mysterium
awesome-mechanical-keyboard
mysterium | awesome-mechanical-keyboard | |
---|---|---|
24 | 42 | |
499 | 2,789 | |
- | 1.5% | |
0.0 | 6.2 | |
about 1 year ago | 11 days ago | |
Astro | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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mysterium
- Mysterium - my new daily driver at home
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Mysterium keyboard, all orange!
All the files and instructions are in the designer's Github repositories, see https://github.com/coseyfannitutti/mysterium and https://github.com/coseyfannitutti/discipline
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[GB] Glacier80 // January 14 - February 14, 2022 or 800 Units
Started with the mysterium TKL case and reduced it to the footprint of the h88 (basic F13 TKL). Had the plate layer cut in 304 stainless steel by sendcutsend and the rest in acrylic by ponoko. Built with H1 switches. The top color layer (mysterium should have a clear layer then solid) is ivory to match most keycaps.
- Whats this keyboards name?
- Mysterium pcb problem
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Mysterium TKL
Put the multimeter on continuity mode, which is where it beeps as you put the two probes together. Then go from pad to pad. The ones that should beep, are the ones connected together because they are duplicated on the USB C, but they are never next to each other. Double check the wiring schematics, Mysterium is available on GitHub.
- Mysterium TKL x Akko Neon
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Discipline/ Mysterium flashing bootloader help
I followed the instructions here and tried typing the make, make flash and make fuse commands. I edited the code to make sure that the programmer in the .inc file is USBasp as per cftkb's instructions here.
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Mysterium case question
I’m wanting to buy a Mysterium but I’m only able to get my hands on the v1. Will the case that u/coseyfannitutti released (https://github.com/coseyfannitutti/mysterium/tree/master/case) work with the v1?
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[US-CA] [H] Paypal [W] Acrylic Mysterium case
The github files have the instructions on how to get it made at ponoko. cost me about $90 for the kit with pom plate. https://github.com/coseyfannitutti/mysterium/tree/master/case
awesome-mechanical-keyboard
- My first custom pcb design
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Trying to get into custom keyboards, im confused
You should build something you would want for yourself no? Have a look here for some options: https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard
- AMD drivers are so much better on Linux than on Windows.
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recommendation for low budget pcb
I have found two different GitHub repos that have a database of open-source mech keyboards. Most have plate files available as well, I’d start there.
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ErgodoxE EZ – an ergonomic keyboard with open source firmware
I'm very late to this party, but here's an amazing list of buildable keyboards[0], specifically linked are the split ones (like Ergodox).
Most of these today run QMK and specifically the Configurator[1].
I recommend most people stay away from the Ergodox unless your hands are larger and have a specific reach. While a great keyboard back in 2012-2015, the thumb cluster is outside of comfortable for most people and there have been a lot of improvements in this area over the years.
If building a keyboard yourself isn't your thing, I highly recommend the keyboard.io crew.
[0] https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard/blob/m...
[1] https://config.qmk.fm/#/hotdox/LAYOUT_ergodox
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How do you know if it's ergo "enough"
I'm in the middle of designing my own ergonomic split keyboard. The way I do it is to put my hand over a sheet of paper and curl up my fingers like I would if I were to use a keyboard efficiently, then I draw where the fingers are in the home position. I check the location where my thumb is most relaxed as that will be the location for the spacebar (on one hand). Then I check and draw in the arc of my thumb as it moves with little or no strain and mark off the other thumb keys that will be comfortable to use. (My thumb can with relative ease cover 4 keys from under my middle finger and out, but not as far out as e.g. the Moonlander). Next I check where I can most comfortably move my pinky, which seems to be in a diamond shape. Next, can I move the middle finger both 1 key up and 1 down or should I go for 2 keys for the ring finger and therefore shift the column a bit? For the index finger I also check what stagger the second (inner) index column needs, and I can only comfortably hit 2 of those so I focus on getting good positions for them. I then draw the location of the keys with the amazing ergogen software, and printed it first on paper to test. Next I bought some sample choc key switches and I use their footprint in ergogen, exported to kicad pcb and made a color printout. I cellotaped the printout to about 3mm of cardboard and made through holes with a pin and mounted the keys and tested a real physical model. To get mm precision I needed to do one iteration as the tenting and height of the keys will affect what's most comfortable. This is where I am at right now. I still need to draw the rest of the PCB. From my second iteration I can see that there are a few keyboards that closely match my thumbfan position, but only 1 that has a vaguely similar pinky cluster. Since I also want low profile keys it looks like the best option is to continue to make my own design. But if you are in luck and you know what you're looking for you might be able to find something that closely matches your specs in a previous design. There is a pretty large list here https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard/blob/master/docs/README.md GL
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Best split keyboard?(budget 200 can build myself)
here's a list of keyboard builds you can check out.
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i just completed my big project of making a keyboard from scratch
This GitHub repo is a good source to find tutorials and open source projects https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard
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I've been having a lot of dark thoughts lately. Thoughts of how with enough combos and tap dances, a 30% keyboard isn't that bad. A 30% keyboard is more than enough for most people. I should force people people around me to use 30% boards.
There’s a whole bunch of small boards listed here — https://github.com/BenRoe/awesome-mechanical-keyboard/blob/master/docs/README.md — but most are one-off or small runs. The only commercial 36ish-key ones I can think of right away are split keyboards:
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Pro micro based 40% keebs?
Many of these are pro-micro based: https://keebfolio.netlify.app/
What are some alternatives?
releases
Sweep - Sweep - a small promicro based keyboard inspired by the Ferris.
QMK-Lily58-Custom-Code
kbsim - Mechanical keyboard simulator website w/ a typing test. Offers 10+ unique switch sounds, layouts, and keyboard colors for an oddly satisfying typing experience.
discipad - 17-key numpad assembled with only through hole components, including usb type-c
isometria-75 - Minimalist 75% ISO keyboard
qmk_toolbox - A Toolbox companion for QMK Firmware
dracuLad - QMK-powered 34-36 key split keyboard
sxhkd - Simple X hotkey daemon
pheromone_keyboard
awesome-split-keyboards - A collection of ergonomic split keyboards ⌨
2-milk-build-guide - Build guide for the 2% Milk 2-Key Macropad