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Keychron karabiner
Keychron karabiner












What is the easiest/best way to do this? And even if not all three remappings are possible, I’d like to do even just one or two of the remappings.

keychron karabiner

I want the backslash key (third from top on right edge) to be remapped as a “forward delete” key I want the Caps Lock key to be remapped to become an extra “return/enter” key I want the “fn” key (bottom left of keyboard) to no longer be the “function” key but be remapped to be an extra “delete” or “backspace” key

keychron karabiner

And as an extra, a picked up a little six-key keypad (usually intended for Osu) that also has hot-swap switches, and I've been fiddling with programming that for extra macros like muting/unmuting in Zoom & Webex.How to remap specific keys on MacBook keyboard in Big Sur 11.1? Using a 2015 12-inch MacBook Retina running Big Sur 11.1. I also miss having programmable macro keys, but I worked around it by using Karabiner to convert the NumLock key (which does nothing on Mac OS) to a Hyper key so that I can use that for key combos across the keyboard. It doesn't look wonderful, but it's pretty effective: I can now find the arrow keys pretty consistently without looking down, and I can find the middle of the numeric keypad thanks to the scooped 5 key in the center. At the moment, the solution is to use SA-profile keycaps on those keys, which are much taller than the default keycaps. That's no longer the case, so I had to get creative. I'm used to TKL-style keyboards where the arrow keys or special modifiers up top are easy to find by touch because they're surrounded by a gap. On the down side, the absolutely uniform layout of the keys definitely throws my fingers for a loop. Once I got the default switches out (the tolerance in the aluminum frame is pretty tight, so getting the default switches out requires a really firm tug!), swapping switches on a whim is pretty easy, so I'm looking forward to playing with some other switches as we go.

keychron karabiner

I absolutely love the clickiness, and the sound with the aluminum frame and the default keycaps is really solid. Weirdly, having the outer keys on a linear switch is pretty comfortable, probably because those are often hit with weaker fingers or odd angles, so having a light linear reduces finger fatigue. I bought it with Gateron Reds (linear) and then swapped the core keys (alphanumerics, keypad) to Kailh Box Whites because I really like the clickiness.

keychron karabiner

It's heavy and solid, compact enough that I can have a numeric keypad without feeling like my trackball is off to the right somewhere in Narnia, and the default keycaps and lighting are (to me) really classy and good-looking. Switched recently to a Keychron K4 (v2), the aluminum/hot-swap model.














Keychron karabiner