key-ripper
exhibitor
key-ripper | exhibitor | |
---|---|---|
11 | 6 | |
217 | 8 | |
- | - | |
5.1 | 6.8 | |
5 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
Rust | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
key-ripper
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Nyan Keys - An FPGA Based Mechanical Keyboard I Engineered for Low Latency - Open Source
Nice - a friend and I worked on my keyboard's debouncer and call it "eager debouncing", not sure if there's an official term for it. I agree that it's much better for latency.
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
Awhile ago I made an remote infrared sending tool so a raspberry pi can control my A/C unit
https://blog.bschwind.com/2016/05/29/sending-infrared-comman...
Since then I made a much slimmer, cheaper, more efficient version based on the ESP32 but I haven't written up much about that.
I also created my own keyboard with firmware in Rust
https://github.com/bschwind/key-ripper
I've done a bunch of other small one-off projects too.
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2nd post about my first pcb(added pictures)
Good luck! I have an open source keyboard project in KiCad as well, feel free to reference or use anything from it.
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Yet another keyboard post, or, introducing ErgoNICE
Not sure if the author of the post is around, but I guess this is a question for anyone who has designed keyboards: have you ever tried using shift registers for reading all the keyswitch inputs, and is it worth it? Does it mean you don't have to use a diode per switch?
I've designed my own as well but just went with the traditional key matrix with a diode per switch. Works well enough for the current size.
https://github.com/bschwind/key-ripper
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[Review Request] RP2040-based keyboard
All the source files can be found here
- Point keycaps? Yes.
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Drop Giveaway Day 2 - 5x DCX Dolch Keycap Sets
I made my own keyboard layout just the way I want so I would put these caps on that, or replace the stock caps that came with my Filco board.
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[Giveaway] PBTfans Deep Sea Predator/Twist
Twist looks awesome, I'd put it on my key-ripper
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Can you run rust on the new raspberry pi pico w?
You can absolutely run Rust on the pico - I designed a keyboard with Rust firmware which runs on an RP2040. That being said, wireless functionality might not be existent yet in the Rust world for the Pico W, but I'm sure it won't take long to get added.
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[Review] RP2040 Keypad
I looked at the schematic and it seems reasonable. I just completed an RP2040 project with USB C and it works correctly. You can see the project files here
exhibitor
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
TL;DR: A React front-end component workshop, a simple version of Storybook.
So around 5 months ago, I needed a tool to preview front-end (React) components whilst I create them for a personal project of mine. There were two options: Storybook or Ladle.
Storybook is the tool everybody knows. I've used it before quite a lot. It's very big, full-fat, supports loads of use-cases, etc.
Ladle comes out of Uber. It's very small, lean, and doesn't support that much. After trying it out for a while, it just gives me a feeling like it's a 20% project to learn some new tech.
So I realised that I wanted something kind of in the middle. Something that's a bit more customizable than Ladle, but something much simpler and less intrusive than Storybook.
This led me to create Exhibitor (https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor) (https://demo.exhibitor.dev).
I worked on it on-and-off for a couple months, and it ended up being something that I'm quite proud of. It's not perfect, and supports only a fraction of what Storybook does, however for a tool made by 1 engineer vs the 20+ for Storybook, I'm quite happy about it!
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Show HN: Exhibitor – Snappy and delightful React component workshop
Exhibitor, a snappy & delightful React component workshop, is GA. My aim is for Exhibitor to be an extremely fast, easy to use, and delightful tool for creating front-end component libraries.
It's been around 2 months since my last mention and quite a tonne has changed.
Wiki: https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor/wiki
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Show HN: DriftDB is an open source WebSocket back end for real-time apps
Looks interesting. Coincidentally, I've just completed the bulk of work on a distributed Websocket network system to synchronize certain bits of state between multiple clients for my own kind of Storybook tool [0]. How interesting!
This kind of tool is exactly what I would have needed, instead of the approach I've taken which is a bit kludgy, grass-roots, novice-like, etc.
Good work :)
[0] https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor/pull/22
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Ask HN: What have you created that deserves a second chance on HN?
I was a bit deflated when my submission about https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor fell through the HN floor-boards.
Think Storybook but simpler, faster, better Typescript support, and uses esbuild by default.
...Is the aim. I'm the sole lead dev working on it at the moment up against the ~10-20 strong team who built most of Storybook, so it's a long road ahead, but it's growing into something I'm quite proud of and happy about.
- Show HN: Exhibitor – Snappy, no-fuss, delightful React component workshop
What are some alternatives?
kad - Keyboard Automated Design (KAD) is a Golang library for designing mechanical keyboards
epub2tts - Turn an epub or text file into an audiobook
mac-mini-mount - An OpenSCAD design for a Mac Mini M1 wall mount
MLVPN - Multi-link VPN (ADSL/SDSL/xDSL/Network aggregation / bonding)
dactyl-keyboard - Dactyl-ManuForm, a parameterized ergonomic keyboard
scheme-for-max - Max/MSP external for scripting and live coding Max with s7 Scheme Lisp
E80-1800 - QMK compatible PCB replacement for Cherry G80-1800
mqtt-to-kafka-bridge - Move your messages from MQTT to Apache Kafka in real-time :rocket:
rp2040-template
brethap
cyw43 - ARCHIVED -- moved into the main Embassy repo at https://github.com/embassy-rs/embassy
ratarmount - Access large archives as a filesystem efficiently, e.g., TAR, RAR, ZIP, GZ, BZ2, XZ, ZSTD archives