Keyboard Color Symmetry

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Muirium
µ

11 Jan 2016, 21:11

bazh wrote: well if it's just for the look then you don't use it so often anyway :))
Looks vs. utility keeps on coming up. Yet I find there is no trade off. I use my boards plenty, and, oddly enough, they work just as well when I make tilde and backslash the same colour as the mods! No surprise really. There's no functional difference to when I leave them the assymmetric standard.

A custom board with weird staggering is the one I'd likely abandon pretty quick. Which is why I'm unwilling to go that far. The HHKB is as symmetric as I want, and need. Which means it's entirely useable!

I insist my keyboards work.

seaworthy

11 Jan 2016, 21:22

A symmetrically colored keyboard is consciously and subconsciously appealing, especially on a 60% board (right and left columns of modifiers bridged by a spacebar in the same color but contrasting with alphas and numerals). I have no data to support this supposition—just habits and opinions.

But when learning a new keyboard layout (currently only three months into using HHKB), color functions as a visual mnemonic for me at sacrifice of symmetry. This is an extreme example of how a lack of symmetry can be a distraction, but it is nonetheless an authentic example.

I recently put caps from an AEK II on a Matias Laptop Pro (this is probably harvesting from the better board to feed the lesser board, but I occasionally like to have bluetooth—and the Matias boards have 6-month battery life). I love the feel of the AEK caps (the Helvetica italics font is okay-ish but is wonderfully nostalgic), but the legacy nature of the homing keys—being on D and K instead of F and J—causes me occasional muscle memory confusion after decades of homing with F and J. So simply dying the F and J keys on the old AEK caps an alternate color makes a significant visual aide—when my finger memory gets confused, I can just glance down to get back on the home keys quickly.

Highlighting F and J from the other alphas is fairly symmetrical, but I’ve got a bit of a mess on my HHKB. I initially tried to adapt and like the fn arrow diamond cluster navigation. It works well if I am scrolling down a web page with one hand on my keyboard, but I find it much easier keeping both hands on the home row and use IJKL + Control for navigation.

Currently, I’m trying to get acclimated to both navigation methods, so I have IJKL caps in one color, the HHKB diamond cluster in another color, and the balance of my alphas in yet a third color (I have a white set I’ve died various colors and the native black on charcoal gray).

It looks like a by-product of finger painting day at clown college. It’s now anything but symmetrical. If I can put the rainbow vomit out of my mind and work, all the colors are highly functional. But when I stop to admire the aesthetics of my keyboard—well…I don’t spend much time admiring.

If you could rely on only ever using one keyboard layout at all times, having color or tone symmetry between modifiers and alphas/numerals seems zen-like on a 60% er (similar to Hypersphere’s “Symmetrical + Mods example in his original post, but all in blanks). TKL and full boards seem like they could achieve a balance of sorts with tone accents, but inherently the visual weighting of the num pad and arrow clusters keeps them from achieving symmetry …“not that there’s anything wrong with that…not at all”
Last edited by seaworthy on 11 Jan 2016, 23:03, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
zslane

11 Jan 2016, 22:58

Yeah, my preference for the ANSI 104 layout means symmetry is a pretty meaningless target to aim for.

And my Pok3r is just a Filco with everything but the base keys removed. Even with what's left there is little symmetry to be found. Three mods to the left of the spacebar and four mods to the right. A 1u mod in the upper left corner (ESC) and a 2u mod in the upper right, and they aren't even the same color since I like the ESC key to pop visually. The QWERTY row has alpha keys that start after a mod on the left, but go all the way to the end on the right. From the home row down, there is no size symmetry between the mods on the left and the mods on the right.

Describing a standard ANSI or ISO layout as having symmetry is an exercise in sheer fantasy, no matter the format factor you choose. And I have yet to see a mass-produced ANSI/ISO variant with anything resembling symmetry either.

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