Why I Love Prototype Runs and Helping Keyboard Designers
The Migra TKL Prototype by Thebloodyez “This is my keyboard. There are many like it, but this one is mine.” - William H. Rupertus. In another life, if Major General William H. Rupertus, the Marine who coined the United States Marine Creed, had been a keyboard enthusiast, we might've gotten this line instead. All joking aside, this has been an article that I’ve wanted to write for quite some time. There are many reasons why we love the keyboard hobby, and today, I wanted to introduce you to one of mine—prototype keyboards and helping keyboard designers by joining prototype runs. Now, it’s not risk-free, and one should weigh the pros and cons of joining a prototype run, so I encourage you to pay attention to the disclaimer portion of this article. I know that there are prototype runs for keycaps, switches, and other cool things in our keyboard hobby, but for this article, I’ll be focusing only on keyboards. Also, please know that not every prototype run will be handled...
Dec 31, 2024
- Don't believe anyone's numbers, especially if it comes to layout design.
- Whether QWERTY is good or bad depends entirely on your typing habits: physical layout, language/corpus, preferences.
- In the best case (0.2%), QWERTY was outperformed by only 2 random layouts out of 1000. (This suggests relying on random layouts in optimization models is absolutely inefficient.)
- In a worse scenario (50%+), every second random layout may outperform QWERTY. Relying on random layouts while looking for better alternatives may seem to be worth considering in this case.
- Well, not really. Random layouts may be better than QWERTY but usually not much better. It's next to impossible to find really good ones randomly in a pool of 2.65*10^32 or 5.23*10^44 alternatives.
- On the physical layout: both 60% QWERTY users and minimalistic split keymap wizards may be right. QWERTY on 60% is relatively better than QWERTY on 30-40%.
- Bonus: these principles are valid not just for QWERTY but any other layout.
All in all, now that we've made it clear why it makes sense to be sceptic and bother with custom layouts, in the upcoming articles of this series we will look into methods to find and design much better custom keymaps.Yep, one more thing. As I promised earlier: 520,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 - this is the number of all the possible layouts for my 38-key layout (ignoring thumb keys).