Despite the advent of touch screens, speech recognition and eye-tracking, the keyboard still reigns supreme as the input device of choice for many of us. Somebody who places a lot of value on this ...
Hackaday has seen dozens of Morse code keyboards over the years, but [Hudson] at NYC Resistor finally managed to give that idea the justice it deserves. He built a USB Morse code keyboard with the ...
Jeff Atwood (of Stack Overflow fame) decided that he needed a new keyboard for his coding adventures. So instead of just firing up the Amazon app and starting from there, he decided to make his own.
Keyboards are a dime a dozen these days, and there are literally hundreds to choose from – chiclet-style, compact, full-size, gaming, mechanical, different colors; the possibilities are endless.
Two and a half years ago, I fell in love with a mechanical keyboard. It was comfortable to use but profoundly loud, to the point of being obnoxious. It was audible across rooms and through walls and ...
Programmers rely on their keyboard perhaps more than any other profession I can think of. When I heard Jeff Atwood, author of the blog Coding Horror and co-founder of coding Q&A website Stack Overflow ...
The project pertains to a Morse code keyboard with software USB implementation as it uses an old fashioned taping device connected to AVR ATmega168 microcontroller. The project pertains to a Morse ...