shifty

joined 3 months ago
[–] shifty@leminal.space 2 points 8 hours ago

For me the selling point is the small screen for travel and portability. I can always use a monitor or my desktop. Maybe they'll make a 16in option like FrameWork for people like you?

[–] shifty@leminal.space 1 points 18 hours ago

I just want the split spacebar and I'd be happy with the framework

[–] shifty@leminal.space 1 points 18 hours ago

Maybe they hired the same designer shrugs

 

TLDR:

  • Keyboard: System 76 Launch
  • Keypad: Keychron Q0 Plus QMK Custom Number Pad
  • Keycaps: XDA profile
  • Switches: Cherry MX SPEED SILVER Switches RGB
  • Wristpad: Keychron Wooden Palm Rest (Wooden / K3 / K3 Pro / K7 / K7 Pro / S1 PR4)

www.keyboard-layout-editor.com/#/ for the last picture with the key layout

Details and Flavor:

This is my first hot swappable mechanical keyboard after having a few Durgod keyboards (switches are soldered to the board).

After the INCIDENT- I spilled a whole jack and coke on my Durgod - the entire thing was unsalvageable because only thing I could do was remove the keycaps, I couldn't remove the soldered switches or take it apart further. So the whole thing was a sticky mess even after drying it out, and the spacebar and CTRL were never the same. I probably could have dunked the whole thing in rubbing alcohol or something, but I just recycled it. So that led me down the path towards customizable mechanical keyboards with hot swappable switches.

Keyboard: System 76 Launch

84 Key variant of the 75% layout, with a split spacebar and extra key for super/function bottom left Super fucking useful why aren't all keyboards made like this I'm never going back to a keyboard with a full spacebar.

Keypad: Keychron Q0 Plus QMK Custom Number Pad

Has survived one accidental drink spillage, luckily it was just water (a whole pint) and I got it unplugged immediately and taken apart to dry. No shorts and all switches and the board were fine after air drying. There was some green paper taped to the bottom of the PCB that did not survive though. I bent a few pins when I manhandled the swtiches back in place, but nothing some tweezers and reinstallation couldn't fix.

Keycaps XDA profile:

I like the profile but these seem to be rarer and its difficult to find any see-through variants with the numbers/letters clear (to let the RBG shine through so I can PWN more in FPSs) Also having keys with a standardized profile, same shape keys regardless of the row, was important because of the oddball layout and key sizes for the system76 keyboards. XDA Tricolor Keycaps

Handmade Abalone Mother of Pearl Keycaps.

These are abalone round beads (meant for a necklace or bracelet) glued to 3D printed keycap mounts. Purchased for around $3 each from my local keyboard shop. They have some cool custom keycaps here: https://shop.yushakobo.jp/collections/artisan-keycaps?page=1 And even more in the store that never get put online. If you are ever in Akihabara Tokyo they are definitely worth a visit. Big disclaimer though: "Every product from this store is hella overpriced." https://maps.app.goo.gl/s4pksssA9sGrz75Z6

So look at the pretty things, but maybe check online or somewhere else first before buying anything lol

DIY if you wanna recreate the abalone keycaps:

There's a bunch of free models you can find online for the "keycap mounts" that might work. I haven't gotten around to making my own, still need to figure out a program in linux I can edit 3D models and figure out how to use it. Super easy to get them 3D printed once you get/make the models. The beads you can find on sites like esty, "mother of pearl round beads"

Switches: Cherry MX SPEED SILVER Switches RGB

I found the Kalih Box switch options from system76 to be too scratchy and I didn't like the Gatreon G Pro switches from Keychron either. I was used to the Cherry MX Speed Silver from my old Durgod keyboard. I prefer linear, super smooth feeling switches especially for gaming, so I went back to the MX speed silver.

Layout:

I used to prefer 96% or 100% (a lot of excel formulas) but the wide keyboard kept getting in the way of FPS gaming and I'd be constantly hitting my mouse against the keyboard, even with maxed out mouse DPI and minimal wrist movement, the keyboard was too wide. So for about 8 years or so I've been using a separate numpad.

Festivus Airing of the Grievances:

I had trouble customizing the keymapping on the Keychron keypad. I wish the keychron keyboard was more straightfoward to customize in linux, or at least compatible with system76's keyboard configurator https://github.com/pop-os/keyboard-configurator so I didn't have to dig through 10 year old arch forums and reddit threads.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

I'm most excited for the split spacebar and the customizable key layout.

However they've made it really annoying to swap out the keycaps, due to the wonky sizes. MNT calls them "1u" in documentation but the cake is a lie.

Custom MBK Glows keycaps by FKcaps

  • Circle key - 1.5U
  • Backspace - 1.5U
  • Tab - 1.5U
  • Right CTRL - 1.75u
  • Enter - 1.75u
  • Shift x2 - 1.25u
  • Hyper/Function - 1.25u
  • Super - 1.5u
  • Right ALT - 1.5u
  • Left Space - 1.5u
  • Middle Space - 2u
  • Right Space - 1.5u
  • Right Arrow - 1.5u

I really wish they stuck to just 2-3 sizes, 1u, 1.5u, and 2u instead of all these inbetween sizes 1.25u, 1.75u. It really makes changing out the keycaps challenging, you pretty much have to get keys custom printed if you want the led backlight to shine through, or just use blank keys or lasered keys if you don't mind the lack of backlight.

The good news is it is all open-firmware and hardware, so you could just make your own custom keyboard and stick it in the case.

 

"A new 12.5" open hardware laptop that is future-proof, modular, and highly performant"

Mechanical Keyboard Details

  • Standard stagger, 80 keys
  • Kailh Choc Brown switches
  • N-key rollover
  • Layout: QWERTY-US, laser-etched legend (international keycap sets available)
  • Custom MBK Glows keycaps by FKcaps
  • Customizable RGB backlight
  • Raspberry Pi RP2040 controller
  • OLED screen for system control functions
  • Open source firmware
[–] shifty@leminal.space 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I had the XDA version of those keycaps but they started wearing through after a year of use. The dark blue and teal keycaps are just a thin layer of ink on mine, so they started wearing out and revealing the white plastic underneath.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Most flagship phones have removed the 3.5mm headphone jack, leaving you with poor options for audio quality.

USB-C is good for charging but bad for wired headphones: any little movement of the USB-C plug can cause the headphones and sound to disconnect. Bluetooth is also a lot poorer music quality compared to wired connections.

Why not just use your mobile phone ? (I’m not very knowledgeable about audio stuff)

I would if manufacturers stopped removing the 3.5mm jack from flagship phones.

Or if UBC-C wasn't such a poor experience for wired headphones.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 1 points 5 days ago

Yeah makes sense.

I guess I'm wanting Tangara to cater to the HIFI crowd, and add more HIFI capabilities, file support, something to compete with devices like these: https://slrpnk.net/post/17871660/13529567

Which isn't mutually exclusive with having WIFI and Bluetooth connectivity.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 2 points 5 days ago

Some of us care enough to bring back the 3.5mm headphone jack. HiFi enthusiasts like me despise bluetooth, and USB-C audio headphones or adapters are low quality trash too.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 1 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Ideally there would be zero bluetooth support and this would be catered to the HIFI crowd, with only 3.5mm jack supported.

At least until we get a HIFI successor to bluetooth.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 8 points 5 days ago

I brings back the headphone jack and high quality analog audio for those of us who care enough.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 5 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Good to know, thank you for sharing your experience! I may go with a different device and install Rockbox instead.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 2 points 5 days ago

This is analog in the sense that it has a Digital to Analog "Cirrus Logic WM8523 DAC"converter and a 3.5mm headphone jack, so does indeed enable analog if you use a wired headphone, and it is absolutely a step in the right direction over shitty bluetooth quality audio.

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