ergodox-ez-shine-dvorak
nyx-kb
ergodox-ez-shine-dvorak | nyx-kb | |
---|---|---|
2 | 10 | |
8 | 156 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 1.8 | |
almost 4 years ago | 7 days ago | |
C | Makefile | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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ergodox-ez-shine-dvorak
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Switching from QWERTY to Colemak and Back
The golden path is to start with Dvorak hardware mapped keyboard (TypeMatrix 2030 USB) and then later buy a programmable keyboard (ErgoDox EZ Shine) and make your own Dvorak-based layout with your own affordances for programming.
That’s what I did.
https://github.com/ctsrc/ergodox-ez-shine-dvorak
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GitHub – tzarc/djinn: Djinn Split Keyboard
I have the ErgoDox EZ Shine split keyboard and use it with a custom Dvorak layout that I created for it inspired by the layout of the keyboard I used to use before it, the TypeMatrix 2030 USB.
My custom Dvorak layout for the ErgoDox EZ Shine: https://github.com/ctsrc/ergodox-ez-shine-dvorak
nyx-kb
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ZSA Voyager: Low profile split keyboard
I made this a while back to fill that exact need: https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb
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Low Profile 65% split? Does it exist? Bonus points for wireless?
How about the 64 keys Nyx https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb or Taira https://github.com/strayer/taira-keyboard that has 66 keys ? They're low profile and support ZMK.
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The origin story of our new ortholinear keyboard
Here's one I designed as my first electronics project: https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb
Seems to meet your criteria, but obviously requires some assembly.
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GitHub – tzarc/djinn: Djinn Split Keyboard
Mine isn't there: https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb
Of course, I need to do a better job at advertising and keeping up with trends like OLED screens and rotary knobs. But as a plain-Jane Bluetooth split ortho keyboard, I fervently enjoy typing on it.
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I brought it to work today to show the developers but nobody cares
Just put that in the legacy pile, and build this guy instead: https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb
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Keyboard Builders' Digest // Issue 21
The Nyx, a low-profile, split, wireless ergo by u/tadfisher is now open hardware (repo).
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Adjustable, low-impact keeb is about as comfortable as it gets
Keeping palms in the air has alleviated my wrist and saddle joint pain as well. What helped immensely to build the habit was to switch to a low-profile keyboard so there is nowhere to rest my wrists.
P.S. The keyboard I switched to was designed and built by myself [1]. It is a fantastic first project for someone new to electronics (e.g. me).
[1]: https://github.com/tadfisher/nyx-kb
- As promised, Nyx is open hardware
What are some alternatives?
Sweep - Sweep - a small promicro based keyboard inspired by the Ferris.
lagrange-keyboard - A configurable, handwired, ergonomic keyboard
kmonad - An advanced keyboard manager
yaemk-split-kb - 5x8 Split keyboard with thumb-clusters, rotary encoders and oleds.
keyboards - @tzarc's custom keyboard designs.
sweep - Sweep: open-source AI-powered Software Developer for small features and bug fixes.
hillside - Family of split ergonomic keyboards with three rows of five or six keys, aggressive column stagger, generous thumb arc and optional bottom utility keys
ErgonomicVerticalKeyboard - An ergonomic vertical keyboard to maximize typing pleasure