Happy Hacking Keyboard, built by Fujitsu, and relatively unchanged since 1996, takes a decades-old Unix-style layout, replaces lesser-used keys with key combinations, strips out all unnecessary fluff (silly dedicated arrow keys, for instance), and marries it with an only-from-Japan ultra-minimal design. It’s composed of “Topre” switches, which combine a coiled spring, a rubber dome, and a capacitive switch, for easy-to-press keys and a patented “bounce.” You can get blank keycaps, and if you really want to get technical, you can flip some DIP switches to reassign keys to your preference. Ultimately, the keyboard is designed to keep you from ever leaving the home row, relying on key combos and a perfect, near-symmetrical layout as you ease into the code haze.
This guy knows how to talk dirty to me.
This guy knows how to talk dirty to me.
Happy Hacking Keyboard, built by Fujitsu, and relatively unchanged since 1996, takes a decades-old Unix-style layout,...