It does on a section under the graph. It's not 10+ right now but this is where it reports the actual index.
We had 20+ for a couple of hours yesterday here in Sudbury.
I thought the rain would help but it barely rained.
No problem. Happy to help!
Got it. They have an ESP chip in them, so they have wifi.
One is ESP32-C3 and the other is ESP8266.
But I'm powering them with the included cable, which is pretty decent. You can certainly power it with battery but I have no idea about its power consumption.
What do you mean with 'needs to be hardwired in'?
I just had to put the components in the case and plug the cables. One of the kits just needed the sensors to be attached to the female pins already soldered in the board. It took me less than 10 min to assemble both.
No soldering needed.
https://www.airgradient.com/kits/
I integrated it with HA via ESPHome after flashing it with configs I found on: https://github.com/ajfriesen/ESPHome-AirGradient/tree/main
Mine are one Pro (indoors) and one Open Air (balcony).
I set up HA to integrate with InfluxDB and Grafana to read from it to plot nice graphs.
Ping me if you wanna chat about it.
This is how the past week looked like
+1 for Technology Connections! So many good videos and awesome storytelling!
TIL! I didn't know that shortcut.
I saw some mentions of layers but in all fairness, it's not appealing to me if I want to hit F6 to make the cursor go to the browser's address bar.
But thanks for mentioning! It may help others.
Thanks for that. It makes me less resistant in spending more to have keyboard with keywell.
I hope your arm is fully recovered now!
It has more than the ergo I saw too. I'm used to number row and function keys and wouldn't want to lose that. That would probably take some getting used to it but if I can still have those keys, no reason to choose one that doesn't.
Some of the videos I watched involved them doing typing training to get used to columnar layout. I'm sure it's a learning curve.
Hope you can get used to it soon!
Had you used any non-keywell ergo keyboards before the 360? If so, how much better is the keywell option compared to them?
The gist of it is "is it worth $200 more to have keywells?"
Do you mean getting used to in the sense of it having columnar keys/typing speed or pain/discomfort?
Taking a better look at the glove80, it's definitely appealing to me, since it also has the function keys on it. It's about CA$550 vs about CA$450 for the dactyl, which has less keys.
I'm trying to find one that I can use for years to come, since they are very pricey.
The Dactyls look interesting, keywell, tenting. I'll take a look at them!
I can solder but it doesn't mean it turns out good lol
I looked mainly on prebuit since the DIY didn't feel to fit what I was looking for. When I was searching for ones with keywell, no DIY models came up.
What I noticed with the one you suggested and some others I found when looking around is that they don't have many keys.
Is it common to have a separated numpad?
Also, out of curiosity, what are uses for the thumb knob? I saw that in some models and also on yours.
Wanting to move from conventional to ergo mech. Am overwhelmed. Send help.
I'm a complete novice to mech and ergo so I apologize in advance for any sins lol
The 3 I checked are Kinesis 360 (https://kinesis-ergo.com/keyboards/advantage360/), Glove80 (https://www.moergo.com/collections/glove80-keyboards) and the Moonlander (https://www.zsa.io/moonlander/).
These below are what I got from watching reviews:
- Kinesis is difficult to customize and sometimes has connectivity issues
- Glove80 feels cheap
- Moonlander doesn’t have many keys and thumb cluster is on odd position
Considering the prices, the moonlander is about US$100 cheaper than the others, so feels like a better option.
I am interested in options with keywell, as they feel way more comfortable, but anything will be better since I use an conventional non-split keyboard.
The right menu links to a compare tool but there are so many.
My hands are small, so it may constrain the options I have. Or maybe not.
What are your opinions/suggestions/experience with these types of keyboards?
Thanks! I tried to find one yesterday but the result was empty.
I'll check that one.
You can already install Jerboa from the play store directly!
Overwhelmed by options of ergo keyboards. Please send help.
I've been wanting to try an ergo split keyboard but there are so many options.
The 3 I checked are Kinesis 360 (https://kinesis-ergo.com/keyboards/advantage360/), Glove80 (https://www.moergo.com/collections/glove80-keyboards) and the Moonlander (https://www.zsa.io/moonlander/).
These below are what I got from watching reviews:
- Kinesis is difficult to customize and sometimes has connectivity issues
- Glove80 feels cheap
- Moonlander doesn't have many keys
Considering the prices, the moonlander is about US$100 cheaper than the others, so feels like a better option.
I am interested in options with keywell, as they feel way more comfortable, but anything will be better since I use a usual non-split keyboard.
What are your opinions/suggestions/experience with these types of keyboards?