cantor
Bonsai-C
cantor | Bonsai-C | |
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34 | 8 | |
566 | 68 | |
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4.8 | 2.8 | |
7 months ago | 11 months ago | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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cantor
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Corne, but with a wider thumb cluster and stronger column stagger?
There are a few things that are close: * The Cantor/Piantor: more aggressive stagger and slightly changed thumb cluster. * The Swept Corne: essentially a big sweep. * The Hillside 46/48: This comes in many forms which are very similar to what you are looking for. Essentially an extra aggressive stagger (and perhaps splayed) Corne with a bigger thumb cluster.
- With enough GPIO pins, can I skip diodes?
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Cheapest way to try Miryoku style layout
Depending on how comfortable you are ordering PCBs yourself, the Cantor (https://github.com/diepala/cantor ) or the Cheapino (https://github.com/tompi/cheapino ) might be a good starting point for getting into split keyboards, both are diodeless, so you only need to solder the switches and use relatively cheap microcontrollers
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My corne swept with handmade oak case
The Corne caught my eye first, but I ended up starting with a Cantor, which has more stagger, like OP's keyboard. It didn't work for me. The Corne works better for me.
- MRIYA
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Optimising Colemak DH for Programming
cantor
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What are the best designs to cheap out? E.g. Reviung34 only needs 1 controller.
Cantor by DiePala, Choc, diodeless, cheap “Black pill” mcu, requires two. Caseless/plateless. Pcb is reversible, but you’ll need trrs cable and Jack.
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Adding millmax to non-swappable PCB
I have 2 hand-wired keyboards with cherry style switches, and I decided to build a Cantor (diodeless, Corne-like with more pinky stagger) to try a PCB build and the Kailh choc v1 switches for a first time.
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Does the Lily58 have the same floating PCB problem of the Sofle?
several of the low-profile / Choc boards (ex. Cantor) go the plateless and caseless route with nothing more than rubber bumpers on the bottom of the PCB
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How do I get started with KiCad for customizing an existing, open source layout?
Cantor – low profile
Bonsai-C
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List of keyboards by controller / not using pro micro
right, but I cannot find a compatible replacement that has more memory proton-c is out of stock everywhere, Bonsai-C would have to be custom printed -- I don't see any ready source for it. The STM32F401CC blackpill is available and cheap, but not compatible with PCBs designed for the pro micro. Other compatible MCUs like the Puchi-C and Elite-C have the same memory as the pro micro.
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Want to use Bonsai C4 for Corne, few questions.
I have read the information on using a Bonsai C4 with split keyboards and think I understand it, but wanted to check with the community. Bonsai C4 Github
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[GB] Bonsai C4: a high performance drop-in replacement for ProMicro | customMK
Github link
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Interest Check for Bonsai C4, an open source ARM-based ProMicro replacement
GitHub link: https://github.com/customMK/Bonsai-C/tree/main/C4
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PCB Design Question: How do you wire a PCB that uses an integrated microcontroller board (proMicro, Elite C)?
In addition to the connections to the switch matrix, you'll obviously have connections, to the USB port (which also conveniently supplies power and ground) and you may even have some ESD protection devices. Here's a schematic for a similar controller card (but powered by an ARM chip): https://github.com/customMK/Bonsai-C
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Out with the 4 year old 40 key and in with the 44 key prototype.
Yeah, the Teensy is a great option for handwiring, or if additional pins are needed for extra features like encoders. I can't help but wonder, however, if the future belongs to ARM. QMK's own Proton C uses a big manly ARM chip with a stupid amount of flash, RAM and ridiculous clock speeds. And then there is the Bonsai C, which is an optimized version of the Proton C: https://github.com/customMK/Bonsai-C
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Introducing Bonsai C: An open source drop-in-replacement for Proton C
Absolutely! We linked to it in the main comment under this post and prominently feature it in the GitHub repo, but for your convenience, I can link it here too. Enjoy!
What are some alternatives?
torn - Torn keyboard
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
piantor - The Piantor Keyboard is a beginner-friendly, easy-to-solder, 42-key or 36-key, diodeless, low profile aggressive column staggered, hotswappable and non-hotswappable, programmable ergonomic mechanical split keyboard powered by Raspberry Pi Pico or other compatible RP2040 boards. It is based on the Cantor Keyboard.
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
zmk - ZMK Firmware Repository
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
Sweep - Sweep - a small promicro based keyboard inspired by the Ferris.
STeMCell - STM32F4 breakout board in pro micro pinout. Designed mainly for ergo split keyboards.
crkbd - Corne keyboard, a split keyboard with 3x6 column staggered keys and 3 thumb keys.
eternal-keypad - A 36 key gaming keypad, for both right and left handed mouse users.
cheapino
sqdg - Shoggot's SQDG but in CadQuery