1
0
Fork 0
qmk_firmware/keyboards/1k
MakotoKurauchi bdd1f318c3
[Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509)
Co-authored-by: Drashna Jaelre <drashna@live.com>
Co-authored-by: mtei <2170248+mtei@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
..
keymaps [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
1k.c [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
1k.h [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
config.h [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
info.json [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
readme.md [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00
rules.mk [Keyboard] New kbd 1k (#15509) 2022-04-19 20:39:43 +10:00

1k

1k

1% Custom mechanical keyboard. ATtiny85 powered, with 1*WS2812 LED, and the micronucleus bootloader.

Note: Due to limited firmware space, a lot of features have to be disabled to get a functioning QMK based keyboard.

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

make 1k:default

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

Flashing

Prerequisites

git clone https://github.com/micronucleus/micronucleus.git
cd micronucleus/commandline/
sudo make install

On Linux, youll need proper privileges to access the MCU. You can either use sudo when flashing firmware, or place these files in /etc/udev/rules.d/. Once added run the following:

sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
sudo udevadm trigger

Instructions

make 1k:default:flash

# or directly with...
micronucleus --run <firmware.hex>

Recovery