• tty1@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    ZSA Voyager for over a year now, and the other ZSA boards since about 2018.

    image (not mine)

    image

    I’ve been really happy with it, and it helps me type fast. I do tend to slam the keys down sometimes but it’s held up great. I was able to stop using a mouse- the key-driven mouse motion is intuitive enough for me.

    Took me a bit to get used to the reduced key layout, but it’s actually turned out to be just enough. I see some people with even fewer keys! Will need to try that out sometime.

    Just running a base hardware configuration with Kalih Choc Brown switches and a custom layout that does not use any chording or timing-based layer switching, only holding.

    Would like to try building my own someday.

  • NostraDavid@programming.devBanned
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    1 year ago

    Keychron K3.

    It’s low-profile (no twisted wrist!), wireless (Bluetooth), has RGB (though I have it set to white), small enough to drag to work, and with the Keychron Mint keys (there’s also a Gateron version) - I’ve tried all their keys except brown because I never liked browns, ever. Black and red are too light - can’t rest my fingers on them without accidentally press them. Blue and orange are too clicky for work, and Mint is what I ended up liking - they’re like browns, but the click is way higher, which feels sooo comfy, instead of weirdly squishy.

    Been looking at the Kinesis 360 (?), but I can’t find low-profile keys for it, and the available options are rather lacking for a 650 EUR keyboard (I kinda want the wireless one).

  • BatmanAoD@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I really like concave keyboards, and maybe someday I’ll invest in one (I previously used a Kinesis 2 but the company kept it when I left).

    But besides the brief Kinesis foray, I have used the MS Ergo Sculpt since…2014, I think. It’s honestly pretty nice, especially since I don’t really care about mechanical keycaps and I value portability. (The only portability downside is that I need to manually put something in the battery compartment to keep it powered off while traveling, because for some reason it has no off-switch.)

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    1 year ago

    ~1500 yen Buffalo US-layout keyboard (Linux/Windows) and a ~15k yen Logi wireless one for the Mac that work makes me use.

    For gaming, I want to eventually get a mechanical (or at least something that allows more than like 2 keys near each other to be pressed at once), but they’re all too expensive for me to justify it. A 10-key and US layout are musts for me (Japanese layout has a bunch of symbols and stuff in completely different positions) which reduces the pool a lot.

  • urata@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Here is what I use. The split mechanical one is from Keebio. I don’t think they stock the PCB I used any more. It’s called the Viterbi and I like it a lot. It’s just 2 simple 7x5 ortho boards with an option for a 2u spacebar on the bottom inside keys on both halves.
    My other keyboard is a Kensington Pro Fit Ergonomic Wired Keyboard. It’s about 40 dollars on Amazon. I got it because I was learning Blender and it uses hotkeys on the numpad and other keys I don’t have on my Viterbi.

    • urata@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Oh and I built the Viterbi with Gateron yellow switches which are like Cherry red but with a heavier actuation because I tend to accidentally press keys with red switches.

  • a baby duck@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Kinesis Gaming. Good ergonomics, but it’s pretty stupid how much they want for risers and like 6 Mac layout key caps on top of an already expensive keyboard. I don’t use the RGB or macro features.

  • SuperNerd@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I think I’m on my 4th Kinesis Advantage in 25 years. Dvorak, with an Apple touchpad taped in the center. I have the newer one – the 360 – but getting the Dvorak layout firmware dialed in is a project I haven’t had time for and so it still sits unused.

  • noughtnaut@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Until I finally complete the firmware for this mothership:…

    …then I’ll be on an(y) old full size keyboard - with INS and DEL and so on in their rightful places. And wireless, that’s convenient.


    This is my current daily driver. Before that, I wore out a couple of these beauties:

    Oh, and Dvorak layout. Obviously.

        • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          I know this is an ancient comment, but I have some motivational sentiment to share:

          It’s been forever since I switched, but back when I was using QWERTY I had a pretty sad 40 WPM (words per minute); to be fair, I never put a conscious effort into typing fast. A friend of mine, who was very proud of her typing ability, typed up to 60-80 WPM, also on QWERTY.

          Then, I decided to learn Colemak. I remember that I was taking a longish holiday, so I had a couple weeks to get comfortable before my speed mattered. In these weeks I managed memorize the layout and get around 30 WPM in bursts, but I was already much more comfortable and using proper touch-typing.

          In the time after this my speed increased and increased (it really has been a while, so I can’t give specific times). Eventually I remember hitting a consistent 60 WPM and being super psyched.

          Then, maybe six months after starting out, I realized I could type 100 WPM. Then 120. Today, 150 (though not for longer periods of time) WPM. My speed has effectively tripled.

          I don’t give Colemak alone full credit for this. Part of it is that I used Colemak as an opportunity to learn the keys properly (I didn’t tape over the physical keys, so I had to memorize them, and thus properly learned touch typing), and that I started putting in a conscious effort into typing fast. But learning Colemak (Dreymar’s Colemak-CAWS and Extend to be specific) has certainly been one of my better decisions. I can highly recommend :P