Support for Alternative Layouts
This is a summary of how alternative layouts have been supported by kits such as Colevrak and Homing. It is not a discussion of alt layout performance and development, but if that interests you I highly recommend starting with Pascal Getreuer’s A guide to alt keyboard layouts (why, how, which one?). It’s a concise and comprehensive overview with links to some great sites that go deeper. He also has a separate Links about keyboards page. The Keyboard layouts doc he recommends explains layout goals and metrics in detail, summarizing the alt layouts discussed here as well as more than one hundred others. Sculpted-profile The majority of custom keycap sets are sculpted-profile (Cherry, SA, MT3, KAT, etc. - more on profiles generally here) so let’s start there. Because each row has a unique keycap shape, alt layouts require a unique keycap for each legend that moves off its QWERTY row. At first there were two The Dvorak layout was patented in 1936 by August Dvorak & William L....
Apr 23, 2024
Das is the ONLY one providing USB 3.0 here can't understand where the others went with ignoring this?
If Das starts implementing USB-C, other brands will surely follow since USB-C allows a lot more possibilities where 2.0 and 3.0 falls short. I can certainly see myself using it more often. Certainly agree why other brands that has a hub ignore 3.0 all this time.
Mainly use USB 3.0 for hard drive backups from my various PC's. Cheapest and easiest way to get data from certain setups without connecting a complicated network of ethernet cabling.
http://blog.usro.net/recommended-usb-3-0-hub-for-external-hard-drives/
100% reliable and I can hook up multiple drives to this hub with no problems at all.