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Got an Ooni pizza oven. Not quite as useful during lockdown as I might have hoped but it's given us something to do in the garden, and I can't wait to take it camping and to festivals.

https://ooni.com/

I've really ended up liking my Moonlander keyboard. I wasn't initially sold onsplit keyboards at all, and it's taken me a while to end up with a layout I'm happy with, but I've just about caught up on typing speed and feel far less cramped. Plus it plays chiptunes.

https://www.zsa.io/moonlander/

Also I can't necessarily recommend a particular brand, but I bought myself a soldering station for the first time ever. Been a long time since I was interested in electronics or computer hardware in particular, but it's been really satisfying fixing various bits of equipment in my house.



I got my Ooni (an Uuni 3) a few years ago and I use it almost weekly during dry weather. If you like making pizza, this is a fantastic investment. I will say though, it take a lot of practice to figure out the right temperature and timing for baking. Even though it goes up to 915f, doesn't mean you should go 915f.


I have been interested in the Moonlander keyboard. What were some of the edge cases for you that made it more difficult to use than a traditional keyboard, and how long did it take you to get up to speed typing?


I've found that I only really use two of the four keys on each thumb cluster, I suppose that's one disappointment, but I've just not found any modifiers worth the lateral movement. The main issues I've had are mostly self-inflicted, by repeatedly tweaking things and breaking muscle memory. I have no fundamental complaints, the only hardship at this point is that I can't always remember what symbol is above which number key. My current layout isn't particularly wild, I'm not a big fan of using multiple layers in normal operation, for example:

https://configure.zsa.io/moonlander/layouts/l79Bz/latest/0

With the ortholinear layout I've found moving P to the second row really nice, and you'll note I've squeezed the number keys inwards a bit. The central keys where I've got -/= and DEL/Backspace are important choices and I'm happy where I've settled. I've found this layout very friendly to my wrists and pinkies, and I'm comfortably back up to 90-100WPM. Takes some tweaking having space and shift the same thumb key on the right and I don't _love_ pressing the same key twice in a row to separate sentences.

Obviously these things are quite personal - I was looking for something Emacs friendly that didn't require thumb contortions for Alt keys. I had tried the X-Bows previously and found it an absolute disaster (don't put Enter next to Backspace, I'm far too clumsy). I've also settled on the toughest, clickiest switches because I only rest my hands on the keyboard and found I was typing by accident on every other keyboard.


Check out the Dygma Raise. I was considering a Moonlander too but I went with the Raise instead because it had a more traditional key layout (non-ortholinear) and I really like how it has 8 thumb keys - they're insanely useful.


Adam Savage went on and on about his favorite soldering station in a YouTube video, so if anyone wants a recommendation, search for that.




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