E80-1800
keyberon
E80-1800 | keyberon | |
---|---|---|
4 | 15 | |
65 | 983 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.0 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | ||
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
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E80-1800
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Show HN: I spent a year designing an low profile, minimal mechanical keyboard
Depends a lot. If you want it fully assembled, you have to go to larger fab houses like PCBway, and spend a few hundred bucks on a 5pc batch. If you can hand-solder some parts (in this case, the Bluetooth module and the USB connector) and design the rest around jlcpcbs libraries, you can get away with 20-30USD per unit (MOQ of 5) plus shipping/customs. Then add another 10USD for the bluetooth module and USB connector.
A simpler wired design like my E80-1800 (https://github.com/ebastler/E80-1800) can be completely assembled by jlc for ~30ish USD per unit.
Oddly enough, small-batch prototyping at jlc can be cheaper than medium sized (50-150 pc) runs at other fabs.
Hope this doesn't sound like an ad, I've compared a lot of prices and nobody came close to jlcpcb, but With their limitations (limited stock, limited finish/color choices, frequently chnaging stocks and component prices) and sometimes far-from-ideal QC (some scratches can happen, in rare cases even missing components that were present in the BOM) they are not really my first choice for production runs. For prototypes or small unofficial-ish batches with a few friends though - god tier.
- I built a keyboard PCB and wrote firmware for it in Rust
- Cherry G81-1800 USB
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[US-FL][H] Paypal [W] G80-1800 Compatible PCB or Keyboard (TKC/GH80/E80)
Some options include but are not limited to TKC1800 PCB, E80-1800 PCB, GH80-3000 or 3003 PCB.
keyberon
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eskarp: Custom design using ergogen, 3D printed case, RP2040 with Rust firmware
https://github.com/TeXitoi/keyberon - keyboard scanning
- I built a keyboard PCB and wrote firmware for it in Rust
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PSA on Sparkfun Pro Micro RP2040
You can find firmwares in rust using RP2040 here: https://github.com/TeXitoi/keyberon/blob/master/KEYBOARDS.md
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Software keyboard customization, written in Rust
Though young, I think it's already in a usable state because it's based on the keyberon library. Keyberon was originally intended for hardware keyboards, but thanks to its great design I was able to adapt it to work off of OS key codes.
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What's wrong with my wiring? Details in comments
It's running my own firmware written using keyberon https://github.com/TeXitoi/keyberon.
- This Year in Embedded Rust: 2021 Edition
- Ultra Low Profile 34 Key Build with RP2040 and Rust Firmware!
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Glowing success: Riskeyboard 70 with Void switches and GEM keycaps
https://github.com/TeXitoi/keyberon if rust is your thing
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Are there any devices with Rust firmware?
There are a few custom keyboards.
What are some alternatives?
gh80-series - GH80-1800, GH80-3700 and GH80-3003 by Evy (aka anykeys.eu)
OpenSK - OpenSK is an open-source implementation for security keys written in Rust that supports both FIDO U2F and FIDO2 standards.
key-ripper
tock - A secure embedded operating system for microcontrollers
kad - Keyboard Automated Design (KAD) is a Golang library for designing mechanical keyboards
gd32-dfu-utils - Dfu-utils GD32 fork.
keyswitch-kicad-library - Footprints for popular keyboard switches
crkbd - Corne keyboard, a split keyboard with 3x6 column staggered keys and 3 thumb keys.
rp2040-template
awesome-embedded-rust - Curated list of resources for Embedded and Low-level development in the Rust programming language
kbct - Keyboard keycode mapping utility for Linux supporting layered configuration
pinci - Super thin split PCB keyboard using rp2040 chips running Rust