more weight, but that wouldn’t be as fun as a new build!

    I’ve kept the key positions the same as before, however moved to columns of two keys instead of three. I’ve basically removed the home row. To get to the home row, you’d simply press both top and bottom together. So it should lead to less finger travel, but I’m interested to find out how well it works in practice.



  • As to the request for an explanation, it’s a 36 key, ortholinear, staggered and splayed split board.

    36 keys - should be obvious Ortholinear - the keys are in line on the vertical axis, unlike a regular keyboard that has an offset between rows Staggered - the pinky column is set lower that the middle finger column, as my pinky is shorter and can’t stretch as far Splayed - if you naturally open an close a fist, your fingers don’t stay together when you open your fist, but rather they splay outwards. The keyboard follows that natural splay.

    Other than that, it’s using QMK, and has 3 layers. I’ve not bothered mapping F keys, as I don’t use them. So layer 1 is regular alpha, layer 2 has numbers (or with shift has symbols), layer 3 has directional keys.

    Also using home row mods for Command, Control, Option (work computer is a Mac).