- 7 Posts
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tarneo@lemmy.mlto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•Just started my ergo adventure, but I have questions...English7·1 year agoFrom my experience:
- I typed around 60 WPM before on a standard keyboard, now it’s barely 25. It may be because I don’t use standard keyboards at all anymore though.
- I learnt colemak with my first split keyboard since it seemed like if I was going to learn a new layout, then I should commit to it entirely. I think keeping AZERTY (since I’m french baguette haha) would have just made me even slower on standard keyboards because there wouldn’t be much difference with my normal workflow. Separating the two layouts entirely seems better to me, but you might also say keping the same layout to some extent is better.
- I went from a full-size keyboard to my monkeyboard, gradually removed keys (left row, top row, inner thumb keys) and now I’m at 34 keys with my triboard. But making the jump could also have worked seems it’s a complete change anyway.
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•The Triboard, a Tiny 34/36 Key Wired/Wireless Split Keyboard - Tarneo's blog2·1 year agoYes, the main thing is you don’t have to pay for nice!nanos which are $25 each as I remember. XIAOs are only $10 each. The price I put on tarneo.fr is only as I remember it, might be a bit more depending on location and the shipping options you choose. But yeah I guess even with that it’s cheap.
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•The Triboard, a Tiny 34/36 Key Wired/Wireless Split Keyboard - Tarneo's blog2·1 year agoThanks! Looks like I’ve reached my goal ;-)
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•The Triboard, a Tiny 34/36 Key Wired/Wireless Split Keyboard - Tarneo's blog3·1 year agoNot really, you get used to the small number of keys if that’s the question. It’s really just muscle memory after some time (I’ve been using this layout for around a year, iterating occasionally)
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•The Triboard, a Tiny 34/36 Key Wired/Wireless Split Keyboard - Tarneo's blog3·1 year agoThanks! Some people find the monospace font hurts their eyes though, but I guess it’s a tradeoff of the 90s theme
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•Does anyone have ideas about a possible battery placement on this board?1·2 years agoI’d like to keep the board as flat as possible, mimicking the TOTEM’s case which doesn’t add any height. This means I’ll have 0.2 mm between the main PCB and the bottom plate, and AFAIK there is no battery that would have the correct size for this.
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•Does anyone have ideas about a possible battery placement on this board?1·2 years agoThanks, great suggestion! But as it seems it would make use of less common parts (I mean parts that can’t be gotten from local shops or ergo keyboard part sellers like splitkb), plus I think the batteries would be too small even compared to the 80mAh batteries used with nice!nanos.
tarneo@lemmy.mlOPto ErgoMechKeyboards@lemmy.world•Does anyone have ideas about a possible battery placement on this board?English2·2 years agoYeah, at first it seemed quite alright to do with a smaller angle (from 3 to 6 degrees depending on the battery), but now I think it would make the board too complicated. Right now I am trying to get used to sticky mod keys on home row combos (colemak A+S for LGUI, N+I for LCTL) and it seems like I’ll be able to remove the inner thumb key in the end.
That’s a pretty good point (with layout I meant both colemak and ortholinearity (is that a word?)). I do think it’s additional work to learn colemak on a standard keyboard, but I guess you could go for it if you think it would pay off. I just prefer having the same keyboard for all my computers.