zlacker

[parent] [thread] 2 comments
1. keyle+(OP)[view] [source] 2026-02-05 03:28:00
We are likely the last generation to know how to use a keyboard. Sadly.

Kids can barely hand write today.

Once neural interfaces are in, it's over for keyboards and displays likely too.

replies(1): >>thepas+81
2. thepas+81[view] [source] 2026-02-05 03:38:22
>>keyle+(OP)
Just as a reminder, 15 years ago was 2011.

That was...like 4 macbooks ago. I still have keyboards from that era. I still have speakers and monitors from that era kicking around.

We are definitely, definitely not the last generation to use keyboards.

replies(1): >>llbbdd+I5
◧◩
3. llbbdd+I5[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-05 04:25:38
>>thepas+81
Maybe not the last, but it feels like we're getting closer than I thought we would.

I love keyboards, I love typing. I'm rocking an Ergodox daily with a wooden shell that I built myself over ten years ago, with layers of macros that make it nearly incomprehensible for another person to use. I've got keyboard storage. I used to have a daily habit of going to multiple typing competition websites, planting a flag at #1 in the daily leaderboard and moving on to the next one.

Over the last year the utility of voice interfaces has just exploded though and I'm finding that I'm touching the keyboard less and less. Outside of projects where I'm really opinionated on the details or the architecture it increasingly feels like a handicap to bother manually typing code for a lot of tasks. I'm honestly more worried about that physical skill atrophying than dulling on any ability to do the actual engineering work, but it makes me a bit sad. Like having a fleet of untiring tractors replacing the work of my horse, but I like horses.

[go to top]