The fulcrum comes to mind: It has a 5-way joystick (up, down, left, right and push) for the thumbs. You can always add tenting if you want (some alternatives)
You also can check some of the split kb databases if someone created something similar.
The fulcrum comes to mind: It has a 5-way joystick (up, down, left, right and push) for the thumbs. You can always add tenting if you want (some alternatives)
You also can check some of the split kb databases if someone created something similar.
Thanks, my works’ codebase feels old now.
They don’t call me AbstractJokerAdapterFactoryProxy for nothin’
If you haven’t decided yet, I find ZMK is a breeze to get the running
It is. The rabbit hole is deeeep.
Your numbers are convincing, you must tell the truth
I felt the same way. Based on this alternatives suggestions post, I installed Aves and it looks quite promising.
Thanks for saving my time.
Have you tried Piped? It can be self hosted, but there are also public instances. Features also include Playlists and Feed, probably also History. Maybe you need to create an account for that. Never tried that, because I use it through the Android App LibreTube which also has these features without account.
Next to U4s I can also recommend Durock Shrimp Silent and TTC Blueish White Silent
Nice build! Make sure you also post it on !mechanicalkeyboards@lemmy.ml
Classic PoweShell experience. Try rm -rf
- I wonder why they added the aliases in the first place. Only frustrating to type different arguments which are also more verbose. Tastes like the good ol’ embrace-extend-extinguish.
Yes it does, still used when installing from media like DVD
Also glad there are discussions about this. Somehow Lemmy and the Fediverse seem more privacy friendly but it’s just as public as anything on the web - which makes sense, since communities, posts and comments are public anyway. So I’m not sure how it could be more private with the currently design.
There are however protocols that can provide the foundation for more privacy friendly and decentralized applications like Web5 and Solid.
Those are rookie numbers!
You program/configure your keymap into the keyboard’s firmware so it is independent of your operating system. If you use Mac, you put your Mac specific keys into the map where you want them. It’s totally up to you - if you want every key to be “a” you can do that :)