![]() ![]() Though you trade clicky feedback for comfort, it will be well worth it after a few dozen presses. The best part of this keyboard, hands down, is the soft, soundless buttons. There’s also a shift button that opens up special characters and uppercase, and the addition of return, ok, and send keys puts it over the top. ![]() It’s based on that ubiquitous red/blue keypad, but it has a full QWERTY layout. (Which is nice, because we were totally going to suggest that). This 41-button Arduino keyboard PCB is a stepping stone to his next project, a pair of two-way texting machines. Isn’t it time for a full Arduino-compatible keyboard? thinks so. There’s that red and blue 4×4 membrane we’ve all seen in password-protected door lock projects, and the phone layout version that does pretty much all the same tricks. If you want to add a keypad to your Arduino project, the options are pretty limited. ![]()
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