Keyboards with a numeric keypad in the middle?

I am suffering from the early symptoms of RSI and am looking for a way to avoid injury. My physiotherapist has determined that the worst I seem to do is use my mouse with such a strange angle. The problem for me is that I hold my keyboard so that my left and right forearms are at an angle in the same amount, i.e. My body is centered around with the B key. On my current keyboard, which is not a split, this means that the wide Enter key, arrow keys, and numeric keypad all protrude to the right before I have room for the mouse. I have a medium-width frame, but nonetheless, it leaves my wrist a very uncomfortable angle when using a mouse. I would prefer that I don't disconnect the keyboard from me every time I switch between them, but sometimes I use the num pad,so I don’t need a keyboard without this.

I think it would be ideal to have about 30-50 cm of space between the left and right halves of the keyboard, so my hands are more perpendicular to my clavicle, and the arrow keys and number pad in the middle, maybe even with numbers at a 45 degree angle, so I could would set them up for use with either hand.

(In case you are interested, then a touch screen with a stylus that has a right-click modifier button for the mouse, because otherwise the mouse pad would be correct if I placed the right half of the home bar, in the most natural position for my right hand while sitting.)

With this space, you can put as many custom keys for things that are usually used for two-button combos for ... or you can completely disconnect them (with the exception of wires) and just have, you know, the actual desktop showing through.

What is the closest keyboard you saw?

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http://www.thehumansolution.com/keyboards.html

I look here on some keyboards (I have a stern Carpal tunnel). Kinesis keyboards are good, but where there are several with a number pad in the middle.

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And after I tried a lot of keyboards (I have more than 20 at home, I'm not joking!) I stayed with the Microsoft Natural 4000 keyboard. It can be huge, but I can type on it very well.

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I don’t know about any keyboards, but what can help is a keyboard with a built-in touch panel (for example, for a laptop), which you can use instead of your other mouse for some of your muscles: small settings, quick clicks to press, etc. .d. to avoid the need to exit the mouse.

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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/1697382/


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