kotonoha_keyboards
keygen
kotonoha_keyboards | keygen | |
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4 | 6 | |
43 | 9 | |
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0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 5 years ago | over 3 years ago | |
Game Maker Language | Rust | |
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kotonoha_keyboards
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bgkeeb - cheap (or free!) split pcb with a lot of features! see post comment for details
I'm aware of other keyboards smaller than 100x100. https://github.com/peej/for-science-keyboard or https://github.com/MasayukiFukada/kotonoha_keyboards (and others). ... ;) I like the allure of "you can save a few dollars on PCB fabrication". -- Most of these small boards don't opt to go for the fancy per-key RGBs.
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Are there any ergo keyboards with some added distance between keys?
Honorable mention: kotonoha-wabisabi.
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cost of building
https://github.com/MasayukiFukada/kotonoha_keyboards has some small designs. this (and some of the others?) from this list: https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard/blob/master/docs/README.md
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34-key keyboards out there
The wabisabi sounds like it'd suit your tastes. https://github.com/MasayukiFukada/kotonoha_keyboards
keygen
- [Ergomechkeyboards] Analyseur de keylogger / mise en page recommandé?
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The T-34/2 keyboard layout
I used one of the forks of xsznix's optimizer (I believe it was Tretygon/keygen) which adds a useful "SWAPPABLE_MAP" configuration that specifies which key positions the simulated annealing is allowed to change. I used this to freeze j and k in their Dvorak positions while optimizing the rest of the keys.
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Letter sequence statistics?
you might want to have a look at this https://github.com/Tretygon/keygen
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Recommended keylogger/layout analyzer?
I've had a hard time finding tools that let me analyze what keys I use most often. I've found https://github.com/Tretygon/keygen and http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/carpalx/ thanks to this sub, but they both don't claim to analyze special characters, which are important to me as a software developer. Are there any off-the-shelf tools for analyzing a keyboard layout? I'm not interested in writing my own keylogger. I'm on macOS, for reference. I'd also be curious about Linux tools as well!
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Made a video explaining how I made a 34 key keymap. Might be useful for those wondering how so few keys are usable!
if you use a keyboard layout analyzer or evolutionary based generator like (https://github.com/Tretygon/keygen) , to create/analyze keymaps, is that not more based on scientific facts then?
- 34-key keyboards out there
What are some alternatives?
Sweep - Sweep - a small promicro based keyboard inspired by the Ferris.
awesome-mechanical-keyboard - ⌨️ A curated list of Open Source Mechanical Keyboard resources.
dracuLad - QMK-powered 34-36 key split keyboard
keyboard-labs - Repo with my PCB designs and keyboard firmware
bgkeeb
keyboard-layout-analyzer - This is SteveP's fork of the Keyboard Layout Analyzer app used on patorjk.com
Contra - Contra - Lowest cost ortholinear keyboard kit possible
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
for-science-keyboard - A split ergo 4x5 keyboard with 3 thumb keys where each half is smaller than the 100x100mm cheap PCB production size.
keygen - An(other) algorithm for generating optimal keyboard layouts.