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2013-10-21
, 06:48
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Moderator |
Posts: 5,320 |
Thanked: 4,464 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#82
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The Following User Says Thank You to jalyst For This Useful Post: | ||
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2013-10-21
, 09:08
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Posts: 1,104 |
Thanked: 5,652 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Holland
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#84
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As I said before, this is what I think is the pinnacle of a hardware keyboard for a ~5in device.
Its function over form at its max.
Keeping the important keys, and hiding the rest as Secondary ones (Activated via Ctrl), and do away with the rest. A small light indicates when Ctrl or the Shift (Caps Lock) is active. The circle at the right is actually a Trackball (think Blackberry) which helps control the cursor with awesome tactile feedback.
The Following User Says Thank You to dirkvl For This Useful Post: | ||
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2013-10-21
, 10:13
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Posts: 65 |
Thanked: 56 times |
Joined on Oct 2013
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#85
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I was recently skimming through this & thought it was quite pertinent to this thread...
http://lifehacker.com/should-i-use-a...rak-1447772004
Should we be considering one of the alternative layouts instead of the standard QWERTY?
Seems the debate's not fully settled on whether alternate layouts truly are better WRT: speed/accuracy/comfort.
... let's suppose that Jolla is indeed preparing a OH kbd for worldwide users. If 100 is the cost of designing & manufacturing a keyboard in only one possible layout, does anybody know what would be the cost to support many layouts ?
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2013-10-21
, 13:12
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Posts: 1,104 |
Thanked: 5,652 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Holland
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#86
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The circle at the right is actually a Trackball (think Blackberry) which helps control the cursor with awesome tactile feedback.
Keymat is a flexible plate of plastic, rubber or silicone which is put on the PCB of the keyboard. The rigid key tops are fixed on the keymat, so that they match with the switching dome below the keymat. Keymat is the standard techinique to make the logistics and manuacturing of optional keyboard variants feasible. The domes and backlight LEDs are soldered to the PCB of the keyboard, and the keymat is a "loose" component, which contains no eletronics. To disperse the light from the LEDs, between the keymat and PCB there can be a transparent plastic plate with holes for the moving key cap and the domes.
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2013-10-21
, 14:02
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Posts: 39 |
Thanked: 81 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#87
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Okay crazy, trackball is totally possible and not complex to integrate in a keyboard!
What do you guys think, is a trackball preferable to a arrow-pad?
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2013-10-21
, 14:45
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Posts: 65 |
Thanked: 56 times |
Joined on Oct 2013
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#88
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Trackpad: Definitely! But IMO, from a right-handed person point of view, it would be positioned better on the left. We usually use the left hand as a support hand, while doing stuff with the right. If the trackpad is on the left, this means we can naturally touch the screen, press a button, or even keep on cooking with the right hand, while still being able to scroll or zoom or whatever.
Again, my opinion as a right-handed person. Any left-handed person in the house that cares to comment on this?
Anyway, just an idea! Keep going, this project is awesome!
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2013-10-21
, 14:54
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Posts: 889 |
Thanked: 2,087 times |
Joined on Sep 2010
@ Manchester
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#89
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2013-10-21
, 15:02
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Posts: 39 |
Thanked: 81 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#90
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Tags |
the other half |
Thread Tools | |
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Actually the HTC S740 was one of the inspirations for my keyboard layout.
As I said before, this is what I think is the pinnacle of a hardware keyboard for a ~5in device.
Its function over form at its max.
Keeping the important keys, and hiding the rest as Secondary ones (Activated via Ctrl), and do away with the rest. A small light indicates when Ctrl or the Shift (Caps Lock) is active. The circle at the right is actually a Trackball (think Blackberry) which helps control the cursor with awesome tactile feedback.
All in all, keep everything big, bland, easy to see and type away!
PS That Jolla photo is actually just a render.
I'm flattered