ErgoDash | kmonad | |
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17 | 199 | |
599 | 3,544 | |
- | 2.1% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
almost 2 years ago | 6 days ago | |
Haskell | ||
MIT License | MIT License |
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ErgoDash
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ErgoDash as right-handed gamepad?
I'm looking to build and use the right half of an ErgoDash keyboard as a fully programmable gamepad. I'm currently using an OLKB Peronic and while it's serviceable, I'm driven to find/make something better. So before I dive head first into this, does anyone have any experience with ErgoDash keyboards? If there's some fundamental flaw I'm missing or if there's a better option out there, please let me know.
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Please could someone assist with my creation?
Could someone please assist me or point me to somewhere I can get assistance with building/diagnosing an Ergodash. https://github.com/omkbd/ErgoDash
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Do WS2812B LEDs require resistor and/or MOSFET?
I'm building (another) ErgoDash and I'm considering adding only underglow lights (with RGB WS2812B LEDs) and not backlights. However the documentation wrapes them together and I'm not sure whether the additonal components - a MOSFET and a 1k Ohm resistor - are needed for the underglow. Anyone knows? Can there be any harm (i.e. shorting something) in trying without them?
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Interested in a split keyboard for ergonomic reasons and have a few questions
If you want a compact split with plenty of keys, I would recommend the ergodash, which is open sourced and can be bought prebuilt.
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Bought Kensington Slimblade trackball and used side by side with Kensington Expert Wired trackball for a week. Sent the Slimblade back to Amazon.
ErgoDash (general info https://github.com/omkbd/ErgoDash)
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[HELP] My Ergodash is not being detected in Via
I flashed the firmware in this repo for both sides. Then I connect the keyboard into my computer and start Via. But it keeps searching for devices... BTW, I see some posted that Ergodash is supported in Via but cannot find the firmware in the official document here . Was it removed or something else?
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Down the mechanical keyboard rabbit hole
I started with an ErgoDash [1], purchased because my Microsoft/Logitech split keyboards had worn out, and at the time I couldn't find a replacement with normal (not low profile) keys. It has a few additional keys compared to the Iris. I have one at work and another at home, and to make them more similar to the broken keyboards I 3D printed angled bases. I use it for 99% of my typing.
I should probably have tried a Kinesis Advantage 2 first.
I'm partway through printing/assembling a Lagrange keyboard [2] (I'm currently stuck working out how to order the circuit boards), which is similar to the Dactyl. I will add the F1-F12 keys to my print, as they're the only thing I miss -- if a shortcut in my IDE is Ctrl+Shift+F10, it's nice for it to be that, not Ctrl+Shift+Fn+0.
I made [3] to help others see what's available.
[1] https://github.com/omkbd/ErgoDash/
[2] https://github.com/dpapavas/lagrange-keyboard
[3] https://aposymbiont.github.io/split-keyboards/
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Split columnar with 8 columns?
What about ergodash. Has an additional inner column, and an extra couple of thumbs.
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Flashing firmware to pro micro questions
Hello, building an Ergodash, I have some questions concerning flashing the pro micros:
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Keyboards and Open-Source
I was warned by a colleague that this was a rabbit hole, then warned by people online, and I'll pass on that warning now.
I tried to help by updating and better-presenting an existing list of ergonomic mechanical keyboards: https://aposymbiont.github.io/split-keyboards/
I'm using an ErgoDash¹ with a 3D-printed tilted stand, but I intend to assemble a Lagrange² "soon".
¹ https://github.com/omkbd/ErgoDash
² https://github.com/dpapavas/lagrange-keyboard
kmonad
- FW13 keyboard QMK support
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Cursorless is alien magic from the future – Xe Iaso
have you actually tried that? afaik they don't get you the perfect home row mods due to some limitations re. how they implement the tap vs hold logic
https://github.com/kmonad/kmonad/issues/228
- KMonad version 0.4.2 is available
- KMonad – a keyboard manager with layers, multi-tap, tap-hold, and more
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The unix69 keyboard layout: nerdy and nice
I use kmonad[1] to have QMK-like functionality on any keyboard.
https://github.com/kmonad/kmonad
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Can't find F13-24 labels
You can create F13-F24 purely in software with key mapping tools. On Windows, one way is with the PowerToys Keyboard Manager: remap some unimportant keys to F13, F14, etc. Another way is with KMonad (cross platform), and define the keymap with KeyF13, KeyF14, etc.
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Some useful software customizations for my NyPhy Air60 (linux)
There you have the software link : https://github.com/kmonad/kmonad
- Keyboard Layout Is Broken
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No linux drivers for rgb and macros?
Other option I would suggest for any linux user with keyboards without QMK is to try KMonad https://github.com/kmonad/kmonad
- Toward a More Useful Keyboard
What are some alternatives?
crkbd - Corne keyboard, a split keyboard with 3x6 column staggered keys and 3 thumb keys.
keyd - A key remapping daemon for linux.
redox-keyboard - Ergonomic split mechanical keyboard
AutoHotkey - AutoHotkey - macro-creation and automation-oriented scripting utility for Windows.
dactyl-keyboard - Dactyl-ManuForm, a parameterized ergonomic keyboard
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
vial-qmk - QMK fork with Vial-specific features.
homebrew-qmk - QMK Homebrew Formulae
KeyV2 - KeyV2: A Parametric Mechanical Keycap Library
sharpkeys - SharpKeys is a utility that manages a Registry key that allows Windows to remap one key to any other key.
dactyl-keyboard - Programmatic keyboard CAD
sway - i3-compatible Wayland compositor