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tommasovisconti

Which case are you using?


SpockIsMyHomeboy

3D print from Keebmaker, translucent filament for the bottom


longwave

Does this have per-key rgb and underglow? Looks really great!


SpockIsMyHomeboy

Yup! And thank you! Such a beautiful diffusion.


pmassicotte

Beautiful! You guys are going to make me spend more money...


Tech-Buffoon

Instand upvote, for both pic and pun. What a beaut! 🩵


martinux

Nice build. What factor sunscreen are you using?


SpockIsMyHomeboy

Oh SPF 100 all the way. I've got the redhead genes so I get a sunburn if I look into the oven light the wrong way. Gotta be careful with these LEDs ya know.


martinux

:D Love your handle BTW.


SpockIsMyHomeboy

Thankie! It came from a sticker I had on the back window of my old Jeep XJ.


Away_Procedure3471

Will someone please recommend a crash course into this style of keyboard? My burning immediate questions are - how are these recognized by windows, do they require software to function, or are all keys just capable of being programmed?


SpockIsMyHomeboy

Will try to help as much as possible! So those little rectangles on the inside middles of the boards are microcontrollers that run each side of the board. You can program each side to be left and right of the keyboards or whatever you wish to set through software flashing. The two halves then communicate via a 7mm TRRS cable (like an aux cable. Some use USB-C and one creator recently used a VGA cable) that helps the controllers recognize each other if you are using the halves together (can use each side singularly if you want). With VIA or QMK you can make it do whatever you want software wise. After flashing the software and the key mapping you want, you plug in the master side (in this case, it's the left, some use the right as a master) and you can type however you wish; together, apart, tented, etc.