• @Hazdaz
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been wanting to build one of these for a while now. But every time I think about ordering some of the parts and maybe start 3D printing a housing I stop and think am I really going to use it or is this just going to collect dust as I just use my phone instead.

    For those who have built one of these… what do you use it for? Especially what tasks that couldn’t be accomplished by a phone which you carry with you anyways.

    • Gunpachi
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      21 year ago

      Interesting ! Would people buy phones with such a keyboard nowadays ?

      I have never used a blackberry myself, but seeing this project made me curious whether there is market for such a product.

      • Square Singer
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        51 year ago

        I actually never used a real blackberry either, only their replacement keyboards ;)

        Every time I post about this, there are a few people who say they’d pay for one. They usually offered €50-200 for one. But so far afaik nobody has built one themselves. Apparently the crowd who is brave enough to replicate this and the crowd that wants a keyboard don’t overlap a lot.

        I’d guess, if I were to sell these, I could probably sell a few hundred to a few thousand.

        There are some keyboard phones on the market, though only from very niche manufacturers (e.g. Fxtec and Unihertz). And even though these phones are usually priced much higher than a similar phone without keyboard would be, and even though they have crappy hardware and outdated crappy software, they seem to sell enough to keep their manufacturers afloat.

        The Fairberry has the advantage that you can couple it with a phone of your choice. This makes it the only way I know to get a modern phone with good specs and a hardware keyboard.

        (I probably own the hardware-wise best keyboard smartphone in the world right now :) )

        My wish would be that someone would pick this up, make a few thousand of them and sell them. I wouldn’t even need to make money from that, I’d just be happy if people could get their hands on these.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          I owned a Blackberry Passport back when it was a thing, and to this day it is the best phone I’ve ever owned. The keyboard was capacitive, so you could swipe your finger on it to scroll or move the cursor around. The OS also had a thing called “Blackberry Hub”, which was basically the Android notification tray on steroids. You could swipe up-right from any app to access a combined list of all your messages (email, sms, whatsapp, etc) in a common interface to quickly reply or compose messages.

          It was all an incredibly well designed experience. I loved it so much that I never sold my passport even after it was clear BB was doomed. I still have it with the original box in my closet (next to an HTC Dream lol)

          …but I wouldn’t buy something like this. As nice as the physical keyboard was, I was always way faster with a virtual keyboard. I’m sure that the capacitive/physical hybrid idea wasn’t explored to it’s fullest potential, but I can’t see it beating gesture typing on a modern virtual keyboard. Plus, BB10 OS was a major part of the formula that made the form factor compelling. Grafting a physical keyboard onto a modern Android device just isn’t going to be the same. That’s why I didn’t bother buying any of the Android-based Blackberry devices.

          Although I will add that GBA/SNES emulation (and gaming in general) is a million times better with a clicky keyboard than virtual controls. I remember mapping the dpad to QWAS and having a blast playing through Link to the Past on it.

          • Square Singer
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            21 year ago

            Most people never used physical and virtual keyboards side-by-side. They usually either used an old keyboard phone or a recent non-keyboard phone.

            I use both and switch between both frequently. For one, my attachment has no pass-through charging, so if I want to use the phone while charging I need to use touch. Also if I want to type quietly, I sometimes also use the virtual keyboard.

            And while the physical keyboard is slightly faster (I did some typing speed tests. On Gboard I can do ~40 WPM, on the physical keyboard it’s ~50 WPM), that’s by far not the most important advantage.

            With my physical keyboard I can type while walking and without looking at my phone. This is pretty much impossible on a touch keyboard.

            I mapped additional functions on my physical keyboard that just add so much convenience. For example, I remapped the microphone button to CTRL, so all the regular shortcuts (ctrl+a/c/v/z) work like you’d expect it. I added a cursor mode, where WASD are mapped to the cursor keys. Combined with the shift key this makes it really easy to mark a certain part of a word.

            I am using the KISS launcher, which works like the windows start menu: Type the first few letters of an app’s name, hit enter and the app opens. Combined with key combination shortcuts for home/recents/back it makes multitasking and task switching much easier.

            I have a small customizable virtual keyboard which automatically plops up when I attach the physical keyboard. This keyboard adds the special characters not mapped on the keyboard. You see, my UX is very much adapted to the keyboard attachment.

            Another big advantage of the physical keyboard is accuracy. No autocorrupt and still no typos.

            Lastly, I use my phone for SSH and other command line work, and also sometimes for programming on the go. These use cases are terrible on a touch keyboard. Even if you use a specialized virtual keyboard like Hacker’s Keyboard. With a physical keyboard this is no issue at all.

            And yeah, keys are great for games :)

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    This is sweet. I wonder if it would be possible to use a keypad from a blackberry key one. Those ones have a trackpad integrated

  • @Keepitpushin
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    31 year ago

    Very cool project, now i gotta find time.