jiceo | 1 year ago | on: How fast can a human possibly run 100 meters?
jiceo's comments
jiceo | 2 years ago | on: An accessible one-handed keyboard, inspired by FrogPad
In the end, I found a blog post about someone who just built a customized Karabiner-Elements bindings, where the keyboard layout is all the same for the "left-handed keys", but if you hold the spacebar the "right-handed keys" get mirrored to the left making it acessible to your left hand. Releasing the spacebar without a second key just inputs the spacebar as usual.
I customized that a little bit more to get some other keys in the places I wanted and set out to practice. Within a week I was typing at 60wpm comfortably when measuring at Type Racer. I normally type at around 120wpm, so I was pretty happy with the result. In my IDE I also have been using VIM bindings since a decade, so moving around it wasn't any trouble. I adapted myself to use the mouse with my left hand which wasn't also too difficult.
It cost literally zero and I only needed to "re-learn" typing the mirrored letters, and even then, it wasn't as hard because it's just mirrored and your brain quickly adjusts. No need to learn a complete new layout.
Edit: Here's the Karabiner-Elements customized binding I used as a base: https://github.com/qubist/mirrorboard-mac?tab=readme-ov-file
> At best, it's designed to test fitness, but it even fails at that really
> You don't socialize with sprinting, and most people wouldn't use 100m sprinting as an activity to improve their fitness
FAILS to test fitness? Really? Have you ever read anything about sports science and psychology? First, athlets don't compete singularly in the 100m sprinting event, a lot of them compete in different modalities, like the 100m, 200m, relays, etc. Sprinting 100m and specially the 400m are considered the hardest races for humans. It tests endurance, lactic acid build-up, pacing, mental toughness, strategy at the rawest level, and not to mention the mental preparation you have to have to deal with the pressure and criticism of the media, when you're on the track being viewed by millions and you have just a few seconds to prove yourself. How is that not testing someone's fitness well? You just can't isolate 100m sprinting especially as an activity. Sprinting up to your 100% max heart rate is excellent for fitness, muscle growth, and longevity. There's a lot of research on this coming out with concrete data about the benefits of sprinting vs other kinds of sports.