Difference between revisions of "Custom bluetooth keyboard"
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* Likely better battery life | * Likely better battery life | ||
* Any microcontroller (with enough IO) can be used | * Any microcontroller (with enough IO) can be used | ||
+ | * Supposedly replacement key wells can be had for < $90 directly from Kinesis. Add on some extra keycaps and the thumb boards and the custom controller and you could have a brand new, bluetooth Kinesis for much less than a brand new one. | ||
+ | ** A case would need to be made, but many people have modded their existing cases so the two halves are physically separated anyway, plus I personally think that the the thumb buttons could be at a slightly better angle, so that could be considered another pro | ||
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* Kinesis keyboards have some advanced programmability - reimplementing that on a custom controller could take some time | * Kinesis keyboards have some advanced programmability - reimplementing that on a custom controller could take some time |
Revision as of 12:59, 16 September 2011
Bluetooth conversion of a Kinesis contour keyboard to a bluetooth keyboard.
Brainstorming
Available approaches
Options | Pros | Cons |
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USB HID to bluetooth adapter |
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PS/2 to bluetooth adapter |
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Custom replacement keyboard controller with integrated bluetooth |
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Features
- Bluetooth module might have audio capabilities in addition to the required HID function
- Use keyboard as audio extender - include a headphone port in keyboard
- Kinesis has a key recognition click speaker built in which can be hard to hear when listening to music, but might still annoy others
- Overlay key click sound over bluetooth audio signal
- USB interface for charging
- disable bluetooth while charging and instead use the USB connection
- Saving, editing, and uploading custom keyboard layouts to the keyboard from the computer
- Cross platform application
- Keyboard layers could be saved, exported, and uploaded individually
- Example:
- Standard keyboards have "qwerty" on the base layer and the shift key brings them to the next layer containing "QWERTY" (assuming qwerty keyboard)
- The Kinesis firmware has a keypad layer, so when you press the keypad button, the keys under the right hand become a numpad and the shift key moves between the layers of the numpad (numbers or arrows)
- Separate keys and their shifted values for more finely tuned layouts (can be done in xmodmap in Linux, but this isn't portable/cross platform)
- May not act as expected in some programs as normally it is the computer that determines the shift's effect on the key, not the keyboard
- Probably need to take special consideration into key sequences (eg pressing shift then x as opposed to x then shift)
- Example:
- Integrated pointing device
Reference
- Development example using Bluegiga WT12
- WT12 breakout boards - supposedly open hardware, but I haven't seen the layout files yet
- WT12 module
- Custom bluetooth IBM Model M using a salvaged bluetooth module from a mini keyboard - salvaged PCB
- Custom bluetooth IBM Model M using a salvaged bluetooth module from a mini keyboard - custom PCB
- Custom bluetooth HHKB using the WT12
- Major Kinesis mod project - includes a collection of other Kinesis mods