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[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 7 points 1 month ago

No comment 😂

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

Logitech Trackman Marble for pointing

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Yes, it’s mechanical. Choc V1 20g Nocturnal switches, and I use it daily at work typing for a living. 26-key Unibody ʻākohekohe

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago

Happy to answer as someone on the low key count side, simply put the benefit for me is comfort. Having a two key inner column reduces that awkward reach which is a pretty big improvement. I personally have pinkie pain so reducing pinkie keys completely down to just one key each lowers load and any reaches.

As noted you get rid of having dedicated keys as a side effect. By design those keys are low frequency or fit well with combos. Q and Z for example are super uncommon.

V is an almost a special case that works really well as a combo. V almost exclusively interacts with vowels, especially “e” and “i”. So with optimized layouts, it gets pushed to one of the worse positions on the consonant side. Usually top pinky or top inner.

The combo position is easier to reach and use over the pinkie or inner index. It is predictably preceded and followed by a vowel (or space), it is easy to keep a typing flow with the combo. (This V explanation is stolen and reworded from jcmkk3)

I’d say the same for / and quotes ring and middle move together and those combos are very comfortable compared to using your pinkies or at least my pinkies.

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 8 points 2 months ago

Designed in Ergogen and KiCAD. Basically remade the Zilpzalp using the rufous Ergogen config then cut down the thumbs. Build the rest with jcmkk3’s great footprints and using the hummingbird matrix. Made firmware for ZMK but should also just work with standard hummingbird firmware. Lot’s of love to apfel, weteor, and PJE66 as well.

https://github.com/grassfedreeve/akohekohe

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[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 6 points 4 months ago

I may or may not like ever smaller unibody keyboards. Grumpy is next then hopefully a 26 key.

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Nocturnal Rufous (lemmy.world)

Less keys = better right?

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 13 points 10 months ago
[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 7 points 10 months ago

Yup all MJF I love the look and feel. Yours looks great, I like how light this came out though. Yup ZMK with Nice Nano’s 3.5 has pointer support and a great community member just released a driver for the PMW3610

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End game lol. Fun build, working great so far! ZMK is really nice

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 13 points 11 months ago

I was at a similar place with colemak-dh plus a swap to ergo. Stuck at 60 wpm for a while. I stopped testing for a few months just typing for work and then did a test and hit 80WPM I think 60 shows good comfort and then just more time you’ll get faster

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 14 points 11 months ago

PopOS is definitely a great first choice distribution. I would recommend Linux Mint over it for people coming from windows who wants something rock solid with a great community

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As if Ergomechkeyboards needs more Cheapino’s. I had my spare parts laying around and built this for a friend. Thought I’d share a quick photo. Still love this project

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

Great job. I’m so happy the Cheapino is getting popular, amazing to have such a low cost to try out and get access to ergonomic keyboards. Now that I’ve got used to mine I can justify upgrading to a Charybdis nano knowing I’ll use it and 34-35 keys is usable.

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 23 points 1 year ago

netstat curl and git

[-] pixelprimer@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

Might be better to ask on ergomechkeyboards@lemmy.world

If that’s how you refer to communities on here hahaha. I just swapped from basically a TKL down to a Cheapino which is 3x5 with 3 keys on the thumb. It was a really steep learning curve but tbh I only really use 4 of the 6 thumb keys so if you want to go down to 34 keys I say go for it. It will be more difficult to transition though.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by pixelprimer@lemmy.world to c/ergomechkeyboards@lemmy.world
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I built a Cheapino today to start trying out a smaller keyboard. I am trying to flash it but I’m definitely doing something wrong.

https://github.com/tompi/cheapino/blob/master/doc/buildguide_v1.md

The Cheapino is not officially supported so I guess they have their own QMK branch.

https://github.com/tompi/qmk_firmware/tree/cheapino

I cloned it and followed QMKs steps to setup a build enviroment but when I try to flash the firmware I cloned the repo and ran the command but it seems to keep failing.

[reeve@t480 qmk_firmware]$ make cheapino:default:flash QMK Firmware 0.15.18 cheapino: TAPPING_FORCE_HOLD in config.h is deprecated and will be removed at a later date cheapino: IGNORE_MOD_TAP_INTERRUPT in config.h is deprecated and will be removed at a later date Making cheapino with keymap default and target flash

cheapino: TAPPING_FORCE_HOLD in config.h is deprecated and will be removed at a later date cheapino: IGNORE_MOD_TAP_INTERRUPT in config.h is deprecated and will be removed at a later date arm-none-eabi-gcc (Fedora 12.2.0-3.fc38) 12.2.0 Copyright (C) 2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Compiling: keyboards/cheapino/encoder.c In file included from : ./platforms/chibios/drivers/wear_leveling/wear_leveling_rp2040_flash_config.h:6:14: fatal error: hardware/flash.h: No such file or directory 6 | # include "hardware/flash.h" | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ compilation terminated. [ERRORS] | | | make[1]: *** [builddefs/common_rules.mk:360: .build/obj_cheapino_default/encoder.o] Error 1 Make finished with errors make: *** [Makefile:392: cheapino:default:flash] Error 1

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pixelprimer

joined 1 year ago