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cadence.moe | ||
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blog.beerriot.com
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| | | | | I bought myself a new keyboard recently. The shape is so different that it took me a several hours of practice to be able to touch-type on it. So, I stopped and thought, "There must be a harder way." What if I also mixed up which letters are on those keys? | |
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blog.wuyuansheng.com
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| | | | | https://fowlie.github.io/2022/02/25/keyboards-rabbit-hole/ I'm writing this to share my experience adapting to weird keyboards and layouts. A few years ago a colleague of mine introduced me to 60% keyboards. Today, I'm typing this blog post on a 42 key US Colemak-DH layout. With this blog post I will try to share what my journey was like. Many [...] | |
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alexarmstrong.net
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| | | | | Three years ago I switched to the Colemak keyboard layout. It's supposed to be more efficient and ergonomic than the standard QWERTY layout. But it's hard to measure these things. I switched -- or, rather, began switching -- due to a bit of RSI over a Thanksgiving weekend with a | |
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cullmann.io
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| | | Keyboards and Open-Source, how is that related? In my Keyboard Fun post from last year I talked a bit about my interest in mechanical keyboards. Since then, I played around with a few more keyboards/switches/keycaps/... Interesting enough, beside the actual hardware, naturally there is some software component to all these keyboards, too. Whereas most commercial keyboards still come with proprietary firmware, there is the trend within the keyboard enthusiast scene to go for open-source firmware. | ||