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Hi, I hope it's okay to ask for recommendations on this sub, if not please just delete my post, or lock it down.

So back to the topic, I came here to ask if anyone could recommend me keyboard. I'm a software dev working 100% from home, therefore the keyboard I'm looking for is mainly used for work related stuff. Outside of work I'll also mainly do browsing, some office stuff and a bit of leisure coding. Gaming is (sadly) nothing I'm doing anymore beside maybe the single day once a year were I'm playing a few hours of factorio or something alike.

Currently I'm mainly using a Logitech MX Keys since my girlfriend got stressed by the sound of my beloved Corsair K70 with blue clicky switches. Since she's not working from home anymore I'm able to go back to a mechanical keyboard. I would like to switch to one of those fancy split keyboard things since their ergonomics actually seems to be way better then the one of a classical keyboard. I'd also like it to be wireless since I reorganized my desk and actually managed to get a nice cable free desk. Thing is, when I was looking around I found some wireless ergonomic keyboards but most of them were no real split keyboards and almost all of them had rubber domes and no mechanical switches. The mechanical ones I found were all cabled bound and for some reason also incredibly expansive. E.g. I'd really liked the Moonlander thing but it's already at close to 400 euros, I also liked the ultimate hacking keyboard even more, since one is able to attach a small trackball to it but it's also cable bound and incl. vat and shipping to Germany it's above 600 euros...

So to sum it up, I'd be really thankful if anyone of you has some suggestion for a nice mechanical wireless split keyboard.

Thanks

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[-] yeanomaybe@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

There's a spectrum of DIY to it. Boards with an integrated MCU may only require that you solder switches. Switch soldering is quite forgiving and I'd say pretty fun. There are some people who hate soldering but still like custom boards, so they will use a soldering service (unfortunately, usually found via word of mouth or places like mechmarket). If you wanted a cheap kit with lots of soldering and you're in the EU, I'd look at https://42keebs.eu/products/kits/

They have a couple of splits available. A lot depends also on how many keys you're looking to have. The wonderful world of layers and combos has a learning curve but there's plenty of programmers who use very small boards on a daily basis. ZMK might be fun for you if you do coding on the side as well as for work.

Feel free to send a DM if you have specific questions, I'm getting a bit long here.

this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Mechanical Keyboards

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