wjrii

joined 2 years ago
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[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 1 points 12 hours ago

Yeah, that Control key is like the opposite of the Severance keyboards.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Ahh, but is it a FUN keyboard, or a narc keyboard?

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 4 points 12 hours ago

In the picture you can just make out the Pro Micro "Soarer's Converter," which I flashed to use a firmware that includes the VIAL graphical configurator. I then taped that old Micro-USB cable to secure it and stuffed the whole thing into the case.

Hardware wise, this is a simple PS/2 to USB conversion, but because it was made for a bit of commercial lab equipment, the software side got a little weird, almost like it was high on something, LOL. The numpad doesn't include the usual math operators, NumLock is non-existent (and in fact this keyboard forcibly turns it back on if you find a way to turn it off), there's no Windows/Super key (not uncommon on older designs), 34 of the keys above the main clusters actually send combined keys (F9+A through F9+Z, then F10+A through F10+H). Someone else had already figured out that using F9 and F10 as your "layer switch" or "Function" keys is the way to unlock that, so I did the same. I only had one extra layer (plus two "Combo" keys) to play with, so I was only able to convert 28 of the 34, but those 28 now do pretty normal stuff: F keys, navigation keys, media keys, etc.

The other quirk is that, while the slightly longer spacebars (7 key "units", versus the usual 6.25) are not rare for keyboard nerds, the stabilizer rod for this one is on slightly nonstandard spacing, so I'm stuck with it until I can source another one. Luckily, the caps themselves are pretty decent.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago

To quote Jenna Maroney, "they contain a little bit of meth which is something my body needs anyway."

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago

Agreed. Many Amigas had a shape and color scheme that was fairly similar.

 

Keyboard from 2010 built by TG3 for a Siemens chemistry analyzer. I cleaned it up, added some weight to the bottom, and converted to USB. Cherry MX Black and PBT Dye-subbed DCS caps. Take a peek at what should be F9 and F10 (and are after conversion), as well as some of the keys above the numpad, which, tangentially, now has 5 keys that do absolutely nothing related to what's written on them.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 1 points 15 hours ago

Over/under on when the Inspection team gets fired?

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 2 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

And that would be the high level stuff that I think could absolutely work. The Pirates and the station and the racing culture (which apparently the books say Han Solo got into after the original trilogy?) were all pretty neat. It also hinted at some of the economic ambiguity that TLJ touched on.

Kaz just deflates the entire experience, IMHO, and a Filoni animated show needs time to rehabilitate gratingly "spunky" POV characters, either by making them much better (Ahsoka) or at least sanding down the edges and integrating them into the ensemble (Ezra).

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago

Somebvody posted a link from Australian ABC about this story, but it was American ABC.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago (4 children)

I wonder if some of the ideas from that show are being repurposed for this film

If so, I hope it is pretty high-level. Resistance never got past the "immature lead is insanely annoying" phase that all Filoni animation projects go through.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 9 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

After a while, you also just sort of accept that Avery Books acts how he acts and that this means Sisko is how he is.

“Stylized,” I think the kids call it.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

If I had to rank them, 2-1-4-3. I have also kinda started to feel like we're coasting on performances and vibes at this point, with plots sort of repetitive and some serious existential questions best left ignored.

spoilerHow many times does MI5 have to literally try to kill our horsies before they fucking bail? S3 obviously the most egregious and descended into action-movie self-parody at times, but it seems to happen at least once a season. Although, I guess, "don't quit or we'll kill you" is adequate motivation, if a bit of a buzzkill 🤣.

[–] wjrii@lemmy.world 0 points 2 days ago

I suppose? But it's also just dicking around at the edges to make a few more big companies move to the US (when every other policy is making that seem like a terrible idea) and to save financial departments a few bucks. Semi-annual reports will not significantly alter corporate incentives.

 

Keyboard is one I first made a year or so ago, but recently upgraded a little. DIY with laser-cut Masonite plate, 3D printed sides, Outemu "mid height" Black switches, and JWA PBT low-profile keycaps with DIY legends. KMK firmware on an RP2040 dev board.

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/35772689

Putting the cart before the horse a bit here, as I haven’t been writing much lately, but I got this education market ARM Chrome tablet pretty cheap and followed some instructions to get it fully converted to Linux. ChromeOS is gone. It’s running Debian Trixie via the “velvetOS” project. I could’ve just used the Linux container in chrome OS, but everything has such high guardrails that even the most minor of customizations got very frustrating. Anyway, I specifically picked the 10E because it was known to at least mostly support Linux.

Some limitations, as the camera doesn’t work, I don’t think the external speakers work (could be specific to this particular boot image), and on full boot I have to manually rotate the screen to make sure the touchscreen coordinates stay aligned with the display. Otherwise it works surprisingly well.

Firefox is probably too slow on this old MT8183 with 4 GB of RAM, but it is much faster on the EMMC install compared to the USB, and it was not torture to go online and grab a couple of files directly. The word processor is Focuswriter with their green theme tweaked to amber and it runs perfectly. Suspend/resume is working well enough with auto-login that I can just leave Focuswriter up. Battery life is an open question, but before I wiped it, Chrome OS reported it had 96% battery health 🤷. With a mobile-grade SoC, and with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi turned off, I’m optimistic it won’t be too bad.

I also fixed up one of my DIY mechanical keyboards, and I think it’s a pretty nice little writing setup. Right now, I just have Wi-Fi turned off, but I could theoretically strip out the drivers altogether, or (if I remember correctly), even take the Wi-Fi module out of this one. I opened it briefly to short out the hardware write protection on the firmware, but forgot to look for the Wi-Fi card. As an aside, this was by far the easiest I could imagine a tablet being to service — zero glue connecting screen to case.

 

Putting the cart before the horse a bit here, as I haven’t been writing much lately, but I got this education market ARM Chrome tablet pretty cheap and followed some instructions to get it fully converted to Linux. ChromeOS is gone. It’s running Debian Trixie via the “velvetOS” project. I could’ve just used the Linux container in chrome OS, but everything has such high guardrails that even the most minor of customizations got very frustrating. Anyway, I specifically picked the 10E because it was known to at least mostly support Linux.

Some limitations, as the camera doesn’t work, I don’t think the external speakers work (could be specific to this particular boot image), and on full boot I have to manually rotate the screen to make sure the touchscreen coordinates stay aligned with the display. Otherwise it works surprisingly well.

Firefox is probably too slow on this old MT8183 with 4 GB of RAM, but it is much faster on the EMMC install compared to the USB, and it was not torture to go online and grab a couple of files directly. The word processor is Focuswriter with their green theme tweaked to amber and it runs perfectly. Suspend/resume is working well enough with auto-login that I can just leave Focuswriter up. Battery life is an open question, but before I wiped it, Chrome OS reported it had 96% battery health 🤷. With a mobile-grade SoC, and with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi turned off, I’m optimistic it won’t be too bad.

I also fixed up one of my DIY mechanical keyboards, and I think it’s a pretty nice little writing setup. Right now, I just have Wi-Fi turned off, but I could theoretically strip out the drivers altogether, or (if I remember correctly), even take the Wi-Fi module out of this one. I opened it briefly to short out the hardware write protection on the firmware, but forgot to look for the Wi-Fi card. As an aside, this was by far the easiest I could imagine a tablet being to service — zero glue connecting screen to case.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/35448022

Belichick's pettiness reaches a new level.

TCU broke his last brain cell. Go Frogs.

 

My current project is a "Writer Deck," a low-powered computer that boots directly to a text editor or word processor (RPi Zero booting to Wordgrinder, btw). Being the weirdo that I am, I also want to use this as an opportunity to try a split layout again, and see if I can get myself used to something other than the "Advanced Hunt and Peck" that I do now and that tops out at 60 or maaaaybe 70 wpm. The deasign I've come up with is a split monoblock based heavily on a Corne, but with a very modest split angle and the thumb cluster (1) shoved a bit farther under the hands and (2) built around 1.25u keys because they can be adapted to switch-stabilized 2.25u or 2.75u (see the green outlines). The whole thing fits in the Pok3r/GH60 footprint.

So, ergo-mech people, is this a completely silly layout? I have always felt that "literally never moving your hands" isn't necessarily as ergonomic for the average typist as has been promoted, and I do like a good nav cluster, but I also wonder if I've compromised too much to hit that footprint, especially with moving the thumb cluster away from the center. The intended use case will be much more prose (journaling and other creative writing) than code, so I'm less concerned about optimizing for programming. I've never had major RSI issues myself, just needing to switch from a mouse to a trackball for a little bit every year or two.

 

NGL, Roll Call is often at least as good as Shorts these days.

Please pay no attention to the fact that Matt Mitchell confessed to being a Florida fan in an interview with PAWWWWLL. That is not relevant to my opinion.

 

It's only been a week, but I kind of hate them. Considering old-man bifocals now.

 

I am trying to put together my own take on a low-distraction writer deck platform. The brain will be an SBC, either a Pi Zero or a "Le Potato" Pi 3 alternative, partly because neither has built in wifi, but more because I already have both of them. I'm not quite to a point where I want it truly minimal, but I would like the word processor to be "the" app that it can run.

Software wise, I'm looking at two early leaders. MS Word 5.5 running on DOSBox, or Wordgrinder. That version of Word is oddly nice, but I'd prefer to have something run without needing the overhead of DOSBOX or an x86 emulator. With a tweak to the terminal's color palette, Wordgrinder could probably be good enough, and I thoroughly appreciate that it does in-line text styling, but it's still a bit more limited than I'd like. I am wondering though, if there isn't a solution that would run native on Linux in an ncurses terminal like Wordgrinder but have some of the QoL improvements something like that mature DOS version of Word would have (mouse support, spellcheck, easy color scheme changes, more comprehensive shortcuts).

I would love something like a rich-text editor that is simply markdown behind the scenes, possibly with a spellcheck engine. I don't need full WYSIWYG, but I do want that basic visual of formatted text without having to mentally parse the markdown code, so I'm not looking for a two-phase solution with VIM and LaTeX, a two-pane markdown editor with live preview, or a note-taking app. If I have to install a DE, I guess Focuswriter or AbiWord could work, but I'd like to avoid that if possible, especially if I go with the Zero.

 

More pics: https://imgur.com/a/epomaker-tide65-mods-cGhisks

I got this all-aluminum board very cheap, like under thirty bucks. It had some issues, but I've fixed most of them. Foremost was that Epomaker was hiding keys from me, and THAT WILL NOT STAND, lol. The PCB supports split-space, but the plate doesn't. My laser helped me fix that. It also had a garbage knob that doesn't go above the keys and had no knurling or texture to use it from the side. Fixed that. I also rarely use boards wireless, and then only because something temporary has made it convenient, so out with the battery and in with some steel wheel weights to replace the mass of the battery and then some. It also came with "Yet Another Light Linear" and for someone who types how I do, a light linear is more of a proximity detector than a keyboard switch, so I traded out the 40g-ish springs for 80g ones, making it equivalent to the heavier side of various companies' black switches. Finally, I traded out the gamer-font front-shine caps for some simple white-on-black. All in all, I am liking this board now, where immediately upon purchase I wondered if I should send it back despite the price.

 

And have any other sports communities come up with a team flair workaround? I haven't messed with my hack of a *monkey script since I was on kbin.social.

 

These are for an upcoming keyboard meetup in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. I'm annoyed that some of the tacos didn't infuse properly, but most of them came out okay.

 

Not low effort at all!

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