• ...m...
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    112 days ago

    …oh, that’s pretty!..reminds me of when i redecorated my bedroom the summer of `83…

      • SharkEatingBreakfast
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        313 hours ago

        I see them now!! Okay, that probably helps with staying centered and knowing where your hands are when typing!

        Man, the human mind is something else. Not my human mind, but other people’s minds.

        Thank you!

        • @[email protected]
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          13 hours ago

          Typing is probably the most useful course (elective) that I took in high school. I honestly cannot even comprehend how I’m able to type as fast as I do. I am literally doing it right now and it makes no sense.

          • @[email protected]
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            112 hours ago

            Despite trying to learn I STILL have to occasionally loom at the keyboard when typing. Not as much as I used to but still.

            Gaming is a different story. 100% locked in on the screen.

  • DominusOfMegadeus
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    52 days ago

    What does the Ortho moniker actually mean? ( Yes I am embarrassed I don’t know). This looks extra cool to me because I am terrible at soldering, and would like to improve. Can you post some pics of your switch recepticle solders?

    • @[email protected]
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      112 days ago

      Ortho linear means all the keys are arranged vertically and straight, with no key offset like you’d find in regular keyboards. The idea is you can type faster (after getting used to it), and offset keys are no longer necessary since we don’t use typewriters anymore.

      • Victor
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        21 day ago

        Just to expand a little,

        ortho-, as a prefix, means:

        Right angle, perpendicular.

        As in orthogonal, or orthographic.

        Or sometimes just “straight”, or “corrective”(?), like in “orthodontist” or “orthopedic”, I suppose.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 days ago

      What kind of iron are you working with? What kind of solder are you using? Those 2 things alone can make a big difference. Practice is necessary too, of course–but if you’re trying to work with inferior equipment and/or solder, it may be harder than it should be…

      • DominusOfMegadeus
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        12 days ago

        It has more been an issue of my not understanding exactly where and how the solder is supposed to go on hotswap sockets

        • @[email protected]
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          11 day ago

          Ooh, i see. Unfortunately i don’t have any experience soldering these…just pcbs, wires, etc. Hopefully someone else here can help out!

    • AlexOP
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      22 days ago

      @Reverendender @mechanicalkeyboards Funnily enough, I haven’t got round to soldering in the mill-max sockets I’m using yet. I put them in the PCB and they’re a tight enough fit that all the keys work purely through the contact the socket makes with the PCB. When I get it soldered I’ll send a photo though.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 day ago

    I always wonder, what is the purpose of two space bars? It looks amazing BTW the keycaps a beautiful.

    • AlexOP
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      11 day ago

      Well originally I intended to bind the left spacebar to space and the right spacebar to escape for when I’m using Helix editor (similar keybindings to Vim) to make escape faster to press. But I’ve found having the escape key in the first column second row beside my pinky to be very comfortable, so right now I have both of the keys set to space. But I am still editing what keys are where so this may well change.
      I’m glad you like the keycaps by the way, I’m very happy with how they turned out.