really small keyboards
Posted: 18 Dec 2022, 04:50
I'm sure it's partially just me not being very tuned into the keyboard scene, but it's also partly lack of general interest, but I'd like to find really small keyboards. Not keyboards with very few keys, but keyboards with very small keys.
I have a "BBQ20" keyboard from Solder Party (on Tindie). It's one of the smaller USB keyboards ever, I'm sure. 75mm wide, 55mm deep, 15mm tall. (Roughly 3" x 2.25" x 0.5"). It's based on a Blackberry phone part repurposed as USB-C.
At just 35 keys (plus a "track ball" which is really optical not a ball) it's more limited than even a 40% and the mounting is a lot less stable than it would have been on a Blackberry device, so it's not exactly easy to use for anything, but it still goes in my bag for Unix shell scripting option on-the-go. (Right shift key is mapped to ESC so that I can vi with this.)
I'm curious what else is out there that I haven't been able to find. I see people make scale model cases for Raspberry Pi and sometimes even scale monitors, but I've never seen the matching keyboards and mice (or trackballs). For infrequently used scale models, I think a micro keyboard that you can basically only type on with a stylus to hit the right keys could be cool, just I've never seen one.
I have a "BBQ20" keyboard from Solder Party (on Tindie). It's one of the smaller USB keyboards ever, I'm sure. 75mm wide, 55mm deep, 15mm tall. (Roughly 3" x 2.25" x 0.5"). It's based on a Blackberry phone part repurposed as USB-C.
At just 35 keys (plus a "track ball" which is really optical not a ball) it's more limited than even a 40% and the mounting is a lot less stable than it would have been on a Blackberry device, so it's not exactly easy to use for anything, but it still goes in my bag for Unix shell scripting option on-the-go. (Right shift key is mapped to ESC so that I can vi with this.)
I'm curious what else is out there that I haven't been able to find. I see people make scale model cases for Raspberry Pi and sometimes even scale monitors, but I've never seen the matching keyboards and mice (or trackballs). For infrequently used scale models, I think a micro keyboard that you can basically only type on with a stylus to hit the right keys could be cool, just I've never seen one.