Over the past two years I tried out a few different keyboards for fun.
I started with common form factors like TKL boards, went over 75% boards like the [Q1](/posts/keyboards-and-open-source/) and then to a 60% [HHKB](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Hacking_Keyboard).
For typing feel, the HHKB is really amazing, but unfortunately the programmable features of a stock HHKB board are very limited.
Now that I went down to 60%, I will give a more extreme keyboard a chance, the 40% Planck ortholinear keyboard.
This one is fully open-source, you can even produce your own PCBs and Co.
You find more or less all stuff freely at [GitHub](https://github.com/olkb).
Given that the Plank designer funded [QMK](https://qmk.fm), too, naturally you can fully customize the Planck boards.
Unlike for my tries with the Q1, this time I just went the plain QMK route, without any UI like the closed [VIA](https://www.caniusevia.com/) or the open [VIAL](https://get.vial.today/).
The Planck board offers a nice platform for experiments, given the plain grid layer that allows really to freely shuffle all your keys and experiment with extreme layouts.
As the history of this repository shows, I already experimented if some different layouts.
## Warning ^^
Yes, the paper on the left of the keyboard is a printout of the lower & raise keyboard layers.
My typing speed is still abysmal on that new layout and I guess I need to build as second one for at work, otherwise I will never get used to the layout if I swap daily between this and a HHKB.
Therefore, if you like to try such a board and are not a lot more experienced with switching between different layouts: you will need some time to get used to this.
Even just the removed row staggering is confusing the first few days.