@@HipyoTech lmao i did you never show the typing test lol so what are you saying It just a long promotional video to sell the keyboard. I get it you have to make money but you are not fooling anyone with half a brain.
Pretty sure lessening repetitive movements - less risk of developing arthritis (or aggravating already existing) is the selling point, not necessarily the words per minute
If you use a keyboard that much then the speed matters, but if you don't use it that much, then you won't develop arthritis from using it. Maybe it's useful when someone already have it, but at this point is just better to use a voice interpreter.
But wouldn’t there be more repetitive strain on the joints and tendons since you are repeatedly moving your fingers up and down with your hands in a fixed positions?
Stenography is crazy. I had a chance to play around with a steno board, it was cool but when I actually tried learning it gave me a headache 😂😂 tricky stuff.
@@revimfadli4666 lateral finger movements are slow, it's just one muscle doing the movement. Try putting buttons on the sides of your finger and press them precisely and reliably. Likely it will be way slower than normal presses that use extension and contraction of multiple muscles at the same time for each joint to make the movement faster and less fatiguing
@@NJ-wb1cz slower yet covering much shorter distances when changing letters could still be faster than faster movement over longer distances. Are you only comparing repetitive presses of the same key? And how often does that happen in actual typing?
@@revimfadli4666 but it's not faster. I'm comparing the end result first and foremost. Datahand has been around for decades as a niche product and people just aren't faster on it. People are extremely fast on chording keyboards but not on datahand
@@theresheblows haha bro you say that as if typing isn’t the job of a typist. Why are you downplaying it as if you are anywhere close to that level. I cant stand people like you. You’ve done nothing. You’re a nobody, but you’re negative about some random person’s achievements. You’re pathetic
@@lightningninja6905 Yeah, that's definitely a huge downside, diagonals are very important in games, so they'd have to account for that, though maybe the keys are light enough it's actually not hard to do diagonals. Also if the keys are magnetic, do they handle constant input well?
I could see this being for someone with limited mobility. Like if moving your fingers or arms is really hard or impossible so instead just a slight bump of the finger in a direction types.
I always was waiting for such keyboard to be built like 10 years ago. Now its redundant. Now voice to text is gotten so good and so fast you can just type as fast as you can speak.
I think the main feature is that it's ergonomic, not fast. You can see that he's barely moving his fingers and that should be amazing for people with joint pain
i'm not that "expert" in keyboards but I'm pretty sure that 700€ it's a bit too much for a 3d printed keyboard, i mean no hate if anyone can explain why the price is that i'm happy to listen
I think that’s why the DIY kits are >50% less than prebuilt. Having fallen down the Sval rabbit hole, it seems like the pricing is what it is to make it possible for the project’s creator to keep it going. And it’s competitively priced against what DataHands (the thing it replaces) was before that company went under 🤷♂️ I mean, it’s too expensive for me to buy at the moment 😅 but as someone with RSI who needs to spend 6h+ a day working with a keyboard and mouse, this is a lot cheaper than carpal tunnel surgery!
Because a company has more costs than only the materials it's made off. R&D, employees, marketing are some things you don't have to pay if you make something at home.
@@OWazabiis it though? I type 110 average, but Give me any statistic suggesting that. 100 WPM Is like the 97th percentile for those who have typeracing accounts, and, yes, a subset of the population that signs up for a typing speed account is an extremely biased sample population. So claiming average Joes are going 100 wpm is ludicrous.
It’s also not ergonomic because your radius and ulna still cross when you lay your palms flat like that. In order to not create carpal tunnel pressure your thumbs would have to be up and pinkies down like you were going to shake another person’s hand.
Yes. "Normal" ergonomic keyboards definitely help, but breaks, stretching, exercise and swapping stance and/or keyboards help too. (8+ years into custom mechanical keyboards and struggled with RSI) And this keyboard seems to be in a higher risk zone for RSI because of the locked in positions for the fingers combined with the not-normal angles the fingers (incl thumbs of ) has to move..
If it isn't impressive then simply try the feat yourself to show us how it's done. I don't disagree that he's a bit slow with it, but it seems to be significantly harder than a standard keyboard. Sounds like someone can't see past the end of their own nose to see that it isn't a 1 : 1 comparison going on here.
@@therare0nemy top speed was something above 140 in high school, but it wasn't sustained.I got a little gold pin somewhere for it. 185 is incredibly fast. I'll type with few errors in the 110 range. Maybe I should be a typist 🤔 sounds boring tho
@@MrLookatmyhat Agree I had that speed for like a few months when I was Rly practising. I probably had a few errors too but we had an equation so 1 mistake=minus 5-10 words per minute. And I wasn't the best in the class, by far..
I think my favourite part is when you showed absolutely nothing! Liking this video! I also love how there are two inputs for the mouse! So intuitive and smart!
It reminds me of Japanese smartphone keyboards. Most of the keys include five different syllables. You click on one and then you either let go or move up/down/right/left before letting go. So for example ka/ki/ku/ke/ko are all under the same key. Very different but you can type on it just as fast if you get used to it. However, the learning curve of the Japanese keyboard is much smaller as most of the keys hold all of the syllables of the same letter so it mskes much more sense.
For those talking about the low wpm, this isn’t a replacement for a normal keyboard, this is for people who don’t have full range of motion in their arms, which normally makes typing nigh impossible
That's completely fair, but the creator and the fans are making claims that it's "ergonomic" in general, like it's the ultimate keyboard. If it was positioned as a tool for the disabled, then not only you would avoid misleading people, but this would also allow some to use their medical insurance to buy it
@@NJ-wb1cz the creator is basically pulling infomercial marketing - a LOT of informercial items are taken from the mobility/accessibility tech sector, and just have it marketed to the 'general population'. It's all sizzle and no steak. a normal person wouldnt use this (its not 'ergonomic') as well as one would have to relearn and unlearn typing. if you are a typist, you would best be instead getting yourself a keyboard in a layout you are more familiar with, as beyond QWERTY there are many formats like DVORAK as an old starter, and many onwards. i can crank out 80wpm with QWERTY even with arthritis giving me grief.
really cool keyboard! does anyone happen to know how helpful this is for people with hand disabilities? if it can help people with disabilities this would be a super nice alternative to your run of the mill keyboard. love your content hipyo, ive been following since 2019 ❤
I type 120 straight off the bat no warmup on a mechanical keyboard that's $60, my record is 149. I don't think this is better considering the well versed creator could only get 81 wpm
Creator is definitely one of my people 😂 (unfortunately though he’s part of the smart group and I’m part of the “collect shiny rocks and listen to loud motors” so this still amazes me LOL)
I think that everyone in the comment section arguing it isn't fast enough needs to shut up. If i had to take a wild guess, I'd say that it's easily possible to type much faster than 81 on that thing considering the lack of hand movements. You could be much more efficient with it if you practiced. And the point isn't even to type, it's just a cool little thing some guy created for fun. Quit hating because you sound stupid arguing online.
The keyboard layout we are all accustomed to was actually designed to slow down the person typing. It was intentionally built that way because in the early days with typewriters if you made a mistake it would be printed on paper so mistakes were permanent and after tests they determined the best format to slow down typing and prevent mistakes was the layout we currently have.
See the problem with this is, it still takes one key press to type a letter. As well as the fact that the English keyboard is already extremely well thought out. Most heavily used letters are within reach of most people's strongest fingers, and you rarely have to use the same hand to type more than two to three letters in a row, and you almost never have to use the same finger to type more then one letter at a time. 81 words a minute is not that impressive, I was expecting this to allow normal typing at nearly stenographer speeds, but this really doesn't seem to achieve anything all that impressive. I'm pretty sure I could type faster than 81 words a minute on a standard keyboard. On top of that, a standard keyboard allows for a greater range of motion of your fingers whereas this keyboard appears to keep your fingers in such a relatively neutral position, with such small movements, it seems like this would cause your hands to hurt even quicker. My reason for this thinking is that, holding a controller, with relatively no grip force required, and only moving my thumbs, leaves my fingers sore after doing it long enough. I can't imagine these being any better. With a typing speed that unimpressive, you might as well just teach yourself stenography. Lastly, complaints about the product itself aside, this is one of the most aggravatingly filmed shorts I've watched in a while. Why wouldn't you show his actual typing? Why wouldn't you show us what is happening on screen?
I’m very okay with having a new keyboard design. QWERTY was specifically designed to spread out the most used keys, so that the little printer arms wouldn’t hit each other in typewriters. It’s all a scam at this point. But I don’t think it will ever really change…
I'm sure like learning proper keyboarding and the muscle memory that makes the querty layout feel so "natural" (ironically), I could see a typist mastering this device with a good few months of practice. The hardest part to me is memorizing the key layouts and then applying muscle memory to that, like normal keyboarding, you have to get to the point where you stop thinking about what key is where and just let your fingers do the work as you think of the word you want to type. I don't think I'd mind trying this out.
In the super smash brothers melee scene, a commentator named Chillindude suffered a stroke. He used a controller similar to this to play with one hand for awhile.
EYE OPENER: When I was in 5th grade, we were expected to type 125+wpm on average and 200wpm for the andvanced class which I was in. WHAT IN THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH THE WORLD NOWADAYS!?!?! You know the requirements now? The minimum requirement is ELEVEN WPM and the average is 22WPM with 30wpm being considered as a year advanced.
This is how the Japanese keyboard works on phones. You have buttons for hiragana starting with a vowel/consonant that you swipe the direction you want to specify. For example you have Na in the centre with Ni to the left, Nu to the top, Ne to the right, and No to the bottom. なにぬねの.
EDIT: I thought this was a stenograph keyboard, but it functions differently. For more detailed info, see @foxelocklear 's comment below! 👇 _______________________________ 81 is fast, but I not as fast as I expected. I thought these were designed to be able to type sentences in seconds?
@@foxelocklear in what way? Aren't they both using combination triggers to type multiple letters at once? Or are stenograph keyboards more about combining inputs into a word and this is just using multiple inputs per letter? I'm curious
@fafflerproductions stenograph keyboards are more phonetically keyboards than usual keyboards. This keyboard has a c button which is not something you'd see on the stenography boards, since the c is handled by the s or k key. Also this "keyboard" doesn't seem to use multiple inputs to make a word, rather just groups the keys by where your fingers rest
You have the RIGHT to Travel; By foot , By Bike , with rollerskates if you want! You DRIVING is a PRIVILEGE not a right, not everyone should be driving ESPECIALLY without proper documentation (Liscense and Registration, plates) designed for safety and ease of identification. TRAVEL by foot if you wanna complain about Rights , but saying its a converted right is downright stupid and the fact this individual is likely on the road to this day has me scared to even walk across a sidewalk. " i ' travel " on the common law" , you dont " Drive on the common law " without all the bells and whistles.
Those keys could be inside gloves for vr, a controller with 50 potential key commands at a time. You just have to memorize it as a keyboard first so you know where to press X or whichever since you couldnt see your fingers
Tap the related video to watch me try and learn to type on it 😮
Can you do the best mod for keychron v3 so I can tell if it's worth it cuz I can buy it 😅
Nice no visual of the monitor to verify nice and fake how i like it
@@catacocamping874 watch the full vid dummy
@@HipyoTech lmao i did you never show the typing test lol so what are you saying It just a long promotional video to sell the keyboard. I get it you have to make money but you are not fooling anyone with half a brain.
@@HipyoTech did you delete my comment because it true 🤣
I was here expecting 200 wpm
Same, like you can easily get 80 wpm on a normal keyboard and not spend like 700 bucks
for that you need a steno
@@YkulvaarlckNo, some people can type well over 200 in regular flat QWERTY keyboards.
@@sttlok most competent stenographers can type in the range of 300
The creator is still in a learning curve
them things look straight outta transformers, holy
Ghost in the Shell
It looks like that bird transformer that transformed into the computer mouse
That isn’t the most complex one there is one for gaming and it has all the keys on one side along with a joystick on the side
Looks something like Wheeljack or Rhinox made...
“Them things”?!?!
What in the hell happened to speaking English? Surely you were not raised to speak like that…
Pretty sure lessening repetitive movements - less risk of developing arthritis (or aggravating already existing) is the selling point, not necessarily the words per minute
buh buh efficiency! or something idk im not really a tech guy
If you use a keyboard that much then the speed matters, but if you don't use it that much, then you won't develop arthritis from using it. Maybe it's useful when someone already have it, but at this point is just better to use a voice interpreter.
Tennis elbow will be crazy though
But wouldn’t there be more repetitive strain on the joints and tendons since you are repeatedly moving your fingers up and down with your hands in a fixed positions?
So you'll get arthritis in other parts of your hand since you're still moving your fingers
This is the 1st time I've seen someone so happy that they typed 4 words in a minute
Wait 'til this guy discovers stenography
Stenography is crazy. I had a chance to play around with a steno board, it was cool but when I actually tried learning it gave me a headache 😂😂 tricky stuff.
Imagine a stenotype with this ergonomy
@@revimfadli4666 lateral finger movements are slow, it's just one muscle doing the movement. Try putting buttons on the sides of your finger and press them precisely and reliably. Likely it will be way slower than normal presses that use extension and contraction of multiple muscles at the same time for each joint to make the movement faster and less fatiguing
@@NJ-wb1cz slower yet covering much shorter distances when changing letters could still be faster than faster movement over longer distances. Are you only comparing repetitive presses of the same key? And how often does that happen in actual typing?
@@revimfadli4666 but it's not faster. I'm comparing the end result first and foremost. Datahand has been around for decades as a niche product and people just aren't faster on it. People are extremely fast on chording keyboards but not on datahand
I was expecting actual footage of him typing on screen
Must have been unimpressive given that average typists do over 100 wpm
@@theresheblows haha bro you say that as if typing isn’t the job of a typist. Why are you downplaying it as if you are anywhere close to that level. I cant stand people like you. You’ve done nothing. You’re a nobody, but you’re negative about some random person’s achievements. You’re pathetic
Yeah... so disappointing
@@theresheblowskeyboard computer stuff is for nerds
@@Bigduke777 😂😂😂
I appreciate that W, A, S, and D are still relatively the same finger inputs for the games out there 😂
I can't confirm, but it seems like it'd be really hard to hit diagonals
@@lightningninja6905 Yeah, that's definitely a huge downside, diagonals are very important in games, so they'd have to account for that, though maybe the keys are light enough it's actually not hard to do diagonals. Also if the keys are magnetic, do they handle constant input well?
Ohh, i didn't notice that. Now im curious how well it could do in games.
No it isn't.
This is quite literally not built for gaming
Wow that's... my typing speed on a normal keyboard. Thats neat and all but for that learning curve I was expecting something miraculous
I could see this being for someone with limited mobility. Like if moving your fingers or arms is really hard or impossible so instead just a slight bump of the finger in a direction types.
Ergonomics are mainly for comfort, not speed.
My top on the same typing website they use is 120 wpm on a chromebook keyboard lol
Pretty sure it’s good for like gaming and stuff
It's not about speed. It's for preventing carpal tunnel and such.
I always was waiting for such keyboard to be built like 10 years ago. Now its redundant. Now voice to text is gotten so good and so fast you can just type as fast as you can speak.
Show this to a stenographer and watch them laugh their ass off at how much weirder their keyboards are.
81 words a minute wouldn't even pass a stick typing class.
Stick? You mean like grannie “👉⌨️” typing?
(Hunt and peck)
I think the main feature is that it's ergonomic, not fast. You can see that he's barely moving his fingers and that should be amazing for people with joint pain
@@thiaamaksmall fast repetitive movements like this are exactly how to get an RSI
@@thiaamaki have joint pain and i can use a normal kbord just fine, this thing is useless
i'm not that "expert" in keyboards but I'm pretty sure that 700€ it's a bit too much for a 3d printed keyboard, i mean no hate if anyone can explain why the price is that i'm happy to listen
I think that’s why the DIY kits are >50% less than prebuilt.
Having fallen down the Sval rabbit hole, it seems like the pricing is what it is to make it possible for the project’s creator to keep it going. And it’s competitively priced against what DataHands (the thing it replaces) was before that company went under 🤷♂️
I mean, it’s too expensive for me to buy at the moment 😅 but as someone with RSI who needs to spend 6h+ a day working with a keyboard and mouse, this is a lot cheaper than carpal tunnel surgery!
It’s a niche market
There's barely any demand. @@SnovixityEdits
Parts costs are low, assembly time is not.
Because a company has more costs than only the materials it's made off. R&D, employees, marketing are some things you don't have to pay if you make something at home.
I type 104 on a bad day. 😂 I’d need to see above 100 to be impressed!
Right? 100wpm is just regular speed of anyone that spends his life on the computer
The speed is not the goal on the keyboard, the comfort is.
@@armLocalhostThock thock over comfort all day for me.
@@OWazabiis it though? I type 110 average, but Give me any statistic suggesting that. 100 WPM Is like the 97th percentile for those who have typeracing accounts, and, yes, a subset of the population that signs up for a typing speed account is an extremely biased sample population.
So claiming average Joes are going 100 wpm is ludicrous.
@@javierclement3047yeah, the average is more like 40 WPM
"which keyboard do you use? "
"Thanos gauntlet"
guy created a high-learning curve device to be 10 words above the AVERAGE typing speed per minute (70)
It’s also not ergonomic because your radius and ulna still cross when you lay your palms flat like that. In order to not create carpal tunnel pressure your thumbs would have to be up and pinkies down like you were going to shake another person’s hand.
Please can you summearise it in words a non medical student like myself can understand 😅
@@damilolaowolabi6716your thumbs would have to be up and your pinkies down.
Yes. "Normal" ergonomic keyboards definitely help, but breaks, stretching, exercise and swapping stance and/or keyboards help too. (8+ years into custom mechanical keyboards and struggled with RSI) And this keyboard seems to be in a higher risk zone for RSI because of the locked in positions for the fingers combined with the not-normal angles the fingers (incl thumbs of ) has to move..
Sounds like a new project, I like it.
Looks easy to tilt both paddles and have them rest on some kind of "upside down v" shape?
The minimum speed for a paid typist is 110 per minute. Many can type significantly more.
If it isn't impressive then simply try the feat yourself to show us how it's done. I don't disagree that he's a bit slow with it, but it seems to be significantly harder than a standard keyboard. Sounds like someone can't see past the end of their own nose to see that it isn't a 1 : 1 comparison going on here.
I had to learn at school, we had a separate subject for it. The most I had was like 185.
Yea I expected him to do a bit better 😂
@@therare0nemy top speed was something above 140 in high school, but it wasn't sustained.I got a little gold pin somewhere for it. 185 is incredibly fast. I'll type with few errors in the 110 range. Maybe I should be a typist 🤔 sounds boring tho
@@MrLookatmyhatit's an underrated skill. Perhaps sadly, speech to type is becoming disturbingly accurate.
@@MrLookatmyhat
Agree I had that speed for like a few months when I was Rly practising. I probably had a few errors too but we had an equation
so 1 mistake=minus 5-10 words per minute.
And I wasn't the best in the class, by far..
I find it strange that there wasn’t a single second of seeing the words on the screen as they are typed
81 wpm is actually very very average, like mine is 86 wpm but max is 91 wpm
I think my favourite part is when you showed absolutely nothing! Liking this video! I also love how there are two inputs for the mouse! So intuitive and smart!
It reminds me of Japanese smartphone keyboards. Most of the keys include five different syllables. You click on one and then you either let go or move up/down/right/left before letting go. So for example ka/ki/ku/ke/ko are all under the same key. Very different but you can type on it just as fast if you get used to it.
However, the learning curve of the Japanese keyboard is much smaller as most of the keys hold all of the syllables of the same letter so it mskes much more sense.
That’s how fliphones worked? How old are you, lad 😂
@@draconian_dragons6588 Let's say I'm old enough that flip phones were the cool kid thing. Those needed multiple clicks though, not a slide.
For those talking about the low wpm, this isn’t a replacement for a normal keyboard, this is for people who don’t have full range of motion in their arms, which normally makes typing nigh impossible
That's completely fair, but the creator and the fans are making claims that it's "ergonomic" in general, like it's the ultimate keyboard.
If it was positioned as a tool for the disabled, then not only you would avoid misleading people, but this would also allow some to use their medical insurance to buy it
@@NJ-wb1cz the creator is basically pulling infomercial marketing - a LOT of informercial items are taken from the mobility/accessibility tech sector, and just have it marketed to the 'general population'. It's all sizzle and no steak. a normal person wouldnt use this (its not 'ergonomic') as well as one would have to relearn and unlearn typing. if you are a typist, you would best be instead getting yourself a keyboard in a layout you are more familiar with, as beyond QWERTY there are many formats like DVORAK as an old starter, and many onwards. i can crank out 80wpm with QWERTY even with arthritis giving me grief.
It’s for people with disabilities that prohibited normal hand and arm movement right?
Bro made a whole ass keyboard gauntlet setup and still hit average desk worker type speeds 😂
And the crowd goes mild!!! 81 words per minute!!
Right lol. I can do that on my crappy mac keyboard.
" underbudget Jacksepticeye"
Joebrokennose
really cool keyboard! does anyone happen to know how helpful this is for people with hand disabilities? if it can help people with disabilities this would be a super nice alternative to your run of the mill keyboard. love your content hipyo, ive been following since 2019 ❤
Yup - Discord community for this thing is full of people dealing with RSIs of all shapes and sizes! In some ways it is like a prosthesis
Yeah! That's one of its main purposes!
Depends on the disability for most probably not
@@Dgafsrangeryeah this is Nut
They expecting people with disabilities to use all of their fingers like seriously
@@ryananggoro493it's probably for people with limited wrist movement. Not everything has to be for a wide amount of people
Bro hasnt heard of steno dudes brain would melt 😂
Today: You csn type fast if you really try....
Neutralink in few years: Loads a video game directly in your brain.
I love when he showed the typing
80 wpm is an average person typing on a normal keyboard while his left hand is scratching his balls
this feels like it would be an interesting thing for a court stenographer to try out
they can type way faster than 80…
They have special keyboards that don't have individual letter input, search it up it's quite cool
You look like Anirudh ravichandran- music composer from India - top 1 from Indian film industry for a decade
The best part is where they show what they are actually typing.
When the learning curve is just a vertical wall
I type 120 straight off the bat no warmup on a mechanical keyboard that's $60, my record is 149. I don't think this is better considering the well versed creator could only get 81 wpm
If you don't have wrist pain, there is no reason for you to use this keyboard. But it exists for people who need it
Depends on how fast the creator is on a regular keyboard. Maybe he only does 40 wpm, and the new design doubles it.
for non verbal people with very little hand mobility this opens up a world of possibilities for them to communicate
Hopefully we get a Lofree Flow Lite Review 🙏🙏🙏
Creator is definitely one of my people 😂 (unfortunately though he’s part of the smart group and I’m part of the “collect shiny rocks and listen to loud motors” so this still amazes me LOL)
I write few, but very large essays every year and have a old lesion in my hand that make writing quite painful. That keyboard looks interesting
Traditional keyboard is much less stressful on your fingers and faster.
I think that everyone in the comment section arguing it isn't fast enough needs to shut up. If i had to take a wild guess, I'd say that it's easily possible to type much faster than 81 on that thing considering the lack of hand movements. You could be much more efficient with it if you practiced. And the point isn't even to type, it's just a cool little thing some guy created for fun. Quit hating because you sound stupid arguing online.
The keyboard layout we are all accustomed to was actually designed to slow down the person typing. It was intentionally built that way because in the early days with typewriters if you made a mistake it would be printed on paper so mistakes were permanent and after tests they determined the best format to slow down typing and prevent mistakes was the layout we currently have.
Yes Alex, I will take "absolutely absurd inventions that no one asked for that work regardless" for 500 please!
We place our hands in 'home position'.... typing class 1980's... giggles
Thanks for showing me absolutely nothing in all these shots 😂😂😂
If one trackball was blue, it would be diablo themed
"This is why we can't have nice things"
My default sentence whenever I try out a keyboard in a PC shop.
See the problem with this is, it still takes one key press to type a letter. As well as the fact that the English keyboard is already extremely well thought out. Most heavily used letters are within reach of most people's strongest fingers, and you rarely have to use the same hand to type more than two to three letters in a row, and you almost never have to use the same finger to type more then one letter at a time. 81 words a minute is not that impressive, I was expecting this to allow normal typing at nearly stenographer speeds, but this really doesn't seem to achieve anything all that impressive. I'm pretty sure I could type faster than 81 words a minute on a standard keyboard. On top of that, a standard keyboard allows for a greater range of motion of your fingers whereas this keyboard appears to keep your fingers in such a relatively neutral position, with such small movements, it seems like this would cause your hands to hurt even quicker. My reason for this thinking is that, holding a controller, with relatively no grip force required, and only moving my thumbs, leaves my fingers sore after doing it long enough. I can't imagine these being any better. With a typing speed that unimpressive, you might as well just teach yourself stenography.
Lastly, complaints about the product itself aside, this is one of the most aggravatingly filmed shorts I've watched in a while. Why wouldn't you show his actual typing? Why wouldn't you show us what is happening on screen?
Dude it took me 25 years to figure out how to type without looking at the keyboard.
I’m very okay with having a new keyboard design. QWERTY was specifically designed to spread out the most used keys, so that the little printer arms wouldn’t hit each other in typewriters.
It’s all a scam at this point. But I don’t think it will ever really change…
I'm assuming typing on this is just like texting on old cell phones
This would be incredible for people with mobility issues!!
my moms been an executive assistant for 20 years and still beats this guys wpm i could only imagine the power she’d have if she learned this
That chuckle at the end sounds like the golf ha💸ha💸ha💸ha💸 like he’s about to make a lot of money with that invention.
When the Dactyl Manuform wasn't enough.
Gaming with those would be both sick as fuck and absolute hell and I'm willing to try it 😂
I'm sure like learning proper keyboarding and the muscle memory that makes the querty layout feel so "natural" (ironically), I could see a typist mastering this device with a good few months of practice. The hardest part to me is memorizing the key layouts and then applying muscle memory to that, like normal keyboarding, you have to get to the point where you stop thinking about what key is where and just let your fingers do the work as you think of the word you want to type. I don't think I'd mind trying this out.
Looooool bro invented the Thanos keyboard which only the creator can use to match the average state employee
Stenographer sits in the corner and smuggs while taking a sip of his beer 🗿
Keyloggers trying to figure out my password when I pull out one of these:
Similar to old keypad Phones, Indians were pretty fast with those because of texting.
He types faster than I do on a regular keyboard 😭
I can’t even type 40 words a minute on a regular keyboard, I think I’ll pass on this one 😂
Use a stenographer keyboard❎️
Create your own, that's equally complex✅️
In the super smash brothers melee scene, a commentator named Chillindude suffered a stroke. He used a controller similar to this to play with one hand for awhile.
Looks like gloves of an enemy of powerrangers anyone else?
The combo writer. Learn to memorize combos as fluidly as you type ig 😅
My first thought was that this was like characorder. Nope, but interesting, and looks like it'd be fun to try.
I used to work in a call center that demanded a minimum of 90 wpm, so this wouldn't even cut it in an entry level job.
EYE OPENER: When I was in 5th grade, we were expected to type 125+wpm on average and 200wpm for the andvanced class which I was in. WHAT IN THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH THE WORLD NOWADAYS!?!?! You know the requirements now? The minimum requirement is ELEVEN WPM and the average is 22WPM with 30wpm being considered as a year advanced.
I wonder if he could get a court stenographer to type on there. They are the kings of shorthand.
Give them an outwards tilt like a Dactyl Manuform and you've probably got the most ergonomic keyboard ever.
Wow so interesting! Greetings from Tricity in Poland
This is how the Japanese keyboard works on phones. You have buttons for hiragana starting with a vowel/consonant that you swipe the direction you want to specify. For example you have Na in the centre with Ni to the left, Nu to the top, Ne to the right, and No to the bottom. なにぬねの.
Imagine cyber bullying on that keyboard
Me thinking about the 7th grade Asian kid in computer class typing 115wpm
Sci-fi mecha gaming fans gonna go hyped when using this lol
Sadly, the moment the other guy put his hands on the machine, wasn’t as fascinating as I thought before it happened.
EDIT: I thought this was a stenograph keyboard, but it functions differently. For more detailed info, see @foxelocklear 's comment below! 👇
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81 is fast, but I not as fast as I expected. I thought these were designed to be able to type sentences in seconds?
Are you thinking of stenograph keyboards?
@@foxelocklear i was under the impression that this was a "mechanical" stenograph keyboard. Am I wrong?
@fafflerproductions someone else thought it was one of those in the comments but these are different
@@foxelocklear in what way? Aren't they both using combination triggers to type multiple letters at once? Or are stenograph keyboards more about combining inputs into a word and this is just using multiple inputs per letter?
I'm curious
@fafflerproductions stenograph keyboards are more phonetically keyboards than usual keyboards. This keyboard has a c button which is not something you'd see on the stenography boards, since the c is handled by the s or k key. Also this "keyboard" doesn't seem to use multiple inputs to make a word, rather just groups the keys by where your fingers rest
Imagine companies actually use these keyboards and on your resume, you need actual typing skills.
Watching the creator type is like how don bluth can beat dragon's lair in 5 mins
You have the RIGHT to Travel; By foot , By Bike , with rollerskates if you want! You DRIVING is a PRIVILEGE not a right, not everyone should be driving ESPECIALLY without proper documentation (Liscense and Registration, plates) designed for safety and ease of identification. TRAVEL by foot if you wanna complain about Rights , but saying its a converted right is downright stupid and the fact this individual is likely on the road to this day has me scared to even walk across a sidewalk. " i ' travel " on the common law" , you dont " Drive on the common law " without all the bells and whistles.
Those keys could be inside gloves for vr, a controller with 50 potential key commands at a time. You just have to memorize it as a keyboard first so you know where to press X or whichever since you couldnt see your fingers
Bro is NOT piloting an alien spacecraft 👽👽👽👽
Thanks for showing the typing on screen as it was happening
This looks just as hard as stenography but with a speed handicap instead of a speed boost.
the hand movements look simular to an actual keyboard i kinda wanna try it to see if im right
Just looking at the left hand key map, I can see how intuitive it would be, all the same fingers are making all the same basic motions!
Dont let a korean starcraft player saw this
“Yo I’m gonna put P into your search bar”
“Good luck”
“What in the ever loving Fu-“
My brain would NOT agree with that
so he’s out here doing 50 wpm less than i do when im high on a normal keyboard
bro i did not know nitro type was getting that competitive these days
My friend mod'd his own ergboard back in college in 2004. It was a hemisphere you held in your lap, and he could manage almost 200 words a minute.
If someone truly mastered that, they could type so fast
Some typing footage would have helped. Not digging further. Good luck
In 2008 I thought about that kind of keyboard 😅
This is what we did in the '90s on Nokia phones