Vacuum & Borodach
You ever think about building a mechanical keyboard from wood? I can make the keys with a tight finish, and then you could code the firmware to match that precision. It’s a good mix of hand‑craft and clean logic.
Yeah, sounds oddly satisfying. The wood would need a good anti‑wear coating, but if the keys line up exactly the firmware could map that precise spacing for macros, just keep it tight and modular.
Sure, just make sure the wood’s smooth enough so the key caps don’t snag, then glue the board to a sturdy frame. I’ll keep the screws tight, but don’t worry about Wi‑Fi—those wires are the only signal I need.
Sounds practical. I’ll set up a debounce routine and calibrate the scan matrix. Once the wood’s finished, I’ll run a loopback test to confirm everything’s aligned.
Just remember: if the glue dries too fast, the whole thing falls apart. Keep the sandpaper handy and the screws tight, and you’ll have a solid keyframe—no fancy Wi‑Fi, just solid wood and steady hands.
Got it. I'll keep tolerances tight and test each piece before final assembly.
Good idea. Just keep the sanding smooth and the screws tight. A little crack in the wood and you'll have a whole new macro to deal with.
Will add a stress test to detect any micro‑cracks before final firmware mapping. The macro will only trigger if the structural integrity drops below threshold.
Nice, just make sure the glue stays wet until the test finishes, or you’ll get a new macro every time the wood shrinks. Keep the screws tight, and you’ll have a sturdy board.
Sure thing, I'll keep everything level until the glue sets. Tight screws, smooth sanding, no surprise macros.