Are you referring to the #define MASTER_LEFT?
This is just defining whether the USB is plugged into the left board or right board.
All defines start with a hash as standard. It’s not commenting the line out. For that, you’d use //.
I’m an Australian based Data Engineer, who enjoys making sub-40% custom keyboards.
Are you referring to the #define MASTER_LEFT?
This is just defining whether the USB is plugged into the left board or right board.
All defines start with a hash as standard. It’s not commenting the line out. For that, you’d use //.
Yes. But if 90% of your friends use it, and have groups in it where things are planned and organised, then by not having it you’re going to be missing out on a big chunk of things going on around you.
The challenge is that these days a phone is rarely used for calls or texts, but used with apps like WhatsApp or Teams or Slack or your mobile banking app, or things like that. And so there would need to be a critical mass of these apps to get me to switch.
I think it gives everyone the same list of 29, but it’s the order that’s important. Gentoo came back as my top. I use Void which came back as 4th in my list.
Well at least at the end of the questions the distro I use (Void) was somewhere near the top of the list (4th).
I’m an avid Void user, so I get the value of linux. But I cringe every time I see a comment like this. The OP has asked a specific question about a specific version of a specific OS. Someone asking about an OS should not be considered an invitation to tell them about another.
I use it as my primary home machine, running bspwm. I enjoy it, and find once configured it just works. Primarily web browsing, Kicad and OpenSCAD, and some Python development.
Yes. I’ve been using a 36 key split as my daily driver for a year or so. So each finger and thumb has 3 keys. I’m removing the middle one (the home key), and to press it you simply press top and bottom together. So there shouldn’t be that big of a learning curve for me.
Yeah, maybe. 10x the cost for a default print is a bit too much for me to bother fiddling to make it right for them. Think I’ll just stick with jlcpcb and make do without the transparent coat.
I must be doing something wrong. For what looks to be exactly the same spec, jlcpbc is quoting A$14.85 (US$9.92)while pcbway are quoting just over US$100 for the same thing.
Gotcha, thank you!
Yeah, unfortunately also there is a interlock/cog teeth system so you can lock the legs in place. One side of the cog is on what you can buy. The other side is on the part that it built into the keyboard. So realistically the only way to get the full thing is to crack open an ErgoDox and take/break them out.
Already done. They sell the legs, but they won’t sell the fittings that are used to attach the legs to the case, as these come built into the chassis.
Sounds like it would be worth looking at the asyncio package.
Because I don’t want my Firefox window overlapping my Vim window.
Can confirm not hiding on Memmy
I’ve got pfsense coming into the house, and then ubiquiti throughout.
Not Gentoo based, but have you considered having a play with Void? It’s a stable rolling release, bare bones with it’s own init. Very customisable. I’m using it as my daily driver outside work use (Linux isn’t allowed), and not having any problems, while still getting to tinker.
Ah, thank you. I’ll have a go at that then.