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I used to work with a guy that mounted a keyboard vertically on each side of his chair, using both at once.

A true legend.



I'm typing this from a split keyboard right now. If someone made a nice set of arms that could mount my keyboard halves to my chair arms (with enough room on the right for a trackpad) I'd absolutely spring for that and get rid of my desk. Then when Apple makes a Vision Air I can just go full cyberman and drop the monitor too.


It frustrates me to no end that the split form factor has not gotten more poplar. It naturally seems a better fit for the human body. Instead, I am stuck paying a premium to kinesis for their garbage software.


I don't know how popular you would like, but ZSA has been around for quite a while. Their ErgoDox has been around for years, and they have other models as well. [0]

The Dygma Defy has also been making waves, it released not too long ago. [1]

The Keyboardio Model 100 has been out for a while, it pops up occasionally on eBay so can't be too unpopular if it shows up there. [2]

The MoErgo is probably less well known but has a good following both in the US and Europe. [3] Their Discord is pretty active.

> premium to kinesis for their garbage software

All the keyboards above are programmable, often with more than one option for programming. QMK is the common denominator and it isn't bad, but their are other options (Python, etc) and usually web-based configurators also.

...If you're willing to go with something that is too new to be popular, but has excellent ergonomics, programmable, and great customer support in US, I'd recommend Cyboard. [4] Currently waiting for mine to be shipped.

There are lots of options besides these. So you are correct split keyboards are not available at the local big-box store, but at the same time they are definitely more powerful, more comfortable, and more customizable as a class. They are out there and they have a following, just have to know how to get started.

[0] https://www.zsa.io/voyager/

[1] https://dygma.com/pages/defy

[2] https://shop.keyboard.io/

[3] https://www.moergo.com/

[4] https://www.cyboard.digital/


I know a lot of these options exist, but I have a few unbreakable requirements.

1) not building it myself. I need off the shelf. I am lousy with a soldering iron.

2) it must have a dedicated F row. I do not care about layers and supposedly saved movement distance. I must always be able to mash F5 without any chording. Give me an F row + layers. The keys need to physically be there, my desk has plenty of “vertical” space to hold it.


Dedicated FN row supported by 2 out of 5 links above, check Cyboard and MoErgo. Most places (all in these links) provide turnkey, no soldering required.

Agree your requirements get into rarefied territory if you want something ready-to-go, split, programmable, with FN row. But there are options.


Glove80 has a dedicated F row, is off he shelf, and also has layers if you -want- to use them. I haven't bothered with the layers yet, but my carpal tunnel definitely thanks me for switching to it.

I am not affiliated in anyway, just a happy customer who is no longer in pain after work. Dedicated F row was a must for me as well.


You don't need to solder modern day DIY keyboards (to my disappointment). There are now switch sockets. So everything is pre-soldered and all you do is maybe put in some screws, put in the switches and put on the keycaps.


Get Keeb.io sinc it’s sold prebuilt and has an f row. I have 2


I’d say non-split keyboard is barbaric at this point of computer evolution


Sadly I agree. Splits are great. I am eagerly awaiting my ortholinear split keyboard from https://dygma.com/ - no affiliation other than being a customer of their first keyboard, the raise and having the defy on order.

Maybe it's just me, but I think the proliferation of mechanical keyboards brings people closer to the fringe where custom keyboards, layouts, parts and pcbs are the norm for the pursuit of perfection.


Check out this mounting kit: https://www.zsa.io/moonlander/tripod-kit/


This is nice in that it has standardized threaded mounting points, but doesn't solve the distance from the chair arms outs to the keyboard halves. So there'd still be some doing.


The cable connecting the two halves of my ZSA is just a standard 3.5mm TRRS audio cable. Moonlander docs say max length is 6ft~=2m. That should be plenty to route it around the back of your chair.


sure, that's not the issue. The issue is that these mounts let you put a moonlander on tripod bolts. They do not address attaching the so-equipped keyboard halves to the arms of a chair.


Glove80 has a quick release mount system meant specifically for that use case. The first version was better in my opinion, but they had trouble source some parts and just launched a version 2 with the parts they can get.



I do something similar at home: lie on my bed with a keyboard half leaning on each of my hips.

One of these days I'll get around to 3D-printing a clamp or something.


I saw someone playing a concertina once and thought hmmmm... a split keyboard might work there. Never got round to doing anything about it, though.


May I introduce you to the Commodordion: https://linusakesson.net/commodordion/index.php





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