Hey,

I’m looking for a portable ortholinear for taking to co-working in my backpack.

For context, I’m a coder. I use neovim all day. At home I use a maltron 3d. It’s a fantastic comfortable keyboard (I think kinesis nicked the design?), although it did take getting used to.

It’s the only keyboard I’ve ever been able to touch type on.

So yeah. I’d like to find something similar that is portable. It has to have quiet switches, as it’s a shared office. Any suggestions?

So far I’ve looked at:

Those all look nice, but are too expensive.

How does the ergodox ez hold up these days?

  • @pixelprimer@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    For a silent and portable keywell you’ve basically only got the Glove80. Their new Cherry Blossom silent switches is where I would go. Voyager is also an option but only slightly less expensive than the glove and you lose the keywell. I’d definitely go for that if you’re willing to drop the cash. There’s usually a few used ones up for sale on the MoErgo discord

  • @forrcaho@lemmy.world
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    621 hours ago

    I really liked my Keebio FoldKB, which I wrote about here, although for me the main attraction was its similarity to a standard keyboard, which sounds like it isn’t a consideration for you. I currently have a Moonlander, and the last time I was going on a trip, I packed it up but said “f*ck it” because it was just too cumbersome, and just relied on my laptop’s keyboard. I’ve taken my FoldKB on trips before, though, and it was much easier to take along. I think I will continue to use it on trips.

  • @version_unsorted@lemm.ee
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    322 hours ago

    Ergodox EZ is fantastic, I’ve got zealpc zilents installed in mine for silent tactile. Expensive switches, but I’ve been transplanting them between new keyboards. I got the EZ from a friend when he wanted to go to a moonlander.

  • @evo@sh.itjust.works
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    221 hours ago

    I think kinesis nicked the design?

    Idk which is older but didn’t they both blatantly copy the Ergodox layout?

    I have commuted with an Ergodox and I honestly just find it a bit too large. If you are set on that many keys I’d suggest you check out SliceMK since they made a low profile Ergodox. I’m not a fan of ZSA since they are overpriced (cheap plastic) and haven’t really ever done anything innovative IMO. Although I don’t use it often my SliceMK wireless Ergodox is really solid.

    • @vext01@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      113 hours ago

      Thanks for the slice mk suggestion.

      I dont know when the M3D was first manufactured, but I assumed maltron were the first with that design since they’ve been in the game since the 70s.

      • @vext01@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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        113 hours ago

        Ah, it says on their website that the first revision was developed in 1976:

        The first keyboard, (top image), was shown at the News Tec exhibition, Brighton, in December 1976

        The thumb cluster was different back then, but the ortholinear scoop was there.

  • @667
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    120 hours ago

    I specifically selected the Moonlander because I travel often and needed the small form factor, while also retaining the split design and large number of keys.

    • @vext01@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      112 hours ago

      Can you tell me about your experience with it?

      Do you find it easy to lug around in a backpack? Is it easy to set up after you’ve ported it?

      I’m slightly worried that the layout configurator is web-based and could disappear at any moment. Is there an offline tool you can use for the same purpose?

      • @667
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        211 hours ago

        I enjoy it, though there is a little effort friction with deploying the tilt legs, but beyond that it’s a delight, and highly configurable, and well-supported both in the community and from the company. For example, the USB port on mine had some demonstrable connection issues after I received it; I contacted the company and they replaced it immediately under warranty.

        While Oryx is a convenient online configuration tool, the firmware is open-source, called QMK (https://qmk.fm/guide), and it seems the project also has a GUI configurator.

        When folded and stored in its case, the Moonlander is quite compact, though it’s not tiny. It will fit in a regular-sized backpack if it’s not already packed to the brim.