As both a long-ago math major and someone with an overdeveloped sense of whimsey, I’ve long been fascinated by Möbius strips. You know Möbius strips: they look like they should be two sided, but they are actually one sided (as you can test by tracing a line all the way around without lifting your pencil). They’re simple to make, but deceptively complex (mathematicians would add that it is a non-orientable surface with no boundaries, but let’s not go there).
The Gboard double-sided keyboard. Credit: Google Japan |
You probably never found yourself thinking, hmm, I wish I had a keyboard that was a Möbius strip, but the good folks at Google Japan thought some of us wished we had a keyboard that we could type on both sides of. So, voila: they invented a Möbius strip keyboard.
"'I
want to use the back of the keyboard as well as the front!'," Google Japan
writes, in
one translation, of the problem it aimed to solve. "In response to the
voice of such users, I made a keyboard that has no front or back. A unique
keyboard with two sides. Gboard double-sided version."
“If you
turn the keyboard upside down, you can’t type at all. After racking our brains
trying to find a solution to this major problem, we came up with this
keyboard,” Google Japan noted in
another translation of the blog post.
They call
it the Gboard double-sided,
aka the “Infinity Keyboard.”
"The
endless structure has no front or back," Google Japan claims
of its design. "You can type at any angle. If you put the Gboard
double-sided version [somewhere], suddenly a circle of people will form there.
If we used it together, smooth 'teamringWorkin.' You'll come up with some
original ideas.”
One can
certainly hope so.
Now, that's teamwork. Credit: Google Japan |
The
Infinity Keyboard has some 208 mechanical keys, able to be accessed at any
angle and from both “sides.” They are laid out in ortho-linear 26x8 layout, with
per key RBG lighting (ergo, using as a Christmas wreath is one application the
developers mention). The keys are hot-swappable, allowing users to easily customize
the array. With all those keys, users can have keys specifically for typing,
gaming, and coding, as well as in other languages. Sadly, it isn’t wireless,
using a USB-C connection.
Google
Japan estimates it weighs “20.8 donuts,” which Fast Company figures
is about 2.2 pounds (based on the weight of a Krispy Kreme Original Glazed).
Google
Japan shows a number of uses for the keyboard, including simultaneous use by
several people but also to wear as a bracelet or as the aforementioned
Christmas wreath. And, they point out, it would be great in weightless
conditions, since it has no top or bottom.
It turns
out that Google Japan has been releasing unique keyboard designs each year on
October 1, because – I had never counted -- 10/1 = 101 = number of keys on a
typical keyboard. Previous efforts
include the Gboard
Bar, which has all the keys laid out horizontally (some 5 feet long!), the
Gboard Bending Spoon, which allows users to input by – you guessed it – bending
a spoon, and
Gboard Caps, a wearable keyboard in the (rough) shape of a cap.
Although
each of these keyboards exist and are functional, Google has no plans to
commercialize them. They’re intended to engender some smiles, and, perhaps,
spur some creative thinking. However, Google has made the schematics and
firmware open source on GitHub,
with 3D printing STL files. You can make one yourself and see what it can do for
your creativity/productivity.
Have at it. Credit: Google Japan |
Marcus
Mears III, reviewing the Infinity Keyboard in TechRadar, says:
“I love seeing these bizarre keyboard designs pop up…It's this type of
ingenuity and playful creation that we need to keep advancing in the world of
computer peripherals - where would we be if we never moved on from trackballs
and beige membrane keyboards? Certainly not at the Gboard Double-Sided Version.”
Jesus
Diaz, in Fast Company, goes
further in his praise: “If anything, this ongoing keyboard joke shows that
there’s nobody in the world like the Japanese to create the quirkiest, most fun
designs on the planet.” He adds: “Nobody else can compete with their
imagination, but here I humbly submit, Google Japan, two final words for the
next Gboard: hula hoop.”
I look
forward to seeing what they come up with next October.
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We live in
a world that, for the most part, has never advanced from the QWERTY keyboard
design, which, as you may recall, was originally intended to slow typists down
so they wouldn’t jam the typewriter keys. Obviously, it’s been a long time
since that’s been our big problem, yet we’ve gotten so used to that layout that
we’re still using it. So if it takes a double sided, Infinity keyboard, Möbius
strip keyboard to jar our thinking about keyboards (or anything else), I say:
good work, Google Japan!
Much as I
love the concept, I have to admit that I’ll probably never use a Gboard double
sided keyboard, and I’m certainly not going to attempt to build one. But I love
that the design team at Google Japan thought of it, and I hope others are
inspired to build their own, to play around with it, and to see what new ideas
it might spark.
I’ve
written before about people trying to break traditional design paradigms – e.g.,
umbrellas or even the wheel. We get so used to doing
things in a particular way using existing designs that we often don’t remember
that, hey, other designs are possible, and some of those designs may open up
not only new ways of doing the things we’re doing but also help us identify new
things to do. Design should be an enabler, not a constraint.
Their video
talks about wanting “a keyboard with a twist, one that turns the problem space
outside-in.” That’s what design should be helping us do.
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