| ▲ | 0x1ch 9 hours ago | |||||||
> The issue with kinesis and all those nice small symmetrical keyboards is that not every alphabet is as short as English. > Russian, for example, has 33 letters. Ironically, the biggest enthusiast of these splits I know in real life (he owns a kinesis) is a slavic guy, speaks both Ukranian and Russian, but I suppose he's typing in English for most of the day at his job, however I know he uses layering for the cyrillic. | ||||||||
| ▲ | piskov 9 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Yeah, it’s two or three(?) letters that got cut out, one of them is kinda rare. You can get used to it, but why suffer. Especially if one also uses a laptop. Other thing that I don’t like in all these small custom keyboards is that most rely on a single spacebar on one half. I learned to use either thumb depending on which next key is: press space with left thumb if next key is on the right half and vice-versa. — Also I would urge you to buy a keyboard with arrows keys and extra stuff like home/end I use uhk 40 and it is fine most of the time since I use vim-motions in my IDEs. But sometimes I just wish they were there. For example alt-right on mac is to expand all folders recursively in the Finders list view. Just becomes an effing piano if you need to add caps-l to have an arrow in addition to all the alts and shifts. You can mitigate this with stuff like caps + ; for alt + right arrow (ctrl + right arrow for win), but again, when you need to add shift or not only left/right it gets cumbersome once you are not in the vim-like environment (chats, word, what have you). tldr; buy uhk 80 nowadays. And an external bluetooth numpad for those days when you need to enter a lot of numbers. Why external? Shorter distance between a keyboard and a mouse — more comfortable and takes less space. | ||||||||
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