Joel Challis
f29daff9b6
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2 months ago | |
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keymaps | Remove obvious user keymaps, keyboards/{i,j,k}* edition (#23102) | 4 months ago |
rev1 | Miscellaneous keyboard.json migrations (#23378) | 2 months ago |
readme.md | Add Junco Keyboard (#19516) | 1 year ago |
rules.mk | Miscellaneous keyboard.json migrations (#23378) | 2 months ago |
Junco is a 60% Raspberry Pi Pico powered split keyboard boasting a 4x6 layout with an aggressive columnar stagger. It has 5 "thumb" keys on either side, support for 2-4 rotary encoders, and per-key RGB lighting.
Remember you have to flash both halves of the keyboard for it to work!
Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):
make junco:default
Flashing example for this keyboard:
# For flashing the left half...
make junco:default:uf2-split-left
# or the qmk cli equivalent:
qmk flash -kb junco --keymap default -bl uf2-split-left
# For flashing the right half...
make junco:default:uf2-split-right
# or the qmk cli equivalent:
qmk flash -kb junco --keymap default -bl uf2-split-right
See the build environment setup and the make instructions for more information. Brand new to QMK? Start with our Complete Newbs Guide.
Enter the bootloader in 3 ways:
~
left half, -
right half). This will also clear the EEPROM.BOOT
button on the Pico and press the RST
button on the Pico, release the the RST
button before the BOOT
button.Bootloader
keycode is above home row pinky on the right side's adjust layer.Once you enter the bootloader, the keyboard will show up as a USB device on your computer, you could drag and drop a firmware file to flash it, but I recommend using the flash commands for the respective side.