184

This is very quickly becoming a very expensive hobby...

Bottom is my first, a GMMK Pro with Gateron ink black V2 switches. And just yesterday I received the Keychron Q5 Pro with Keychron's own banana switches that I'll be using at work

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] moosh@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Oh, I know. I keep hearing about Colemak and Mirokyu.

[-] roux@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

ColemakDh and Miryoku was a great transitionary step. I use my own custom layout now but I'd lie if I said it wasn't partially inspired by Miryoku.

[-] moosh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Definitely curious about where these layouts sprung from and the ideology behind them. Any good articles you know of that I could read up on them?

[-] roux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

So I'm at work so I can't do quite the write up I'd like to.

Here's a database of a lot of keymaps that have been developed: https://keymapdb.com/?keyCount=1-36&stagger=columnar

and here is a write up of homerow mods: https://precondition.github.io/home-row-mods

Homerow mods are hard to zero in on but if you can get used to it, it's really nice. I get misfires but it's not that often. An alternative to HRM is One Shot Mods. I've seen it around but haven't used it much but the idea is that a key like Shift would get buffered and then attached to the next keystroke, so fer example, tap Shift and then release and tap a for a capital A. Some people swear by it. I personally just stuck with HRM. having Ctrl and Shift in homerow, under my fingers and saving pinky strain has bee amazing.

For the database like, check out bsag, kkga, and callum for some other tiny board layouts. There is a lot of smart stuff in there. Hypership is one I keep looking at and can be found here: https://keebogram.pages.dev/hypership/

My personal layout is a weird amalgamation of Miyoku, kkga, and a this write up for my symbols: https://getreuer.info/posts/keyboards/symbol-layer/index.html

For something not Colemak, look into Workman, Canary, and Hands Down. They take Colemak's ideas and seem to try and fix the trouble spots. For example, Canary takes the last remaining lesser used pinky keys and moves them to the inner lateral column for index finger. I really wish I had the time to learn Canary because I think it's probably as close to a good layout that typing in English can probably be made. Colemak does a lot of good but it benefits from still having quite a few keys where they are in QWERTY so it's easier to pick up.

I tried linking my keymap but Lemmy's being dumb.

this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2023
184 points (94.7% liked)

Mechanical Keyboards

8880 readers
40 users here now

Are you addicted to the clicking sounds of your beautiful and impressive mechanical keyboard?
If so, this community is for you!

Here you can discuss everything about mechanical keyboards (and only mechanical keyboards).

Banner by Jay Zhang on Unsplash

founded 4 years ago