Long time suffer from RSI here. What helped for me a lot was getting the monitor height right, the neck/shoulders can put lot of pressure on the nerves in your arms, which leads to wrists pain. Did a lot of yoga and Alexander technique which helped a lot too. Best mouse I have found so far is a contour mouse, they help put your wrist in a more neutral position. Keyboard wise I’m really loving the 360, but I’m using a 36 key layout on it, the reduced finger movement and stretching has reduced my pain levels to the best ever. Tried the flat split keyboard but can quickly feel a flare up coming. The key wells and tenting on the 360 are awesome. Hopefully one day I’ll try out the glove 80. Keep up the great content 😊
This is such a good point. The keyboard is just one element and if your desk is too high and monitor is too low, you're going to have a rough time no matter what keyboard you use.
Agree as I'm usually fine working in the office with the same keyboard as at home, but at home I feel a lot more pain at the end of the day. That said my most recent pain is in my upper shoulders so am here to see if these would help keep my shoulders further apart and stop unintentionally hunching.
Yup, 20 years of rsi here, with in 2019 a relapse where I was partially workincapacitated for 8 months, with numb forearms for a few hours a day. After that I took my physical exercise regimen much more seriously, with focus on neck and upper back and shoulders, and now I'm probably better than I ever was since a very long time. Regular resistance training is a mayor part in actually doing something to improve the situation. Ergonomics alone doesn't really fix the problem, but is super important, for sure.
I think one of the main resons the Kinesis brand does well is that they are in corporate accounts. I needed to get ergo and my employeer was only setup with a few brands - I just ended up on the Kinesis Adv Pro. I really wanted the Glove80 but it was not in any of my options. I had the same experience as you - the day I switched my RSI was gone. It was amazing. It has given me my life back.
Oryx is the reason why I got my first split keyboard as the Voyager, I think it is trully underrated and the team keeps updating it giving us more features. (Also I work in a hybrid model so portablity is really important to me)
How was the switch for you? I am torn between the Glove80 and the Voyager. My heart wants the voyager, but I am a tad worried about adjusting to the lower key count
You can get one in the $50-100 range, but only if you're comfortable soldering the components together yourself (I just ordered a Corne split ergonomic keyboard online and went super barebones, I'm not even using a case, I'm just gonna stick some rubber feet on the underside of the PCB, the whole kit was like $40 from keyboardsource after I deselected the case and the little screens it comes with by default). It's really not as hard as it sounds, you can get a cheap soldering iron for like $15 online
@@daanw6270 The Goldtouch folding keyboards may be the most affordable and effective office-style ergonomic boards before you jump up into lit-up programmable types Less than US$100. And the tenting feature goes up to 30°, which is one of the most effective things for some wrist issues, and is better than any of the keyboards in this video Only the $500 Dygma boards have tenting as good as my old $50 Goldtouch (not a great keyboard, but night and day helped my wrist pain and I won’t type on a flat board anymore)
I use the non-Pro Kinesis 360. It's simply amazing. I had horrible RSI problems 25 years ago, but getting a Kinesis contoured keyboard cured my problems basically overnight, and they never returned. And the Kinesis 360 is even better and more comfortable. It just works out of the box, it has no Bluetooth that can malfunction, and it has their easy to use point-and-click configurator program. If you want to have maximum RSI protection, I don't know of any better physical design.
I think you’ve convinced me to try the Glove80. I want to make the transition to split keyboards. I like the design of the voyager but it might be too difficult as new in this area. Thank you great video!!
I found that the biggest helper for my RSI was to switch over to a trackball mouse, particularly the Logitech Mx Ergo Plus. Being able to have the mouse angled to reduce pronation was a god send with this mouse.
@@BFedie518 I have an RSI in my wrist that pains me anytime I use my index finger while my wrist is pronated. So that's why I got a thumb track ball, but any trackball mouse would probably have done the job IMO The important thing that made the difference was fixing the pronation of the wrist.
As for gaming, having used keyboards like these for 15 years for work and games, in my experience nothing beats reconfiguring every game from WASD to ESDF (or the Colemak equivalent in my case). Yes, it is a bit of a PITA and takes an extra 10 minutes to do, but it is super comfortable. I only use the left keyboard half when gaming, and put the right half further back, so the mouse can be in the most ergonomic position. When chatting in game I have to reach a bit further back with my right arm, but that's fine, also there's often voice communication via Discord or the like. BTW on my non-gaming computers (Macs) I use either a trackpad (Apple's) or Trackball (Elecom Deft Pro) to have some variety, I think it helps with RSI.
@@ifcodingwerenatural you're very welcome. Hearing about other people's perspectives is what I like so much about videos like yours. They help make decisions, get insight, be inspired, … Forgot to mention that my keyboard is Colemak in hardware (or firmware), so I have to configure every game anyway. I had thought about making a gaming layer where WASD is at the ESDF position, but that leaves many other keys without such a well-established standard as WASD. And in multiplayer games, where one types at other people, not having the layout one is accustomed to would be very weird. Another standard key I like to move is shift, that's often the run key, and having that on a thumb is great with ESDF for movement. And A for action (can be used by pinky when moving with ESDF). And W and R and G for other important stuff. More as needed.
With programmable keyboards it shouldn’t even be 10 minutes per game. Just create a layout where letters are shifted and switch to it whenever you play games. I actually have half of Ergo Dox specifically for games with such remapping.
WASD sucks even on standard keyboard, coz it severely limits the number of keys you can use. I switched to UHJK few years back since it allows me to press space without using finger for that.
I came here to say the same. I switched to ESDF years ago (on normie keyboards). It opens up a lot more keys: for the pinky (q,a,z) which you can easily hit while moving with esdf. Also, the bump on the f key makes it easy to return to the movement keys if you need to reach for something. Remapping a new game only takes a few minutes. When you get a new game you need to take a few minutes to figure out the keys anyways.
Thanks for adding a new video over the long weekend, I love this topic! I like your reviews because you are a programmer like me so you appreciate larger numbers of keys. For me, the main step in getting rid of my RSI was getting an Evoluent Vertical mouse. I tried some fancier ones and cheaper ones, but none of them worked for me. There are two topics that I've never seen mentioned in any video comments or forums: 1. I like the fact that Oryx allows you to program the LED colors for each key, because I like to change these per layer. For instance, I have a gaming/number key layer and when I use this it highlights "easf", as you mentioned, on the left hand, while creating a 9 number layout on the right hand. Each of my layers have different color coding which is the main reason I haven't switched over to the Glove 80. The rainbow fade is pretty, but not utilitarian. 2. Why is it that contoured keyboard users that use the Voyager don't get RSI? Well, I think that it is because the columnar layout on the Voyager is more vertically staggered and closer to matching people's actual finger lengths than the Moonlander was. When you lay your fingers down flat on it, your main 4 digits line up more accurately with the keys and so you don't need to cup your fingers anymore. Because of this, I've come to a theory that if manufactures measured the finger lengths and made different sizes of keyboard for different sizes of hands, that would make flat keyboards like the ZSAs totally acceptable.
I'd suggest looking into trying either the Dygma raise and or defy!. I have both and am extremely happy. Been using the raise for a few years with the tenting kit, and the defy for a little over a month. Raise is staggered and the defy is columnar.
I was hoping there would be a sale on for the Voyager, Black Friday n’all. I have a glove 80 but it’s a bit of a ‘statement piece’ whipping it out in a coffee shop. 😂
Just ordered a keyboard yesterday largely based on your other videos yesterday and got a little freaked out when i started watching this video being like "Oh damn - please don't contradict my purchase reasoning". Luckily that's not the case. For me, it was a decision between Glove80 and Voyager - having used a ZSA Ergodox since it came out. I went for a Voyager - my reasoning - Being blessed not to have RSI (but cautious not to get it because like you I love my programming job) it is mainly about efficiency and comfort with little tinkering for me - You covered on big point for me - gaming - i have a “regular” keyboard just for gaming at the moment due to the “domino effect” you mentioned - i think out of the 4 compared voyager will enable the least friction with games - Using the keyboard in an open floor office the voyager will be the least “freaky” - while I love having the “oh wow - what is THAT?” conversation every now and then I think the voyager will turn less heads on first sight. E.g. using it portable during workshops with people etc. It still retains the “don’t try to use my keyboard” protection due to blank keys :P (I hate when people “quickly wanna show” me something on my machine) - being a user of ZSA’s configurator I don’t wanna go for anything else that is less convenient - Being forced into a smaller layout - like you mentioned in the video. I noticed on my ergodox that I could easily also have the small keys on the thumb cluster with a Homerow mod - something that the voyager will now force me to do. Do you have any recommendations for voyager tenting solutions by any chance? (you show some in some of your videos - i did get the tripod mounts)? Might even be interesting for a broader audience what is your experience with those (e.g. with your glove80 on your chair etc.) Thanks for all the great content around split keyboards! Highly appreciated!
Thanks for the compliments! I'm still pretty new to mounting and constantly tinkering with the position and angle of the Glove80, but I've settled on mounting it on my desk where my mouse is still within comfortable reaching distance. The chair mount is great, but it puts my mouse too far out of reach. I think I'd need to get a trackball/trackpad to make the chair mount a viable option. For tenting on the Voyager without tripod mounts, I don't have much to say. I just use the magnetic pucks and have been pretty happy with that!
Thanks for your detailed perspective. Aye, the ZSA configurator is very good, maybe even best in class. The Glove80 configurator is pretty decent as well. As for gaming, with a column staggered layout, or sculpted key wells even more so, I find it's best to bite the bullet and reconfigure each game so the hand can rest on ESDF rather than WASD. I find it interesting that so many people favor small layouts. I understand the appeal too, but did have some trouble with thumb key limits on the Voyager. Having used Advantages and Ergodoxes for 15 years the Glove80 is more to my taste, or rather closer to what I'm used to. All of the 4 keyboards presented are fantastic, and if limited to either things would be fine. May I recommend reading the website A guide to home row mods? They do take some getting used to in perhaps unexpected ways, which made me enjoy having extra keys. See if they work for you, or maybe check out alternatives such as Callum style mods.
As a gamer and a Data Scientist... I'm at a loss for what to do. I'm so glad that I watched this video and was pretty set on the Glove80, but I can't be bothered with rebinding WASD keys or different layers just for gaming. You probably just saved me a bunch of frustration and about $650 AUD! Thank you!
Thanks for the reviews. Coming from the Corne keyboard, the two thumb keys put me off the Voyager. However, I just noticed Oryx supports combo keys now, and I will be testing if I can configure the 3rd thumb key by pressing the 2 keys.
I ended up removing the number row on the voyager and zipping the top row and outermost columns on both sides for a 34 key layout. I haven’t tried yet but I saw somebody on Reddit using a 3D printed key cap for an extra thumb key after moving everything one row up. I’ll probably try that in the next days
It's always interesting to see the different ways developers tackle RSI. At work I use a Leopold keyboard and bind the caps lock to control (emacs user). At home ironically I have a red dragon blue switch keyboard and I don't need to modify anything. Love your videos!
Hey, thanks for the video. What helped me with my RSI was switching over to a trackball. Instead of the whole arm, one needs to just move the thumb, massive difference. Took me 1 week to adjust, never looked back, RSI gone. Insanely comfortable compared to ANY mouse. Give it a try if you have some time, you will love it.
Just got the voyager this weekend and still learning. putting LEFT, UP, RIGHT on one row is a game changer. took a while to get used to it but ill never look back
Did you put DOWN in the same row too, or below? I've been using left, up, down, right in a single row on my left hand for years (on the bottommost row on an ErgoDox), which is handy when the right hand is on the mouse. It did take some getting used to. On the Voyager the arrow keys are on layer 1 in the ESDF position, very comfortable indeed. Because of the few thumb keys I couldn't have a layer switch on the left thumb, so I put an extra layer toggle-while-holding on the A key instead (sort of like a home row mod), just to be able to reach the arrows easily with one hand. Another layer-while-holding is on a right hand thumb key.
I've had a Kinesis Advantage for so long. Like, this one that I'm typing on now might be 15 years old. We've got 4 of them in the house (2 people, and I had one for work, and one that's really REALLY old). They're extremely reliable. I'm inclined to go towards the Kinesis not just because the customer service is great, but you pay a bit more and you get something that will work for a long, long time. My per-year cost for these keyboards is so low.
Glad I found this video; I am on the lookout for my next keyboard, coming from a long-time RealForce enjoyer. Didn't even know most of those styles exist. ty!
Recently made the Lily58, I do really think making it yourself is perfect, you learn how they work and you can fix it when something breaks. Basically it becomes a keyboard for life.
I am to get the glove80 at some point, but I wanted to experiment with something cheaper and with fewer keys. I almost went full 34-36, but my pinkies have been trained for flexibility, so I went with a Sufle Choc instead (60-ish keys, kinda like the Voyager). I also like that it is very easy to make it a gaming keyboard. For anyone reading this in EU (even worldwide, but EU for convenience) mechboards co uk are currently having one of the cheapest prebuilt preorders I've seen for such keyboards (thx to Black Friday). If you like the voyager, Sufle Choc is pretty much the same, only with more thumb keys. Corne Choc is 42 keys, and they even have Ferris Sweep (34 keys). Sadly, only wired versions, and no rgb, but at least they are a cheap entry into the niche and I'm pretty sure they have decent resale value.
The Sofle looks interesting with the knobs, and it's very affordable. As does the Lily58 with 2 extra keys instead of knobs. Since you mentioned more thumb keys, do you operate the bottom row with your thumbs then? Personally I prefer spreading the thumbs away from the fingers rather than folding them below the fingers, but that's probably personal preference. The voyager is pretty nice in this regard, though it desperately needs at least one more thumb key IMO.
@@shrugalic I thought the same about thumb keys, but for my arc, none of the designs work if they require the thumb to spread out, without it also going quite low. The Voyager will work for sure, I quite like the design, but a third thumb key on it will have to go inwards for me. That changes with a keywell, because the thumb then rests in a more vertical position (not exactly, but it has a different plane of operation). I don't doubt that the Glove80 will be more comfortable in that regard. I use 3 thumb keys at most, don't know why the Sofle has 5, as the inner two seem kinda impossible to reach comfortably and quickly. Some people use them as arrow keys for leisure operations, not during active use. My thumb comfortably goes below my index, which is fine for the Sofle. That being said, I'm thinking about experimenting with only 2 thumb keys, and jumping to a wireless Ferris Sweep at some point, or a 42 Cantor/Piantor, if I can't manage with 2 thumb keys. The Sofle V2 is another alternative, it has more pinky stagger and the thumb cluster favors outer movement of the thumb. Sadly, I couldn't find the design for the Choc version at a reasonable price. Nonetheless, I'm enjoying the hobby and will probably get myself a kit for the MX version and experiment with some lower travel and profile keys that are supposed to make it "Choc like", while offering the versatility of MX.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I suppose a thumb key right below the index should still be fine, and the Sofle v2 does just that. I agree with your point about it changing in 3D. Because they are so affordable, I think I am going to try a Sofle or Lily58, as that might just solve the thumb key issues I had with the Voyager. The Lily58 in particular has single keys below the displays, and I like that innermost column for index operation on keyboards that have it (ErgoDox, Advantage, Moonlander). It does have one less key in the bottom row, but when those are considered thumb keys, that should be fine because the missing key didn't seem easily reachable. Nor does the 4th (outermost bottom) key beside it, but I suppose that can serve as a spare of sorts.
I've been using a Kinesis Advantage since 2015 to resolve an RSI. My pain went away within a couple of weeks and has never come back. I've worked a regular 9-5 with typing intense duties (not programming) and love this keyboard. I'm interested in the Glove80, as one of my Kinesis boards is starting to fail. Thanks for the video! (and causing flashbacks to PayDay2 remapping nightmares. ;-)
I have been using the glove80 for about 5 months now. After two weeks of suffering due to the drastic change, it started feeling natural. At 5 months, I can say my hands hurt less, I’ve trained out my bad typing habits and type with all my fingers now, and my speed has gone up by roughly 10% I love the keyboard and would recommend it to anybody
I used an older version of the kinesis that saved my RSI. Nice to see the model updated a bit with larger f-keys. I don't use it much today, but it did save MY LIFE when in extreme distress due to arm pains.
I just subbed as a show of solidarity as I too have prefrontal cortex, um, challenges. As to gaming I long ago realized that programming and gaming were substantially different activities. So I standardized on putting the "typing keyboard" aside for games and using a left-hand gaming Razer keyboard (20 keys + a thumb-operated mini joystick) combined with a Redragon MMO mouse (12 thumb keys). Changing their profiles lacks the convenience of shifting layers on today's split keyboards, but on the other hand the time required for changing their per-game profiles is insignificant when compared to the coffee breaks provided by today's AAA loading screens.
Thank you for the in-depth reviews! I'm looking for a split keyboard to help my shoulders/neck, and some occasional wrist/finger pain (usually after gaming a lot, which I don't do as much now but still sometimes). Leaning towards the Glove80 now after some research. Previously was interested in the Advantage360 introduced by ThePrimeagen, but read an article about how Glove80 is designed even better re: the curve and the heights and the keycaps and the key angles. And your video solidified my choice! ~12:30 I like ESDF, since the hand sits where it ought to for typing. But have to remap a bunch of bindings. Or use WASD but without using the index finger (use other 3 fingers), so again the hand can sit in the correct spot, but could be hard on the pinky!
As someone has been daily driving a 36 key layout for almost a year now (same as Ferris sweep, but with three thumb keys. Ran it emulated with software on my laptops built in keyboard, which was horrendous but worked to try it out, and recently finished my split board build), I can honestly say that I don’t think I could use a keyboard with more rows or columns anymore. Sure I could make it work, but I’d never use anything beyond the 36 I use now. It’s the perfect number of keys that I never have to stretch even a little, and 6 thumb keys mean 6 extra layers, so I have no shortage of places to bind keys to. I think the Glove80 is likely what I’d buy if I had to go for one on the market, instead of building one myself like I did, but even if I had one, I’d only be using 36 of the keys anyways. Also portability, as a student, it’s amazing to toss my 36 key keyboard in my bag and it’s the smallest thing in my bag, and I have a full desktop class typing experience in class taking notes. Truly amazing for someone working in the go a lot. Not a callout like you said in the video, but wanted to share my experience with tiny keyboards! Even as a software engineer, it’s extremely usable! I’ll likely never go back.
Thanks for the fantastic content on split keyboards! Your reviews and comparisons are incredibly helpful. I'm curious, do you primarily focus on columnar layout, or are you open to trying staggered ones? We've chosen a staggered layout for our first keyboard with the aim of encouraging more people to give them a try. Your insights on different layouts would be invaluable to us.
Two factors are sticking out for me between the two welled boards, the Glove and the Advantage. Going to a first thumb command area, I can tell already that comfort there to make a sliding decision with each thumb accurately is going to be critical - I worry about dragging over both instead of gliding or turning inward a bit on the Advantage. I can see navigating that on the Glove better - perhaps with some dead buttons as my hands familiarize, but I'm also really drawn to this extra internal row of macro keys that is not present on the glove. Am I just too inexperienced to see how I could just be cranking up G, T, Y and H on the glove and pretty much off to the same races? Thank you for your great overview !
Have tried all of these as well! I still go back to the Corne running VIAL. Ticks every box and has the best thumb cluster around (3 keys). Pinky stagger is there but not too much. Spot on.
I prefer the regular Kinesis Advantage 360 over the glove 80. I prefer the fact that it has different sized keys on the thumb cluster. Also the tenting on the Kinesis feels better imo.
I have the original kenesis advantage, moonlander, and a 36 keyboard. Sounds like your RSI symptoms were similar. When I try anything besides the advantage my RSI flares up, also Im just not as productive for some reason. I want a split keyboard for traveling. The glove80 sounds promissing but curious how close it "feels" to the advantage. Not sure how to describe it but the moonlander just doesnt feel right to me and could never get the hang of it.
I believe you are using magnetic USB connecters, do you have a brand/link to the ones you've found that works well? I was lost looking at some poor reviews amongst the 10s of clones listed.
Speaking of mice and RSI. I can't recommend a trackball enough, preferably one with a scroll ring. I learnt to use mine with my left hand, since I have problems mostly with my right. My accuracy isn't as high as a mouse but it's plenty good enough for normal use, including programmer, etc. I still use a mouse for gaming, but not using the mouse most of the time makes a big difference for em.
Thank you for touching upon RSI issues. Having these since 14 (gaming too much). Now 28, Data Scientist, programming loads gives me flare ups now and again. Checked your previous vids on Glove80, though this vid first one to get deeper into RSI. Now the price seems more proportional to the value it may give to those who suffer RSI. Truth be told, using magic keyboard and mouse and not helping me at all :D
yo i love the vid, super informative thanks! (probably gonna start with the Moonlander). Just wanted to say, I'm not sure what you goals are with the channel but I would for sure link to each of the keyboards in the description (i looked to check them out individually on their company websites (bonus if they were affiliate links!)). also, linking the to the other keyboard-specific videos would probably help drive views on those as well (added benefit if you also throw links to the respective keyboard in each of those videos as well. anyway cheers!
I looked at the Advantage 360 wireless and wired version, and I think your recommendation of the non pro version comes with a misunderstanding. Note that unlike the Pro version, the wired version runs proprietary firmware, so your customization will be extremely limited compared to the Pro version.
I'm at the moment a happy user of an Ultimate Hacking Keyboard and a Keyboardio Atreus. The UHK is my "work desk" keyboard and the Atreus is my travel keyboard. I love them both, for different reasons, but what they have in common of course is full-travel MX-style keys (Kailh Blue and Kailh Box White), and I absolutely love that positive mechanical travel and click. I'm really compelled by the Voyager, and while everyone is clear that the Choc low-profile switches have shorter travel and thus feel different, I'm not seeing a lot of reviews that talk about this. I get that it's a subjective thing, but I'd love to see some coverage of HOW they feel different, and if that's better or worse or if there are pluses or minuses to one vs the other.
Have you considered using a vertical mouse or a trackball? I can use a regular keyboard for hours without getting any pain, but for me, using a mouse is a very quick way to get crippling pain that will last for days. I'm very tempted to try the Glove80, it may not be as pretty as the Advantage 360 and it's thumb cluster looks way too big for my taste, but the prospect of mounting it to my chair is very appealing. I'm not sure if I'd use the Voyager as my "daily driver", but it sure looks like something I'd keep in my backpack so I don't have to use my laptop's keyboard when I'm away from home, just like I already carry a wireless trackball for such situations. My only issue with the Voyager is that is seems to be wired only... for using on the go, a wireless would be a lot more convenient. I don't mind carrying a USB cable, but my experience with split keyboards makes me want to avoid TRRS cables as much as I can.
I got wrist pains, tried an Alice layout, did not help at all, then i went split (lily58) which helped a lot, then got progressively less keys, I am typing on a 34 key ferris sweep right now. The more you adapt and learn to use smaller layouts, the more productive I've become, at this point, anything with more keys feels like a burden to type on.
Best thing about the ZSA keyboards is their hot switch capabilities. Being able to change the switches is amazing. All keyboards should offer it, though I’m aware that the Glove80 can’t do it cause of the grooves
- Voyager and glove 80 owner here. Voyager's thumb cluster is a bit of a joke as the only realistic useful keys are the 1-2 ones close to the rest of the board. The red key? good luck reaching that. The lack of key dwell makes it hard for small-hand people and eventually I developed some pain on my hand from extending my index finder to reach columns 5,6,7,8,9,10. - Glove 80 ergonomics are just superior in almos every aspects. My main complains are: typing experience is a bit flat and i find traditional cherry like switches more enjoyable to type than choc ones. This one might be only me, but sometimes keys are sent twice leading to typos/errors, specially when releasing other keys at the same time. Also I don't find it as responsive and can notice some micro latency when typing.
I got a Moonlander, but became interested the Ergodox Ez. I recommend the Ergo over the Moonlander for a static office, and I suspect the voyager is better if you need some portability
Also chipping in re: wha helped me with RSI. Biggest breakthrough for me: use a trackpad, not a mouse. This helps me so much, it seems to reduce muscle tension quite a bit. In terms of keyboard: have been using a big old clunky Microsoft natural erognomic keyboard (4000 model) and never looked back. It's not pretty and requires quite hard key presses, but it took alway all my rsi complaints and they never came back.
Thanks for the great video. I've been looking for a better keyboard for many years, but I was trying to find not only split programmable keyboard but also wireless. And finally I found and use for over a year now which is Dygma Defy I love it so much that I am currently waiting for Dygma Raise 2 which has different layout than Dygma Defy and is open for extensions (which currently don't exist). Both have great integrated tenting and I love first one (second one not arrived yet). The Moonlander and other split keyboards didn't conviene me due to being only wired solution and their tenting kits if exist are a lot bigger. I was also wondering about Glove80 but seems that build quality is not there yet. How do you like its build quality? Maybe you will compare Dygma keyboards with this ones in the future.
I don’t know where the shift key is on the voyager, but on a traditional keyboard you aren’t supposed to use the opposite hand to press shift (like if I want to do a capital “A” the. I should be pressing shift with my right hand). That should make the “anchoring” while typing a nonissue
On Glove80 I find the thumb cluster awkward. On the other extreme, I hate boards that make me bring my thumb in beyond the index column. I have now ordered an Imprint (customized Dactyl-style). We'll see how that goes.
I understand ergonomics and I do see an advantage with split keyboard, but one thing baffles me is the price. Can anyone tell me why are they so high priced when compared to normal keyboard
@@tirunagariuttam They do not sell a ton so have a higher price to recoup costs. Also the key welled keyboards are not simple to manufacture. That's my non-expert take on it.
You were talking about using the Glove80 for gaming and WASD causing a bunch of problems with the default layout. And all my brain thought as I was looking at my Azeron gaming keypad was "well have I got a solution for you"
The keyboard options that you presented to us are amazing but I think that for those prices I can buy a Lily58 Wireless and try different layouts easier for half the price.
i've bought the glove80 basically based on this review. what can i say. it's comfortable, it's ergonomic, it does the job. but, boy, the sound just kills me. it's so squishy, idk why it sound so cheap. the other mecanical keybords i have have lower tone, but this one... i do not recommend red gaterons, because with the brown ones at least you'll hear clicking as well...
I'm curious, do you use a vi type editor? I'm also a developer and I noticed that a lot of people here on RUclips that get into these ergo keyboards are into Neovim. I also like custom keyboards but more so the standard qwerty 75% layouts. I use jetbrains IDEs in my day to day so I'm not constantly typing to navigate around. Just wondering if there's any correlation between using your keyboard to navigate and RSI.
Oh yes, I'm pretty deep into the neovim ecosystem 😅. My theory is that people who are drawn to neovim also write an abnormal amount of code, which equates to high keyboard usage, which leads to higher occurrences of RSI. I wouldn't be surprised if there's a correlation between using neovim and having an ergo keyboard.
I've subscribed after the joke about "boosting the channel". Actually I love such frankness, especially when modern bloggers are drowned in cliches, asking for LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE)
As a software developer with joint issues, I'm starting to really think about longevity in my early 30s. I'm currently using a regular keyboard but I have my eye on that glove80. I'll go watch your in depth review. Thank you! Btw for gaming you could use separate arrow keys if the curved keyboard doesn't work. I bought a set when I bought a keyboard that turned out to be a 60% as opposed to a 65% (why name in 65 tho! but I probably should have noticed...) and because I type in dvorak I find that it's useful for games that don't revert my dvorak to qwerty for wasd. I put the separate arrows on the left so I can arrow + mouse. Edit: About the mouse, I found my hand really starts to hurt with a small mouse. I'm a relatively petite (read: short) woman with small hands, but they handed me an Apple magic mouse at work and oh boy the hand pain was real. I ended up requesting an ergonomic mouse when you turn your hand to the side like a handshake and I'm very happy. I'll probably get one for my personal setup. Another thing: have you seen the Dactyl Manuform? It's a little bit like the voyager with a bit of curve and it looks like it has that third thumb button you're looking for. I think you might have to DIY it though - sounds like it's a 3D print type situation. I think some people make them to order if you want to try it but aren't feeling that make-it-yourself thing. Interested in your opinion!
Great content! Thanks for taking the time to compare these four different ergonomic keyboards. Regarding the Voyager, you say, “Not having a dedicated shift key on the thumb cluster feels like it’s just really holding me back on this keyboard.” Then why aren’t you using Oryx to program one of the thumb keys as a dedicated shift key? I’m currently waiting for my Voyager to arrive and have already designed an initial layout that includes a dedicated shift key on the thumb cluster.
Dactyl Manuform. Ultimate customization, never going back. PSA: for gaming, you don't need to remap every game to match your keyboard. You can make a layer on your keyboard that shifts the keys over, and it all makes sense again for every game without further modification.
I just got the Kinesis 360 Pro. It feels great, but is a pain to even try to remap any keys. ( Still haven't done it).Woulda got the non-pro version, but really wanted the back lit keyboard, and that's only with the pro version. Video ides? Maybe a how-to for key remapping on the Kenesis Advantage 360 Pro?
I touch on key remapping in one of my videos on the Adv360 (ruclips.net/video/IDayf7YPLsg/видео.html), but yeah, it's not a bad idea to make a dedicated video on it!
I'm that guy with the ferris sweep and I only use 34 keys, but it just doesn't feel nice to type on. I've been using a moonlander with only 34 keys (removed the other keys with their zip kit), but just got my hands on a defy. I bought a second one for work about an hour after typing on it, it's really nice. Even though there are still way too many keys. Imagine how nice the zsa keyboards feel from a quality standpoint, and dial it up a bit. With the keyboards you seem to like here, I think you'd really like the defy.
I just got mine the other day. Absolutely awesome. I kickstarted it so long ago I forgot I bought it. I actually got it for gaming… and I hardly play anymore XD. Still great for keeping at my desktop. Some thumb buttons seem excessive while not gaming, but I could only use half and still have 4! I was just starting to look into a keyboard about a month ago to upgrade my old ergodox from. My heart started calling out for a voyager, and i recently found the sofle models with dials or even cooler FREAKING TRACKBALL. I’m flipping between the two, and then the Dygma shows up at my door. Debating if I should not buy now 😅 I do think the dygma is bigger than I want to bring with my laptop.
Great video! I'm a big fan of a dedicated gaming layer on the Glove80. All games are WASD by default so why make things harder by remapping all your games when you can switch to a layer instantly that will work with everything.
It sure is expensive to have health issues isn’t it? I’m currently using a Microsoft sculpt and haven’t cut over to a columnar yet. I can’t really use any other keyboard my right hand slowly gets nerve issues/will go numb. I’m on the fence and considering the Glove80. I want low profile and wrist rests, I’ll never compromise there. Only thing holding me back is the noise, the Glove sounds loud, I’ve gotten used to nearly silent typing which is a big deal on calls for me. I think if the Glove was hot-swappable I would have pulled the trigger already. So much to consider…
You spoke a lot about “home row mod” on the Voyager. Could you share more about what that means and how it helps? Thanks for your keyboard videos. I’m seriously tempted to upgrade 😊
i have been playing pc games for as long as i can remember (30+) years now, and have always used my mouse to turn around. My pains always come form excessive clivking the mouse, but havent found a great vertical mouse yet that actually has a lot of thumb keys. SO thats why is still use the corsair scimitar for gaming. Would love to see some more innovation for mice
I switched from the Logitech vertical mouse to a kensington trackball trackblade slim. It worked wonders for working for a year, no more wrist movement, helped so much. The issue appeared now tho, since the movements with the trackball caused a tenniselbow ... cant do it right
My problem with these kind of split keyboards is that they are so expensive for what they are, mainly in how they are lacking many basic features i would expect from a keyboard of that price. Most commonly this is the ability for hotswap switches, and/or more understandably, the lack of additional keycap sets i could use for any one of these.
I really want the voyager, but only two thumb buttons is rough… I mean, I suppose I could 1. Get ride of number row 2. Move letters up 3. Have 4 thumb buttons? Are v/b and n/m comfortable to reach with your thumb? I’m wondering if I should go for the voyager or sofle. ZSA seems like a good company ( I have an ergodox and am happy with it/ customer support), but more thumbkeys and a trackball would be so dope.
Hmm, unless you desperately need a more compact keyboard for travel (Voyager) or are desperate for something slightly more comfortable (Advantage 360) or more comfortable and wireless (Glove80) the ErgoDox is a great keyboard. Personally my favorite is the Advantage 360, followed by Glove80, followed by ErgoDox or Moonlander, then Voyager. But I don't need wireless nor LEDs nor ZMK, just a comfortable ergonomic keyboard with lots of thumb keys (ideally 3 minimum, 4 are better, 6 is luxurious). For different needs the order would be different. On the Voyager I also thought about giving up the top (number) row at first, because the thumb keys felt better when the home row was further away. But I got used to the default position it in a few days, and would miss the number row a lot. As it is, I missed the bottom row a lot, because I have my arrow keys there on other keyboards. BTW I use the bottom row with fingers not thumbs, as folding the thumb to below the fingers feels awkward to me, I prefer spreading the thumb away from the fingers, having gotten used to Advantage 1 and ErgoDox style thumb keys for 15 years. How do you use the bottom row on your ErgoDox? Thumbs or fingers? The answer should be insightful about the thing you imagine doing with a Voyager.
@@shrugalic I couldn't see myself using the Kinesis for too many reasons. I do have a laptop I bring around and really do hate laptop keyboards. I don't bring it out everyday due to my classes, but I will in the near future. I mean, with a keyboard as small as the voyager I really do think that using all the peripheral buttons for numbers and arrows seems wasteful when it could be layered so easily. I do need to feel it to know where I'd be comfortable putting my hand though. On my Ergodox, I CAN use the thumb buttons, but they just feel awkwardly positioned, and its the biggest weakness imo. I use my thumb for the first 2 keys of the bottom row, and don't even bother with the other 3, I set those to shift to my gaming layers. But now that I have this defy, I'm going to have that dedicated for it. I'm looking at a voyager or sofle ( with a trackball) for non gaming purposes.
@@thedog5k That's fair, for travel purposes a Kinesis 360 is about the worst/bulkiest. The Glove with case is a little better. The Moonlander is actually only slightly larger in its transport pouch than the Voyager and a lot less compromised key-wise. But do what feels best to you ofc. All 4 keyboards are fantastic, with their own strengths and weaknesses. The Sofle or Lily58 seem a reasonable and cheaper alternative to the Voyager, if you can cope with with the lower amount of thumb keys any of these have. The Voyager still has enough keys that one extra layer was enough for me, but I did miss a few keys on the top level, such as delete and arrow keys. And it does pretty much enforce finding a solution for all the modifiers, be it home row mods or callum style mods or .... If you're fine with going that route then it (or a similar one) should be a great choice.
@@thedog5k PS: since you do use your thumb for the first 2 keys on the bottom row, I should think that a Voyager/Sofle/Lily58 or similar should work fine for you. Especially since you don't seem to like spreading your thumb out on the ErgoDox.
@@thedog5k PPS: if you don't mind building your own keyboard, the Dactyl Manuform or Charybdis seem rather intriguing as well. Personally I soldered many an ErgoDox, but these days I don't mind buying ready to go keebs either. ;)
I was liking the kinesis but after this video I think that I can buy the glovo 80. I've only one question about the hand size. Is there any resource over the net that make some consideration about preferred ergonomib keyboards over hand size? Because I don't know if big and little hands feel the same with curved keyboards...
Haha, yeah... My first split ergo is the ferris sweep. Using it right now. Miryoku QMK with Colmak-DHm layout. I like it, but thinking about Glove80 or Moonlander so I can get some of my dedicated keys back. I like the full travel of the MX style switches on my "normie" keyboard but maybe the Glove80 will convert me with it's contours.
im not a programmer. i mostly game. i use a periloot caravel for my left hand. Its ergonomics are the hands down best because the section of the board where control+shift+tilde+z are located is sunk down and the rest of the board is sloped tilted up to the right. the thumb cluster is also positioned below C+V (below as in under row and also below as in sunken down) allowing for most natural thumb positioning. If i were motivated and smart enuff id figure out a way to make a whole dactyl keeb like the periloot caravel + wireless with bazillon battery life
13:10 I have seen some controller software that lets you set up profiles. IE Launching a game? Swap to the appropriate game style profile. Is this an option & if not should it be?
I had to lookup what RSI means. I don't think I have that after 12 years as a Software Engineer, but my typing speed tops out at around 70 kpm, so maybe that has something to do with it? I have had mild soreness in my forearm on rare occasion, but it usually resolves within a day or so with some massage and stretches. I also use a thumb trackball mouse.
Thanks for awesome content. I have been torn between voyager and glove80. I don’t have RSI but I would like to try to avoid it if possible. Can you do a video between voyager and glove80? Thanks!
One trouble with the Glove 80 is that few people have long-term experience with it yet. Most "reviews" are just trials so far. If the cost were half what it is, that wouldn't be so problematic. Typed at 8 WPM on a Kinesis Advantage 2 using Colemak. 😂
I really really really wanted to love my glove 80. I've daily driven it for over a year and despite that, I never could get my wpm back to where it was before the glove80 and I had a pretty high mistype rate. I always felt I had to constantly adjust my hand position which put pressure on my wrists. I kept with it, telling myself I just needed more time with it... but once I realized it had been a year, I came to my senses and realized it just isn't working for me. I really think it's just a me problem. My hands might just not be suited for it. I have large hands but most of the size is in my palms, not my fingers. So just hitting all the normal alpha keys in the keywell just was always a bit of a stretch rather than comfortable. I just recently switched to my old Atreus that I hadn't touched in a very long time and within 30 minutes I was already typing 10wpm faster than the glove80 I had been using daily. So if you have "normal" hands, I bet the glove80 will be great, just for me, flat boards without the keywell seems to be better. I would say, learning a restricted key layout that uses layers, sure it is a bit of a time investment but I've found it to be incredibly rewarding. A 34 key ferris is about as small as I think is reasonable but you also never have to stretch or move your hand, it can stay comfortably put and for me is the key to preventing RSI.
I have switched from a non ergo keyboard to the glove80 recently. I an experiencing more pain than i used to, particularly while programming because curly braces are difficult to reach. I have not gone through creating a custom layer because i like to rely on defaults. Should i try going all in on layers with the ferris?
imho, you're really shooting yourself in the foot by not taking advantage of layers for programming. Good ergonomics is a combination of things. If you're still experiencing pain while typing, it's 100% worth moving symbols to easy-to-reach spots on a different layer!
What he said. These keyboards are programmable for a reason, and the Glove80 configurator is pretty good. All the default layouts I've seen suck in one way or another for my personal preference. Check out different layouts from other people to get inspired, and think what your needs are / what you could profit from. You can check out ErgoDox or Moonlander layouts in ZSA Oryx too, for more inspiration. The default brackets work for me, but I got used to that on an Advantage years ago. With the layer key easily accessible with a thumb, there are many good spots to put braces on another layer. How about prime spots such as J and K, or L and ;? Do you need the numblock on the lower layer? If not, use those positions for something useful to you. If you do need it, maybe put in on another layer. Or make an easily accessible layer with the stuff you need. What about the parentheses spot on the lower layer, do you use that, or do you use the ones on the shifted base layer's 9 and 0 position? I work in a software engineering company where many have a programmable keyboards, and there are no two people with exactly the same layout.
So I built a modified Corne keyboard. My first split keyboard, I'm sort of regretting going so ham. But it's not for the lack of keys, it's because I did not know I would need to use ZMK when I built it. So I'm stuck with a keyboard layout that is not mine (I pulled the config file from the git repo I got the board from). Anyway I have no clue how to work with zmk 😅
That's rough! I highly recommend checking out nickcoutsos.github.io/keymap-editor/. You can get pretty far with layout customization without writing any config code.
Nice comparison! I also had the experience of having RSI disappear when switching to a Kinesis…25 years ago 🧓🏻 I’ve been tempted by the Glove80, but I suspect I wouldn’t like the thumb layout - if you could even get it with something like the Moonlander layout I think it’d be ideal. I know from experience that I tend to take advantage the length of the 2u Kinesis thumb keys in a way that would probably make me miss the Glove80 ones. Seriously considering building a custom Dactyl of some sort to get the best of both worlds.
I also use the Logitech mx master 3 and unfortunately find myself getting really bad discomfort in my right pinky and ring fingers where they hang off the side. Unfortunate because I love the mouse. May have to switch to a vertical mouse
I actually prefer kinesis adv. 360 pro over glove 80. Having used both, the kinesis is more comfortable and feels much more solid. The GUI to remap keys is actually on par with the glove one (nickcoutsos editor). However, glove 80 is still fantastic and certainly unique keyboard on the market.
Long time suffer from RSI here. What helped for me a lot was getting the monitor height right, the neck/shoulders can put lot of pressure on the nerves in your arms, which leads to wrists pain. Did a lot of yoga and Alexander technique which helped a lot too. Best mouse I have found so far is a contour mouse, they help put your wrist in a more neutral position. Keyboard wise I’m really loving the 360, but I’m using a 36 key layout on it, the reduced finger movement and stretching has reduced my pain levels to the best ever. Tried the flat split keyboard but can quickly feel a flare up coming. The key wells and tenting on the 360 are awesome. Hopefully one day I’ll try out the glove 80. Keep up the great content 😊
This is such a good point. The keyboard is just one element and if your desk is too high and monitor is too low, you're going to have a rough time no matter what keyboard you use.
Agree as I'm usually fine working in the office with the same keyboard as at home, but at home I feel a lot more pain at the end of the day. That said my most recent pain is in my upper shoulders so am here to see if these would help keep my shoulders further apart and stop unintentionally hunching.
Yup, 20 years of rsi here, with in 2019 a relapse where I was partially workincapacitated for 8 months, with numb forearms for a few hours a day. After that I took my physical exercise regimen much more seriously, with focus on neck and upper back and shoulders, and now I'm probably better than I ever was since a very long time. Regular resistance training is a mayor part in actually doing something to improve the situation. Ergonomics alone doesn't really fix the problem, but is super important, for sure.
0:15 Youch, I didn't expect to be so mercilessly called out to start off this video!
I only speak as one who knows.
just @ me bro damn
damn :D
This - I definitely feel seen...
I think one of the main resons the Kinesis brand does well is that they are in corporate accounts. I needed to get ergo and my employeer was only setup with a few brands - I just ended up on the Kinesis Adv Pro. I really wanted the Glove80 but it was not in any of my options. I had the same experience as you - the day I switched my RSI was gone. It was amazing. It has given me my life back.
This video could not have come at a better time for me! Looking forward to watching
Oryx is the reason why I got my first split keyboard as the Voyager, I think it is trully underrated and the team keeps updating it giving us more features. (Also I work in a hybrid model so portablity is really important to me)
How was the switch for you? I am torn between the Glove80 and the Voyager. My heart wants the voyager, but I am a tad worried about adjusting to the lower key count
I was just looking for an ergonomic keyboard for like 50 bucks, now I'm looking at a video on keyboards about 10x that price ... ffs
You can get one in the $50-100 range, but only if you're comfortable soldering the components together yourself (I just ordered a Corne split ergonomic keyboard online and went super barebones, I'm not even using a case, I'm just gonna stick some rubber feet on the underside of the PCB, the whole kit was like $40 from keyboardsource after I deselected the case and the little screens it comes with by default). It's really not as hard as it sounds, you can get a cheap soldering iron for like $15 online
@@daanw6270
The Goldtouch folding keyboards may be the most affordable and effective office-style ergonomic boards before you jump up into lit-up programmable types
Less than US$100. And the tenting feature goes up to 30°, which is one of the most effective things for some wrist issues, and is better than any of the keyboards in this video
Only the $500 Dygma boards have tenting as good as my old $50 Goldtouch (not a great keyboard, but night and day helped my wrist pain and I won’t type on a flat board anymore)
I have a 50$ usd attackshark alice layout keyboard and have been loving it. I just found it on amazon and decided to try it and it worked out great
I use the non-Pro Kinesis 360. It's simply amazing. I had horrible RSI problems 25 years ago, but getting a Kinesis contoured keyboard cured my problems basically overnight, and they never returned. And the Kinesis 360 is even better and more comfortable. It just works out of the box, it has no Bluetooth that can malfunction, and it has their easy to use point-and-click configurator program. If you want to have maximum RSI protection, I don't know of any better physical design.
I think you’ve convinced me to try the Glove80. I want to make the transition to split keyboards. I like the design of the voyager but it might be too difficult as new in this area. Thank you great video!!
the same here :)
I found that the biggest helper for my RSI was to switch over to a trackball mouse, particularly the Logitech Mx Ergo Plus. Being able to have the mouse angled to reduce pronation was a god send with this mouse.
I thougt about that myself but ended up on getting the Logitech MX Vertical instead, I can´t play games with a trackball mouse myself
I had one of those but switched to an Elecom Deft Pro. I prefer using my index and middle finger for the ball.
@@BFedie518 I have an RSI in my wrist that pains me anytime I use my index finger while my wrist is pronated. So that's why I got a thumb track ball, but any trackball mouse would probably have done the job IMO
The important thing that made the difference was fixing the pronation of the wrist.
As for gaming, having used keyboards like these for 15 years for work and games, in my experience nothing beats reconfiguring every game from WASD to ESDF (or the Colemak equivalent in my case). Yes, it is a bit of a PITA and takes an extra 10 minutes to do, but it is super comfortable.
I only use the left keyboard half when gaming, and put the right half further back, so the mouse can be in the most ergonomic position. When chatting in game I have to reach a bit further back with my right arm, but that's fine, also there's often voice communication via Discord or the like.
BTW on my non-gaming computers (Macs) I use either a trackpad (Apple's) or Trackball (Elecom Deft Pro) to have some variety, I think it helps with RSI.
Thanks for this extra perspective! Always interesting to hear what works well for other people.
@@ifcodingwerenatural you're very welcome. Hearing about other people's perspectives is what I like so much about videos like yours. They help make decisions, get insight, be inspired, …
Forgot to mention that my keyboard is Colemak in hardware (or firmware), so I have to configure every game anyway. I had thought about making a gaming layer where WASD is at the ESDF position, but that leaves many other keys without such a well-established standard as WASD. And in multiplayer games, where one types at other people, not having the layout one is accustomed to would be very weird.
Another standard key I like to move is shift, that's often the run key, and having that on a thumb is great with ESDF for movement. And A for action (can be used by pinky when moving with ESDF). And W and R and G for other important stuff. More as needed.
With programmable keyboards it shouldn’t even be 10 minutes per game. Just create a layout where letters are shifted and switch to it whenever you play games. I actually have half of Ergo Dox specifically for games with such remapping.
WASD sucks even on standard keyboard, coz it severely limits the number of keys you can use. I switched to UHJK few years back since it allows me to press space without using finger for that.
I came here to say the same. I switched to ESDF years ago (on normie keyboards). It opens up a lot more keys: for the pinky (q,a,z) which you can easily hit while moving with esdf. Also, the bump on the f key makes it easy to return to the movement keys if you need to reach for something. Remapping a new game only takes a few minutes. When you get a new game you need to take a few minutes to figure out the keys anyways.
Thanks for adding a new video over the long weekend, I love this topic! I like your reviews because you are a programmer like me so you appreciate larger numbers of keys. For me, the main step in getting rid of my RSI was getting an Evoluent Vertical mouse. I tried some fancier ones and cheaper ones, but none of them worked for me. There are two topics that I've never seen mentioned in any video comments or forums:
1. I like the fact that Oryx allows you to program the LED colors for each key, because I like to change these per layer. For instance, I have a gaming/number key layer and when I use this it highlights "easf", as you mentioned, on the left hand, while creating a 9 number layout on the right hand. Each of my layers have different color coding which is the main reason I haven't switched over to the Glove 80. The rainbow fade is pretty, but not utilitarian.
2. Why is it that contoured keyboard users that use the Voyager don't get RSI? Well, I think that it is because the columnar layout on the Voyager is more vertically staggered and closer to matching people's actual finger lengths than the Moonlander was. When you lay your fingers down flat on it, your main 4 digits line up more accurately with the keys and so you don't need to cup your fingers anymore. Because of this, I've come to a theory that if manufactures measured the finger lengths and made different sizes of keyboard for different sizes of hands, that would make flat keyboards like the ZSAs totally acceptable.
Got my glove 80 because of ur recommendation I love it. No more RSI
I'd suggest looking into trying either the Dygma raise and or defy!. I have both and am extremely happy. Been using the raise for a few years with the tenting kit, and the defy for a little over a month. Raise is staggered and the defy is columnar.
I was hoping there would be a sale on for the Voyager, Black Friday n’all.
I have a glove 80 but it’s a bit of a ‘statement piece’ whipping it out in a coffee shop. 😂
😂
They've never had BF discounts.
Great vid, thank you! Would've loves to see some b-rolls of you typing on these keyboards.
Just ordered a keyboard yesterday largely based on your other videos yesterday and got a little freaked out when i started watching this video being like "Oh damn - please don't contradict my purchase reasoning". Luckily that's not the case.
For me, it was a decision between Glove80 and Voyager - having used a ZSA Ergodox since it came out.
I went for a Voyager - my reasoning
- Being blessed not to have RSI (but cautious not to get it because like you I love my programming job) it is mainly about efficiency and comfort with little tinkering for me
- You covered on big point for me - gaming - i have a “regular” keyboard just for gaming at the moment due to the “domino effect” you mentioned - i think out of the 4 compared voyager will enable the least friction with games
- Using the keyboard in an open floor office the voyager will be the least “freaky” - while I love having the “oh wow - what is THAT?” conversation every now and then I think the voyager will turn less heads on first sight. E.g. using it portable during workshops with people etc. It still retains the “don’t try to use my keyboard” protection due to blank keys :P (I hate when people “quickly wanna show” me something on my machine)
- being a user of ZSA’s configurator I don’t wanna go for anything else that is less convenient
- Being forced into a smaller layout - like you mentioned in the video. I noticed on my ergodox that I could easily also have the small keys on the thumb cluster with a Homerow mod - something that the voyager will now force me to do.
Do you have any recommendations for voyager tenting solutions by any chance? (you show some in some of your videos - i did get the tripod mounts)?
Might even be interesting for a broader audience what is your experience with those (e.g. with your glove80 on your chair etc.)
Thanks for all the great content around split keyboards! Highly appreciated!
Thanks for the compliments! I'm still pretty new to mounting and constantly tinkering with the position and angle of the Glove80, but I've settled on mounting it on my desk where my mouse is still within comfortable reaching distance. The chair mount is great, but it puts my mouse too far out of reach. I think I'd need to get a trackball/trackpad to make the chair mount a viable option. For tenting on the Voyager without tripod mounts, I don't have much to say. I just use the magnetic pucks and have been pretty happy with that!
Thanks for your detailed perspective. Aye, the ZSA configurator is very good, maybe even best in class. The Glove80 configurator is pretty decent as well. As for gaming, with a column staggered layout, or sculpted key wells even more so, I find it's best to bite the bullet and reconfigure each game so the hand can rest on ESDF rather than WASD. I find it interesting that so many people favor small layouts. I understand the appeal too, but did have some trouble with thumb key limits on the Voyager. Having used Advantages and Ergodoxes for 15 years the Glove80 is more to my taste, or rather closer to what I'm used to. All of the 4 keyboards presented are fantastic, and if limited to either things would be fine. May I recommend reading the website A guide to home row mods? They do take some getting used to in perhaps unexpected ways, which made me enjoy having extra keys. See if they work for you, or maybe check out alternatives such as Callum style mods.
Subbed, RSI is a major factor and not many reviewers discuss it. Thank you very much! You sold me on the glove 80.
I just left a comment about my RSI journey and what I did to cure myself. Hopefully it helps you.
Probably because a lot of them don't have it, and so they can't accurately judge what makes it flare up or what helps in extreme cases
20 seconds into the video and the man has confronted me with my purchasing obsession.
As a gamer and a Data Scientist... I'm at a loss for what to do. I'm so glad that I watched this video and was pretty set on the Glove80, but I can't be bothered with rebinding WASD keys or different layers just for gaming.
You probably just saved me a bunch of frustration and about $650 AUD! Thank you!
In the process of having work either get a glove80, moonlander, or advantage 360. Perfect timing to help with the decision next week!
Thanks for the reviews. Coming from the Corne keyboard, the two thumb keys put me off the Voyager. However, I just noticed Oryx supports combo keys now, and I will be testing if I can configure the 3rd thumb key by pressing the 2 keys.
I ended up removing the number row on the voyager and zipping the top row and outermost columns on both sides for a 34 key layout.
I haven’t tried yet but I saw somebody on Reddit using a 3D printed key cap for an extra thumb key after moving everything one row up.
I’ll probably try that in the next days
It's always interesting to see the different ways developers tackle RSI. At work I use a Leopold keyboard and bind the caps lock to control (emacs user). At home ironically I have a red dragon blue switch keyboard and I don't need to modify anything. Love your videos!
Hey, thanks for the video. What helped me with my RSI was switching over to a trackball. Instead of the whole arm, one needs to just move the thumb, massive difference. Took me 1 week to adjust, never looked back, RSI gone. Insanely comfortable compared to ANY mouse. Give it a try if you have some time, you will love it.
Just got the voyager this weekend and still learning. putting LEFT, UP, RIGHT on one row is a game changer. took a while to get used to it but ill never look back
Did you put DOWN in the same row too, or below? I've been using left, up, down, right in a single row on my left hand for years (on the bottommost row on an ErgoDox), which is handy when the right hand is on the mouse. It did take some getting used to.
On the Voyager the arrow keys are on layer 1 in the ESDF position, very comfortable indeed. Because of the few thumb keys I couldn't have a layer switch on the left thumb, so I put an extra layer toggle-while-holding on the A key instead (sort of like a home row mod), just to be able to reach the arrows easily with one hand.
Another layer-while-holding is on a right hand thumb key.
I've had a Kinesis Advantage for so long. Like, this one that I'm typing on now might be 15 years old. We've got 4 of them in the house (2 people, and I had one for work, and one that's really REALLY old). They're extremely reliable. I'm inclined to go towards the Kinesis not just because the customer service is great, but you pay a bit more and you get something that will work for a long, long time. My per-year cost for these keyboards is so low.
Glad I found this video; I am on the lookout for my next keyboard, coming from a long-time RealForce enjoyer.
Didn't even know most of those styles exist.
ty!
Recently made the Lily58, I do really think making it yourself is perfect, you learn how they work and you can fix it when something breaks. Basically it becomes a keyboard for life.
I am to get the glove80 at some point, but I wanted to experiment with something cheaper and with fewer keys. I almost went full 34-36, but my pinkies have been trained for flexibility, so I went with a Sufle Choc instead (60-ish keys, kinda like the Voyager). I also like that it is very easy to make it a gaming keyboard.
For anyone reading this in EU (even worldwide, but EU for convenience) mechboards co uk are currently having one of the cheapest prebuilt preorders I've seen for such keyboards (thx to Black Friday). If you like the voyager, Sufle Choc is pretty much the same, only with more thumb keys. Corne Choc is 42 keys, and they even have Ferris Sweep (34 keys). Sadly, only wired versions, and no rgb, but at least they are a cheap entry into the niche and I'm pretty sure they have decent resale value.
are they hotswappable?
@@0l3gK Yeah
The Sofle looks interesting with the knobs, and it's very affordable. As does the Lily58 with 2 extra keys instead of knobs. Since you mentioned more thumb keys, do you operate the bottom row with your thumbs then? Personally I prefer spreading the thumbs away from the fingers rather than folding them below the fingers, but that's probably personal preference. The voyager is pretty nice in this regard, though it desperately needs at least one more thumb key IMO.
@@shrugalic I thought the same about thumb keys, but for my arc, none of the designs work if they require the thumb to spread out, without it also going quite low. The Voyager will work for sure, I quite like the design, but a third thumb key on it will have to go inwards for me. That changes with a keywell, because the thumb then rests in a more vertical position (not exactly, but it has a different plane of operation). I don't doubt that the Glove80 will be more comfortable in that regard.
I use 3 thumb keys at most, don't know why the Sofle has 5, as the inner two seem kinda impossible to reach comfortably and quickly. Some people use them as arrow keys for leisure operations, not during active use.
My thumb comfortably goes below my index, which is fine for the Sofle. That being said, I'm thinking about experimenting with only 2 thumb keys, and jumping to a wireless Ferris Sweep at some point, or a 42 Cantor/Piantor, if I can't manage with 2 thumb keys.
The Sofle V2 is another alternative, it has more pinky stagger and the thumb cluster favors outer movement of the thumb. Sadly, I couldn't find the design for the Choc version at a reasonable price. Nonetheless, I'm enjoying the hobby and will probably get myself a kit for the MX version and experiment with some lower travel and profile keys that are supposed to make it "Choc like", while offering the versatility of MX.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I suppose a thumb key right below the index should still be fine, and the Sofle v2 does just that. I agree with your point about it changing in 3D. Because they are so affordable, I think I am going to try a Sofle or Lily58, as that might just solve the thumb key issues I had with the Voyager.
The Lily58 in particular has single keys below the displays, and I like that innermost column for index operation on keyboards that have it (ErgoDox, Advantage, Moonlander). It does have one less key in the bottom row, but when those are considered thumb keys, that should be fine because the missing key didn't seem easily reachable. Nor does the 4th (outermost bottom) key beside it, but I suppose that can serve as a spare of sorts.
I've been using a Kinesis Advantage since 2015 to resolve an RSI. My pain went away within a couple of weeks and has never come back. I've worked a regular 9-5 with typing intense duties (not programming) and love this keyboard. I'm interested in the Glove80, as one of my Kinesis boards is starting to fail. Thanks for the video! (and causing flashbacks to PayDay2 remapping nightmares. ;-)
I have been using the glove80 for about 5 months now. After two weeks of suffering due to the drastic change, it started feeling natural. At 5 months, I can say my hands hurt less, I’ve trained out my bad typing habits and type with all my fingers now, and my speed has gone up by roughly 10%
I love the keyboard and would recommend it to anybody
love your ergo keyboard videos. keep them coming! big fan
Hah that "Future me editing" bit was the best joke i've seen this week :D good job
I used an older version of the kinesis that saved my RSI. Nice to see the model updated a bit with larger f-keys. I don't use it much today, but it did save MY LIFE when in extreme distress due to arm pains.
I just subbed as a show of solidarity as I too have prefrontal cortex, um, challenges. As to gaming I long ago realized that programming and gaming were substantially different activities. So I standardized on putting the "typing keyboard" aside for games and using a left-hand gaming Razer keyboard (20 keys + a thumb-operated mini joystick) combined with a Redragon MMO mouse (12 thumb keys). Changing their profiles lacks the convenience of shifting layers on today's split keyboards, but on the other hand the time required for changing their per-game profiles is insignificant when compared to the coffee breaks provided by today's AAA loading screens.
Biggest thing I have ever done to help my RSI was to get a Logitech MX Ergo trackball.
Thank you for the in-depth reviews! I'm looking for a split keyboard to help my shoulders/neck, and some occasional wrist/finger pain (usually after gaming a lot, which I don't do as much now but still sometimes). Leaning towards the Glove80 now after some research. Previously was interested in the Advantage360 introduced by ThePrimeagen, but read an article about how Glove80 is designed even better re: the curve and the heights and the keycaps and the key angles. And your video solidified my choice!
~12:30 I like ESDF, since the hand sits where it ought to for typing. But have to remap a bunch of bindings. Or use WASD but without using the index finger (use other 3 fingers), so again the hand can sit in the correct spot, but could be hard on the pinky!
As someone has been daily driving a 36 key layout for almost a year now (same as Ferris sweep, but with three thumb keys. Ran it emulated with software on my laptops built in keyboard, which was horrendous but worked to try it out, and recently finished my split board build), I can honestly say that I don’t think I could use a keyboard with more rows or columns anymore. Sure I could make it work, but I’d never use anything beyond the 36 I use now. It’s the perfect number of keys that I never have to stretch even a little, and 6 thumb keys mean 6 extra layers, so I have no shortage of places to bind keys to.
I think the Glove80 is likely what I’d buy if I had to go for one on the market, instead of building one myself like I did, but even if I had one, I’d only be using 36 of the keys anyways.
Also portability, as a student, it’s amazing to toss my 36 key keyboard in my bag and it’s the smallest thing in my bag, and I have a full desktop class typing experience in class taking notes. Truly amazing for someone working in the go a lot.
Not a callout like you said in the video, but wanted to share my experience with tiny keyboards! Even as a software engineer, it’s extremely usable! I’ll likely never go back.
Thanks for the fantastic content on split keyboards! Your reviews and comparisons are incredibly helpful. I'm curious, do you primarily focus on columnar layout, or are you open to trying staggered ones? We've chosen a staggered layout for our first keyboard with the aim of encouraging more people to give them a try. Your insights on different layouts would be invaluable to us.
Two factors are sticking out for me between the two welled boards, the Glove and the Advantage. Going to a first thumb command area, I can tell already that comfort there to make a sliding decision with each thumb accurately is going to be critical - I worry about dragging over both instead of gliding or turning inward a bit on the Advantage. I can see navigating that on the Glove better - perhaps with some dead buttons as my hands familiarize, but I'm also really drawn to this extra internal row of macro keys that is not present on the glove. Am I just too inexperienced to see how I could just be cranking up G, T, Y and H on the glove and pretty much off to the same races? Thank you for your great overview !
Have tried all of these as well! I still go back to the Corne running VIAL. Ticks every box and has the best thumb cluster around (3 keys). Pinky stagger is there but not too much. Spot on.
I prefer the regular Kinesis Advantage 360 over the glove 80. I prefer the fact that it has different sized keys on the thumb cluster. Also the tenting on the Kinesis feels better imo.
I have the original kenesis advantage, moonlander, and a 36 keyboard. Sounds like your RSI symptoms were similar. When I try anything besides the advantage my RSI flares up, also Im just not as productive for some reason. I want a split keyboard for traveling. The glove80 sounds promissing but curious how close it "feels" to the advantage. Not sure how to describe it but the moonlander just doesnt feel right to me and could never get the hang of it.
I believe you are using magnetic USB connecters, do you have a brand/link to the ones you've found that works well? I was lost looking at some poor reviews amongst the 10s of clones listed.
Great video looking for a replacement for my Moonlander after the plastic broke in under a year.
I've really been on the fence Glove80 vs Voyager. I need to look into mounting options for the Glove80.
Speaking of mice and RSI. I can't recommend a trackball enough, preferably one with a scroll ring. I learnt to use mine with my left hand, since I have problems mostly with my right. My accuracy isn't as high as a mouse but it's plenty good enough for normal use, including programmer, etc. I still use a mouse for gaming, but not using the mouse most of the time makes a big difference for em.
Thank you for touching upon RSI issues. Having these since 14 (gaming too much). Now 28, Data Scientist, programming loads gives me flare ups now and again. Checked your previous vids on Glove80, though this vid first one to get deeper into RSI. Now the price seems more proportional to the value it may give to those who suffer RSI. Truth be told, using magic keyboard and mouse and not helping me at all :D
yo i love the vid, super informative thanks! (probably gonna start with the Moonlander). Just wanted to say, I'm not sure what you goals are with the channel but I would for sure link to each of the keyboards in the description (i looked to check them out individually on their company websites (bonus if they were affiliate links!)). also, linking the to the other keyboard-specific videos would probably help drive views on those as well (added benefit if you also throw links to the respective keyboard in each of those videos as well. anyway cheers!
Good point! Links have been added, and yeah, I wish they were affiliate links 😆
I looked at the Advantage 360 wireless and wired version, and I think your recommendation of the non pro version comes with a misunderstanding. Note that unlike the Pro version, the wired version runs proprietary firmware, so your customization will be extremely limited compared to the Pro version.
Reduced keyboards with multiple layers really should have foot switches to toggle between them on-the-fly.
I'm at the moment a happy user of an Ultimate Hacking Keyboard and a Keyboardio Atreus. The UHK is my "work desk" keyboard and the Atreus is my travel keyboard. I love them both, for different reasons, but what they have in common of course is full-travel MX-style keys (Kailh Blue and Kailh Box White), and I absolutely love that positive mechanical travel and click.
I'm really compelled by the Voyager, and while everyone is clear that the Choc low-profile switches have shorter travel and thus feel different, I'm not seeing a lot of reviews that talk about this. I get that it's a subjective thing, but I'd love to see some coverage of HOW they feel different, and if that's better or worse or if there are pluses or minuses to one vs the other.
awesome video man -- super thorough and honest -- love to see it!
Have you considered using a vertical mouse or a trackball? I can use a regular keyboard for hours without getting any pain, but for me, using a mouse is a very quick way to get crippling pain that will last for days.
I'm very tempted to try the Glove80, it may not be as pretty as the Advantage 360 and it's thumb cluster looks way too big for my taste, but the prospect of mounting it to my chair is very appealing. I'm not sure if I'd use the Voyager as my "daily driver", but it sure looks like something I'd keep in my backpack so I don't have to use my laptop's keyboard when I'm away from home, just like I already carry a wireless trackball for such situations.
My only issue with the Voyager is that is seems to be wired only... for using on the go, a wireless would be a lot more convenient. I don't mind carrying a USB cable, but my experience with split keyboards makes me want to avoid TRRS cables as much as I can.
I got wrist pains, tried an Alice layout, did not help at all, then i went split (lily58) which helped a lot, then got progressively less keys, I am typing on a 34 key ferris sweep right now. The more you adapt and learn to use smaller layouts, the more productive I've become, at this point, anything with more keys feels like a burden to type on.
Best thing about the ZSA keyboards is their hot switch capabilities. Being able to change the switches is amazing. All keyboards should offer it, though I’m aware that the Glove80 can’t do it cause of the grooves
- Voyager and glove 80 owner here. Voyager's thumb cluster is a bit of a joke as the only realistic useful keys are the 1-2 ones close to the rest of the board. The red key? good luck reaching that. The lack of key dwell makes it hard for small-hand people and eventually I developed some pain on my hand from extending my index finder to reach columns 5,6,7,8,9,10.
- Glove 80 ergonomics are just superior in almos every aspects. My main complains are: typing experience is a bit flat and i find traditional cherry like switches more enjoyable to type than choc ones. This one might be only me, but sometimes keys are sent twice leading to typos/errors, specially when releasing other keys at the same time. Also I don't find it as responsive and can notice some micro latency when typing.
I got a Moonlander, but became interested the Ergodox Ez.
I recommend the Ergo over the Moonlander for a static office, and I suspect the voyager is better if you need some portability
Also chipping in re: wha helped me with RSI. Biggest breakthrough for me: use a trackpad, not a mouse. This helps me so much, it seems to reduce muscle tension quite a bit. In terms of keyboard: have been using a big old clunky Microsoft natural erognomic keyboard (4000 model) and never looked back. It's not pretty and requires quite hard key presses, but it took alway all my rsi complaints and they never came back.
Trackballs are also very good. Better still: use two of them and alternate hands.
Thanks for the great video. I've been looking for a better keyboard for many years, but I was trying to find not only split programmable keyboard but also wireless. And finally I found and use for over a year now which is Dygma Defy I love it so much that I am currently waiting for Dygma Raise 2 which has different layout than Dygma Defy and is open for extensions (which currently don't exist). Both have great integrated tenting and I love first one (second one not arrived yet).
The Moonlander and other split keyboards didn't conviene me due to being only wired solution and their tenting kits if exist are a lot bigger.
I was also wondering about Glove80 but seems that build quality is not there yet. How do you like its build quality?
Maybe you will compare Dygma keyboards with this ones in the future.
I don’t know where the shift key is on the voyager, but on a traditional keyboard you aren’t supposed to use the opposite hand to press shift (like if I want to do a capital “A” the. I should be pressing shift with my right hand). That should make the “anchoring” while typing a nonissue
On Glove80 I find the thumb cluster awkward. On the other extreme, I hate boards that make me bring my thumb in beyond the index column.
I have now ordered an Imprint (customized Dactyl-style). We'll see how that goes.
I understand ergonomics and I do see an advantage with split keyboard, but one thing baffles me is the price. Can anyone tell me why are they so high priced when compared to normal keyboard
@@tirunagariuttam They do not sell a ton so have a higher price to recoup costs. Also the key welled keyboards are not simple to manufacture. That's my non-expert take on it.
You were talking about using the Glove80 for gaming and WASD causing a bunch of problems with the default layout.
And all my brain thought as I was looking at my Azeron gaming keypad was "well have I got a solution for you"
I like the MD770 split mechanical keyboard. The switches are soldered on. It's a 75% keyboard and can be configured. There are BT and wired versions.
The keyboard options that you presented to us are amazing but I think that for those prices I can buy a Lily58 Wireless and try different layouts easier for half the price.
i've bought the glove80 basically based on this review. what can i say. it's comfortable, it's ergonomic, it does the job. but, boy, the sound just kills me. it's so squishy, idk why it sound so cheap. the other mecanical keybords i have have lower tone, but this one... i do not recommend red gaterons, because with the brown ones at least you'll hear clicking as well...
12:33 Just use ESDF :p
I use ESDF on 'normal' keyboards tho.
I'm curious, do you use a vi type editor? I'm also a developer and I noticed that a lot of people here on RUclips that get into these ergo keyboards are into Neovim. I also like custom keyboards but more so the standard qwerty 75% layouts. I use jetbrains IDEs in my day to day so I'm not constantly typing to navigate around. Just wondering if there's any correlation between using your keyboard to navigate and RSI.
Oh yes, I'm pretty deep into the neovim ecosystem 😅. My theory is that people who are drawn to neovim also write an abnormal amount of code, which equates to high keyboard usage, which leads to higher occurrences of RSI. I wouldn't be surprised if there's a correlation between using neovim and having an ergo keyboard.
I've subscribed after the joke about "boosting the channel". Actually I love such frankness, especially when modern bloggers are drowned in cliches, asking for LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE)
As a software developer with joint issues, I'm starting to really think about longevity in my early 30s. I'm currently using a regular keyboard but I have my eye on that glove80. I'll go watch your in depth review. Thank you!
Btw for gaming you could use separate arrow keys if the curved keyboard doesn't work. I bought a set when I bought a keyboard that turned out to be a 60% as opposed to a 65% (why name in 65 tho! but I probably should have noticed...) and because I type in dvorak I find that it's useful for games that don't revert my dvorak to qwerty for wasd. I put the separate arrows on the left so I can arrow + mouse.
Edit: About the mouse, I found my hand really starts to hurt with a small mouse. I'm a relatively petite (read: short) woman with small hands, but they handed me an Apple magic mouse at work and oh boy the hand pain was real. I ended up requesting an ergonomic mouse when you turn your hand to the side like a handshake and I'm very happy. I'll probably get one for my personal setup.
Another thing: have you seen the Dactyl Manuform? It's a little bit like the voyager with a bit of curve and it looks like it has that third thumb button you're looking for. I think you might have to DIY it though - sounds like it's a 3D print type situation. I think some people make them to order if you want to try it but aren't feeling that make-it-yourself thing. Interested in your opinion!
Great content! Thanks for taking the time to compare these four different ergonomic keyboards.
Regarding the Voyager, you say, “Not having a dedicated shift key on the thumb cluster feels like it’s just really holding me back on this keyboard.” Then why aren’t you using Oryx to program one of the thumb keys as a dedicated shift key? I’m currently waiting for my Voyager to arrive and have already designed an initial layout that includes a dedicated shift key on the thumb cluster.
Did you get your voyager yet? I ordered one a few days ago. Is it as awesome as I feel like it will be?
Dactyl Manuform. Ultimate customization, never going back.
PSA: for gaming, you don't need to remap every game to match your keyboard. You can make a layer on your keyboard that shifts the keys over, and it all makes sense again for every game without further modification.
I just got the Kinesis 360 Pro. It feels great, but is a pain to even try to remap any keys. ( Still haven't done it).Woulda got the non-pro version, but really wanted the back lit keyboard, and that's only with the pro version. Video ides? Maybe a how-to for key remapping on the Kenesis Advantage 360 Pro?
I touch on key remapping in one of my videos on the Adv360 (ruclips.net/video/IDayf7YPLsg/видео.html), but yeah, it's not a bad idea to make a dedicated video on it!
I'm that guy with the ferris sweep and I only use 34 keys, but it just doesn't feel nice to type on. I've been using a moonlander with only 34 keys (removed the other keys with their zip kit), but just got my hands on a defy. I bought a second one for work about an hour after typing on it, it's really nice. Even though there are still way too many keys. Imagine how nice the zsa keyboards feel from a quality standpoint, and dial it up a bit. With the keyboards you seem to like here, I think you'd really like the defy.
I just got mine the other day. Absolutely awesome.
I kickstarted it so long ago I forgot I bought it. I actually got it for gaming… and I hardly play anymore XD. Still great for keeping at my desktop. Some thumb buttons seem excessive while not gaming, but I could only use half and still have 4!
I was just starting to look into a keyboard about a month ago to upgrade my old ergodox from. My heart started calling out for a voyager, and i recently found the sofle models with dials or even cooler FREAKING TRACKBALL. I’m flipping between the two, and then the Dygma shows up at my door.
Debating if I should not buy now 😅
I do think the dygma is bigger than I want to bring with my laptop.
Great video! I'm a big fan of a dedicated gaming layer on the Glove80. All games are WASD by default so why make things harder by remapping all your games when you can switch to a layer instantly that will work with everything.
Are they all concave? I have arthritis and I work from home. I'm not sure if the concave keyboards will work.
It sure is expensive to have health issues isn’t it? I’m currently using a Microsoft sculpt and haven’t cut over to a columnar yet. I can’t really use any other keyboard my right hand slowly gets nerve issues/will go numb. I’m on the fence and considering the Glove80. I want low profile and wrist rests, I’ll never compromise there. Only thing holding me back is the noise, the Glove sounds loud, I’ve gotten used to nearly silent typing which is a big deal on calls for me. I think if the Glove was hot-swappable I would have pulled the trigger already. So much to consider…
You spoke a lot about “home row mod” on the Voyager. Could you share more about what that means and how it helps?
Thanks for your keyboard videos. I’m seriously tempted to upgrade 😊
Look up 'A guide to home row mods'
Thank you!
i have been playing pc games for as long as i can remember (30+) years now, and have always used my mouse to turn around. My pains always come form excessive clivking the mouse, but havent found a great vertical mouse yet that actually has a lot of thumb keys. SO thats why is still use the corsair scimitar for gaming. Would love to see some more innovation for mice
I switched from the Logitech vertical mouse to a kensington trackball trackblade slim. It worked wonders for working for a year, no more wrist movement, helped so much. The issue appeared now tho, since the movements with the trackball caused a tenniselbow ... cant do it right
My problem with these kind of split keyboards is that they are so expensive for what they are, mainly in how they are lacking many basic features i would expect from a keyboard of that price. Most commonly this is the ability for hotswap switches, and/or more understandably, the lack of additional keycap sets i could use for any one of these.
I really want the voyager, but only two thumb buttons is rough…
I mean, I suppose I could
1. Get ride of number row
2. Move letters up
3. Have 4 thumb buttons? Are v/b and n/m comfortable to reach with your thumb?
I’m wondering if I should go for the voyager or sofle. ZSA seems like a good company ( I have an ergodox and am happy with it/ customer support), but more thumbkeys and a trackball would be so dope.
Hmm, unless you desperately need a more compact keyboard for travel (Voyager) or are desperate for something slightly more comfortable (Advantage 360) or more comfortable and wireless (Glove80) the ErgoDox is a great keyboard. Personally my favorite is the Advantage 360, followed by Glove80, followed by ErgoDox or Moonlander, then Voyager. But I don't need wireless nor LEDs nor ZMK, just a comfortable ergonomic keyboard with lots of thumb keys (ideally 3 minimum, 4 are better, 6 is luxurious). For different needs the order would be different.
On the Voyager I also thought about giving up the top (number) row at first, because the thumb keys felt better when the home row was further away. But I got used to the default position it in a few days, and would miss the number row a lot. As it is, I missed the bottom row a lot, because I have my arrow keys there on other keyboards.
BTW I use the bottom row with fingers not thumbs, as folding the thumb to below the fingers feels awkward to me, I prefer spreading the thumb away from the fingers, having gotten used to Advantage 1 and ErgoDox style thumb keys for 15 years. How do you use the bottom row on your ErgoDox? Thumbs or fingers? The answer should be insightful about the thing you imagine doing with a Voyager.
@@shrugalic I couldn't see myself using the Kinesis for too many reasons.
I do have a laptop I bring around and really do hate laptop keyboards. I don't bring it out everyday due to my classes, but I will in the near future.
I mean, with a keyboard as small as the voyager I really do think that using all the peripheral buttons for numbers and arrows seems wasteful when it could be layered so easily. I do need to feel it to know where I'd be comfortable putting my hand though.
On my Ergodox, I CAN use the thumb buttons, but they just feel awkwardly positioned, and its the biggest weakness imo.
I use my thumb for the first 2 keys of the bottom row, and don't even bother with the other 3, I set those to shift to my gaming layers. But now that I have this defy, I'm going to have that dedicated for it.
I'm looking at a voyager or sofle ( with a trackball) for non gaming purposes.
@@thedog5k That's fair, for travel purposes a Kinesis 360 is about the worst/bulkiest. The Glove with case is a little better. The Moonlander is actually only slightly larger in its transport pouch than the Voyager and a lot less compromised key-wise.
But do what feels best to you ofc. All 4 keyboards are fantastic, with their own strengths and weaknesses.
The Sofle or Lily58 seem a reasonable and cheaper alternative to the Voyager, if you can cope with with the lower amount of thumb keys any of these have.
The Voyager still has enough keys that one extra layer was enough for me, but I did miss a few keys on the top level, such as delete and arrow keys. And it does pretty much enforce finding a solution for all the modifiers, be it home row mods or callum style mods or .... If you're fine with going that route then it (or a similar one) should be a great choice.
@@thedog5k PS: since you do use your thumb for the first 2 keys on the bottom row, I should think that a Voyager/Sofle/Lily58 or similar should work fine for you. Especially since you don't seem to like spreading your thumb out on the ErgoDox.
@@thedog5k PPS: if you don't mind building your own keyboard, the Dactyl Manuform or Charybdis seem rather intriguing as well. Personally I soldered many an ErgoDox, but these days I don't mind buying ready to go keebs either. ;)
I was liking the kinesis but after this video I think that I can buy the glovo 80. I've only one question about the hand size. Is there any resource over the net that make some consideration about preferred ergonomib keyboards over hand size? Because I don't know if big and little hands feel the same with curved keyboards...
thank you for that detail comparison
Haha, yeah... My first split ergo is the ferris sweep. Using it right now. Miryoku QMK with Colmak-DHm layout. I like it, but thinking about Glove80 or Moonlander so I can get some of my dedicated keys back. I like the full travel of the MX style switches on my "normie" keyboard but maybe the Glove80 will convert me with it's contours.
im not a programmer. i mostly game. i use a periloot caravel for my left hand. Its ergonomics are the hands down best because the section of the board where control+shift+tilde+z are located is sunk down and the rest of the board is sloped tilted up to the right. the thumb cluster is also positioned below C+V (below as in under row and also below as in sunken down) allowing for most natural thumb positioning. If i were motivated and smart enuff id figure out a way to make a whole dactyl keeb like the periloot caravel + wireless with bazillon battery life
13:10 I have seen some controller software that lets you set up profiles. IE Launching a game? Swap to the appropriate game style profile. Is this an option & if not should it be?
I had to lookup what RSI means. I don't think I have that after 12 years as a Software Engineer, but my typing speed tops out at around 70 kpm, so maybe that has something to do with it? I have had mild soreness in my forearm on rare occasion, but it usually resolves within a day or so with some massage and stretches. I also use a thumb trackball mouse.
Thanks for awesome content. I have been torn between voyager and glove80. I don’t have RSI but I would like to try to avoid it if possible.
Can you do a video between voyager and glove80?
Thanks!
Thx! (I`still waiting for good combinations of track ball + ergo-Keyboards)
Yeah set up the patreon or something because I'd also really like to see you do the dygma defy. I'm in such a tossup between that and the glove80
One trouble with the Glove 80 is that few people have long-term experience with it yet. Most "reviews" are just trials so far. If the cost were half what it is, that wouldn't be so problematic.
Typed at 8 WPM on a Kinesis Advantage 2 using Colemak. 😂
I really really really wanted to love my glove 80. I've daily driven it for over a year and despite that, I never could get my wpm back to where it was before the glove80 and I had a pretty high mistype rate. I always felt I had to constantly adjust my hand position which put pressure on my wrists. I kept with it, telling myself I just needed more time with it... but once I realized it had been a year, I came to my senses and realized it just isn't working for me. I really think it's just a me problem. My hands might just not be suited for it. I have large hands but most of the size is in my palms, not my fingers. So just hitting all the normal alpha keys in the keywell just was always a bit of a stretch rather than comfortable.
I just recently switched to my old Atreus that I hadn't touched in a very long time and within 30 minutes I was already typing 10wpm faster than the glove80 I had been using daily. So if you have "normal" hands, I bet the glove80 will be great, just for me, flat boards without the keywell seems to be better.
I would say, learning a restricted key layout that uses layers, sure it is a bit of a time investment but I've found it to be incredibly rewarding. A 34 key ferris is about as small as I think is reasonable but you also never have to stretch or move your hand, it can stay comfortably put and for me is the key to preventing RSI.
I have switched from a non ergo keyboard to the glove80 recently. I an experiencing more pain than i used to, particularly while programming because curly braces are difficult to reach. I have not gone through creating a custom layer because i like to rely on defaults. Should i try going all in on layers with the ferris?
imho, you're really shooting yourself in the foot by not taking advantage of layers for programming. Good ergonomics is a combination of things. If you're still experiencing pain while typing, it's 100% worth moving symbols to easy-to-reach spots on a different layer!
What he said. These keyboards are programmable for a reason, and the Glove80 configurator is pretty good. All the default layouts I've seen suck in one way or another for my personal preference. Check out different layouts from other people to get inspired, and think what your needs are / what you could profit from. You can check out ErgoDox or Moonlander layouts in ZSA Oryx too, for more inspiration.
The default brackets work for me, but I got used to that on an Advantage years ago. With the layer key easily accessible with a thumb, there are many good spots to put braces on another layer. How about prime spots such as J and K, or L and ;? Do you need the numblock on the lower layer? If not, use those positions for something useful to you. If you do need it, maybe put in on another layer. Or make an easily accessible layer with the stuff you need. What about the parentheses spot on the lower layer, do you use that, or do you use the ones on the shifted base layer's 9 and 0 position?
I work in a software engineering company where many have a programmable keyboards, and there are no two people with exactly the same layout.
So I built a modified Corne keyboard. My first split keyboard, I'm sort of regretting going so ham. But it's not for the lack of keys, it's because I did not know I would need to use ZMK when I built it. So I'm stuck with a keyboard layout that is not mine (I pulled the config file from the git repo I got the board from). Anyway I have no clue how to work with zmk 😅
That's rough! I highly recommend checking out nickcoutsos.github.io/keymap-editor/. You can get pretty far with layout customization without writing any config code.
You can get the zip set for your moonlander. I mean the flatter keys.
Nice comparison! I also had the experience of having RSI disappear when switching to a Kinesis…25 years ago 🧓🏻
I’ve been tempted by the Glove80, but I suspect I wouldn’t like the thumb layout - if you could even get it with something like the Moonlander layout I think it’d be ideal. I know from experience that I tend to take advantage the length of the 2u Kinesis thumb keys in a way that would probably make me miss the Glove80 ones.
Seriously considering building a custom Dactyl of some sort to get the best of both worlds.
I also use the Logitech mx master 3 and unfortunately find myself getting really bad discomfort in my right pinky and ring fingers where they hang off the side. Unfortunate because I love the mouse. May have to switch to a vertical mouse
It is a good idea to use ESDF instead of WASD for moving in games on any keyboard
I actually prefer kinesis adv. 360 pro over glove 80. Having used both, the kinesis is more comfortable and feels much more solid. The GUI to remap keys is actually on par with the glove one (nickcoutsos editor). However, glove 80 is still fantastic and certainly unique keyboard on the market.