ErgoDox
kanata
ErgoDox | kanata | |
---|---|---|
30 | 62 | |
335 | 1,218 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
almost 3 years ago | about 8 hours ago | |
Rust | ||
- | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ErgoDox
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Best Ortholinear Keyboards
https://www.ergodox.io/, been around forever now.
- Ergodox keyboard
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Travel keyboard options
Closest split PCB based design with a Kinesis Advantage thumb cluster, I know of, is the Ergodox Would need tenting to emulate the keywells. Lovingly design and print a case with tenting legs for it? 🤔
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I built a second ErgoDox to keep at the office. This is my first set of MT3 caps and I LOVE them.
Should be in here somewhere: https://github.com/Ergodox-io/ErgoDox
- Gesucht: Ergonomische, mechanische Tastatur mit Nummernblock
- ErgoDox EZ ft. GMK Lunar on Boba U4s. Love.
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Keyboard Latency
> Is ZSA's build known to have latency issues compared to QMK?
ZSA is using a patched QMK - they even let you download the exact source for each firmware build they make for you. At the time when I switched to vanilla QMK (that was already some years ago), ZSA were veeery far behind master; running the latest QMK release fixed a couple of issues for me (like hotplugging the halves), so I guess there could be other improvements? No idea really.
> Would a faster microprocessor help
In the MCU world, latency and clock speed can have a very linear relationship - until they suddenly don't. The microcontroller's job is very simple really: scan the key matrix at a certain frequency, perform key debouncing, compare the current state with the previous, and craft a USB HID packet with key press/release events.
So having twice the clock speed could theoretically let you scan twice as often, so it might let you cut the latency in half. Except we have those pesky physics getting in our way! For simplicity let's assume we don't have split halves (where there's an extra serial connection slowing things down); I'm no EE so I only grasp these concepts at the surface level, but signals take time to propagate, and long traces on the PCB (and cables too) have a tiny bit of their own capacitance. (Capacitors are like really fast, really tiny batteries - but they still take a tiny amount of time to charge and discharge, which does all sorts of interesting things to high-frequency signals.)
On top of that, the electrical connection that the pieces of metal are making inside the switch, are never perfect at the exact instant the switch is supposed to (de)register: a couple electrons might start jumping over the air even before contact is made, and the physical connection is subject to normal wear, amplifying the "edge case" effect over its lifetime - which all together means we have to actually spend a certain amount of time "looking" at the state of the switch, to let it settle and make sure we got it right.
We end up spending so much time letting physics do its job that in a trivial firmware, the MCU is actually spending a significant amount of time... just sleeping. Which means we were later able to cram all sorts of madness like individual RGB lightning or status displays, and never decreased the poll rate.
Where would these 40ms come from then? Well I wouldn't get near the problem without an oscilloscope, and unfortunately I don't have one.
> I'm just starting to get into custom keyboards.
Then I recommend studying the original ErgoDox firmware & build instructions! It's extremely straightforward compared to a beast like QMK, which actually uses a whole RTOS.
https://www.ergodox.io/; https://github.com/benblazak/ergodox-firmware
- How to condense 48 buttons to a binary output
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Hotkeys in ergodox?
Hi! Does anyone here have some experience playing age on an ergodox? I usually move the right part out of the way so that I can have more space for the mouse (it is actually great for things like FPS because the mouse hand is in a very natural position), but the default hotkeys force me to move my left hand across both sides, making it hard to actually hit the key without looking. I've been only using control groups 1-5 due to this, which is less than optimal.
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Broke my 4th MS Sculpt in 6 years, so I finally made the switch to mechanical.
The closest open source keyboard you'll get next to the Moonlander is probably the ErgoDox that it's heavily inspired from.
kanata
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QMK and Keyboards
Gotta give a shoutout to kanata[1] which I have used daily for years at this point after giving up on QMK-powered keyboards.
QMK itself is great, but I was never able to find a non-columnar split ISO keyboard to use it with. Eventually I reluctantly settled on the Logitech K860[2] and I'm now happily using my favourite features from QMK with kanata at the software level.
[1]: https://github.com/jtroo/kanata
[2]: If I'm behind the times and there is now a QMK-compatible keyboard that looks like this, please let me know!
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Emacs boffins guide to reprogramming keyboard for EXWM?
This is not in Emacs, but if I can't modify my keyboard's firmware (e.g on a laptop), I use Kanata https://github.com/jtroo/kanata. It works by creating a virtual keyboard in Linux (and uses a filter driver or process hooks in Windows), so it can work in any program as they just see a normal keyboard.
- Is it possible to have a magic key for same finger skipgrams?
- Ask HN: What are some unpopular technologies you wish people knew more about?
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HHKB Studio: The New Happy Hacking Keyboard with TrackPoint
Besides the better caps word (by the way, you can have it in software in Win/Linux apps like https://github.com/jtroo/kanata/blob/main/docs/config.adoc#c...) you can also toggle capslock with e.g. a double tap while having on-hold functionality to the more useful Control, so you still wouldn't need to hold any modifier key
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iowa - a keyboard layout for modern hebrew, because none really exist
jtroo/kanata: Improve keyboard comfort and usability with advanced customization (github.com)
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Kanata: Improve keyboard usability with advanced customization
One particular approach that one might find it interesting is how the configuration is laid out (using S-expression from Lisps).
[0] https://github.com/jtroo/kanata/blob/main/docs/config.adoc
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Learn AutoHotKey by stealing my scripts
Kanata[0] is amazing. It support both Linux and Windows. But I'm yet to try it on windows because my majority work is on linux.
[0] https://github.com/jtroo/kanata
- Keyboard Layout Is Broken
- What are the scenarios where "Rewrite it in Rust" didn't meet your expectations or couldn't be successfully implemented?
What are some alternatives?
crkbd - Corne keyboard, a split keyboard with 3x6 column staggered keys and 3 thumb keys.
kmonad - An advanced keyboard manager
SofleKeyboard - A split keyboard based on Lily58, Crkbd and Helix keyboards
keyd - A key remapping daemon for linux.
rae-dux - Generated keyboard
capsicain - Powerful low-level keyboard remapping tool for Windows
dactyl-cc - A Dactyl like 3d printed keyboard written in C++
yasb - A highly configurable cross-platform (Windows) status bar written in Python.
Ergo-S-1
komorebi - A tiling window manager for Windows 🍉
qmk_firmware - My fork of qmk_firmware; with a custom layout for my Ergodox EZ
keymapper - A cross-platform context-aware key remapper.