~ruther/qmk_firmware

ref: a616d3a10d36b5f15a4fc2cc47b7373f2bb22e67 qmk_firmware/keyboards/enviousdesign/delirium/readme.md -rw-r--r-- 1.8 KiB
a616d3a1 — Rutherther feat: use pinky keys for qk_lock, kc_app instead of thumb keys 7 months ago

#EnvKB DELIRIUM

Image of EnvKB TKL PCB

A low cost standard TKL design which takes inspiration from the CFTKB Mysterium. All versions are designed for reference Pi Picos.

  • Keyboard Maintainer: Envious-Data
  • Hardware Supported:
    • Delirium Prototype (tkl/rev0)
    • Delirium (tkl/rev1)
    • Delirium RGB (tkl/rgb)
  • Hardware Availability: Mechboards, GitHub

Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):

make enviousdesign/tkl/rgb:default

Flashing example for this keyboard:

make enviousdesign/tkl/rgb:default:flash

See the build environment setup and the make instructions for more information. Brand new to QMK? Start with our Complete Newbs Guide.

#Bootloader

Enter the bootloader in 3 ways:

  • Bootmagic reset: Hold down the top left key and plug in the keyboard. This will also clear the emulated EEPROM, so it is a good first step if the keyboard is misbehaving.
  • Physical reset: Hold down the BOOTSEL button on the Pi Pico, then either plug the board in or press the RESET button.
  • Keycode in layout: Press the key mapped to QK_BOOT. In the pre-supplied keymaps it is on the second layer, replacing the Esc key.

After entering the bootloader through one of the three methods above, the keyboard will appear as a USB mass storage device named RPI-RP2. If the CLI is unable to find this device, the compiled .uf2 file can be manually copied to it. The keyboard will reboot on completion with the new firmware loaded.

Do not follow this link