cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/45765963

The design is based on the excellent Dactyl keyboard, generated with https://ryanis.cool/cosmos/ and it runs the excellent qmk firmware. It is handwired:

and I have also made a palm support using inkscape and openscad

All printed on a reprap prusa i3 derivative.

This helps me use my computer with less pain, so I want to call out all the wonderful projects and people who contribute to them which made it possible.

Total cost? $60 aud, amortised filament ~15 bucks worth maybe? and a lot of my time haha.

  • @[email protected]
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    45 days ago

    Very cool!

    Honest question, does using a keyboard like this make you forget how to use a standard one?

    I know op did it for the pain, so it’s a moot point. But if I did it just because it’s cool, and to avoid injury in the future, would I mess up my normal keyboard abilities?

    • @[email protected]
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      54 days ago

      As someone who runs an ergodox ez with a custom key layout and who goes in to work from time to time using normal QWERTY keyboards (both English and German configuration), you do not lose anything. It’s incredibly easy to switch between every config you have.

      I also think most people would appreciate a split keyboard setup because it’s so much better for posture and health and comfortability. Would highly recommend.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 days ago

        Oh now this is different than I’ve heard, some others have had issues switching back and forth. So maybe I will give it a try, once I’ve got qwerty up to a decent speed and I feel comfortable with it.

        Right now it’s a problem because if I’m in a hurry, I’m tempted to type the old way, or a broken mixture of the two that messes with what I’ve learned. Not good. Gotta slow down and do it right, bah…

        Thanks for the recommendations, I’m gonna put a 3d printed split board on my list of things I’ll definitely get to some day and totally won’t get pushed off the back of the furthest back burner lol

        • @[email protected]
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          24 days ago

          Lol. For context, it took me maybe two weeks to get back up to full speed on a new typing layout. When I moved to Germany they moved some keys around on standard qwerty and it took me a couple of days.

          If you’re already touch typing I think most changes are easy to adapt to and don’t overwrite previous muscle memory. Your brain is powerful, believe it is and it will work.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 days ago

            That’s good to know, thanks! I’m still just learning to touch type. I spent a few decades typing fast enough but always looking at the keys. This year I’ve started learning touch typing, I’m only a half dozen hours in, so still pretty new.

            But when I get good I’ll take this into consideration! Thanks!

    • @[email protected]OP
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      75 days ago

      I also switched to colemakdh with a series of layers and qmk tricks. My typing is quite slow so far, around 30 wpm, I was never an amazing typist but I haven’t noticed difficulty with standard qwerty layouts.

      It’s not like you get confused between a harp and a guitar, or a spoon and a knife.

      • Pup Biru
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        4 days ago

        for me, switching to dvorak about 10 years ago has made me absolutely useless at typing qwerty… i get used to it after 5min, but much slower than i used to be and wow is it paiiiiiin (both literally in my wrists - the reason i switched, and figuratively in that i feel like im fighting the keyboard for every word)

        … or perhaps you mean the differences in physical layout

        • @[email protected]OP
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          14 days ago

          I haven’t noticed difficulty. Maybe because the layout is so different, maybe I will with time, or maybe I’m just better than you lucky :p

        • @[email protected]
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          23 days ago

          I tried other layouts because it’s easy with an on-screen phone keyboard, just an oftion in the app menu, and Colemak felt the most intuitive to use. I didn’t have to get used to it, it felt natural from the start.

          It’s not as easy to switch with a physical keyboard, with so many games having movement and other functions tied to specific keys that assume a qwerty layout, so I kept using what I was used to in that circumstance. I don’t even think about it.

          One of these days, I’ll probably buy/set up a physical Colemak keyboard, and see how that is with games.