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by dschil138 1236 days ago
Hey, I made this. It was only ever intended just for me, bc I have bad (really bad) RSI. I truly did not ever expect anyone else to want to make one. But I shared it on the ergomech reddit and people were interested so I put some work into the Github repo.

That being said, after realizing some people were actually interested, I also added a more standard 40-key version, bc I know most people don't want to go all the way to 20 keys. There is a pic of that version farther down on the README page.

1 comments

I did not mean this as a criticism, but more as a cry for help! I have worsening RSI but a massively customized keyboard project would be so incompatible with my job requirements. I just wish so bad that there were a sane middle path.
I totally get you. I think that exists tho! Someone else mentioned the Keyboardio100 which might work well for you.

But I would also argue that it's totally worth learning a new layout. I think people overestimate how hard it is, and the difficulty of switching between them. If you have RSI, I would definitely recommend getting some type of split ergo board (maybe Corne?) and learning Colemak-DH layout.

Get a Kinesis Freestyle Edge RGB with palm rests and the tenting kit. Which is pretty much like any ergonomic keyboard, but split and tented. Or get a Dygma Raise if you want QWERTY row staggered, but thumb keys. Or get a Moonlander or Keyboardio Model 100 if you want row stagger. Or get a Kinesis Advantage2 if you want almost all possible ergonomic features (I had wrist pains and switching to a KA2 solved that completely).

You can get some of there brands (in particular Kinesis) at regular ergo shops, so many employers will just see them as another expense besides a good chair or desk. (My employer bought me a Kinesis Advantage2 for the office-office.)

How would a keyboard layout be incompatible with your job requirements ?
I ask as this might be a missed sales opportunity.