Split keyboards are awesome and way more comfortable to use. I have a corne. Shift and layers on my thumbs so I don't have to use my pinkies for anything and actual shoulder width spacing, no I will not use a normal keyboard anymore.
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How long did it take you to get as proficient with it as a regular keyboard? Do they have mechanical kinds? Always been interested but feel like my brain would resist the transition.
How long did it take you to get as proficient with it as a regular keyboard?
It's pretty easy to type on one out of the box, but it takes a little longer to get comfortable with layers. The nice thing is that vial makes it really easy to remap keys so you can experiment easily. Moving shift keys to the thumbs was one of my first changes, followed by moving enter to the left pinky (most layouts have enter on the right thumb, I changed it to backspace). Then I wasn't sure what to do with parentheses, so I got comfortable with space cadet shifting (parens on tap, shift on hold). You can make it a gradual process, tweaking only a couple things at a time, and then the changes feel easier to manage.
Do they have mechanical kinds?
Almost all split keyboards are mechanical, as far as I know of. I use Gazzew Boba silent switches and love 'em.
Many of these are not too wacky, just alternative keyboard layouts.
For alternative mice, tbh I think standard mice are pretty close to optimal. Any time I try another type of pointer input I find it harder to control, but maybe that comes with practice. I also haven't tried one of those stationary ball mice where the ball is on the side of the mouse but maybe that could be ok.
Have been using an ergodox for close to 10 years . It's not in the pictures, but it is a predecessor to several of the split keyboards. While I like it, I think there are better options nowadays
The one thing I like about the ergodox that I wish other split keyboards kept was the second 1.5u thumb key. I feel like that makes layering way easier.
The main reason I still use mine (other than inertia) is the combination of thumb clusters and QMK mod tap.
what’s wrong babe, you haven’t been gaming much since i bought you the ghislaine maxwell mouse
The little plastic joystick you put on top of the arrow keys looks adorable, and good for people with mobility issues on their fingers, or maybe people who play fighting games?
Big trackball/trackpoint and Dvorak user here.
Not on etsy, I remember about these people https://ploopy.co/ who have a little business going for some years now. I am very tempted by this trackball in the event I ever have any extra cash to throw around.

And they also have an external trackpad which there is no example of above already:

There are a lot of keyboards that can give you a softer dip into the world, check out the MoErgo Glove80 for example, or any if the ErgoDox.
Going full custom needs a little lead up in my opinion, but now I'm using a Cyboard custom with custom-selected key switches.
I am planning on getting a fader box to use with my DAW for parameter controls. Looking at the one you posted, given it’s running on open source software it could probably be programmed to send out MIDI CC messages instead of application volume.
You might have a look for actual MIDI hardware as I saw a bunch of stuff like that but I don't know much about it so didn't include.
Oh yeah I’m getting a dedicated midi box. I don’t have the smarts to go mucking around in open-source code to make it happen, and the dedicated box has its own software for adjusting CC numbers and other relevant settings.














