1
0
Fork 0
forked from forks/qmk_firmware
qmk_firmware/keyboards/karlb/kbic65/readme.md
Karl B f2a31b944d
[Keyboard] Add KBIC65 keyboard (#15151)
Co-authored-by: Drashna Jaelre <drashna@live.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan <fauxpark@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Karl Berggren <berggren.karl+git@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: spacefrogfeds <73514335+spacefrogfeds@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Karl Berggren <karber@raysearchlabs.com>
2022-01-12 15:05:19 -08:00

32 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown

# KBIC65
![KBIC65 top-down view](https://github.com/b-karl/KBIC65/blob/main/img/photoshoot/full_keyboard_straight_above.jpg)
A 65%/70 key FR4-stack open-source keyboard with some design optimizations for wireless. For more info visit the [KBIC65 website](https://karlb.eu/kbic65/) or the [GitHub repo](https://github.com/b-karl/KBIC65).
* Keyboard Maintainer: [Karl Berggren](https://github.com/b-karl)
* Hardware Supported: [KBIC65](https://github.com/b-karl/KBIC65)
* Hardware Availability: Open-source design [available on GitHub](https://github.com/b-karl/KBIC65)
Firmware and default keymap have been tested using a KBIC65 with an Elite-C rev 4 controller.
## Build firmware
Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):
```bash
qmk compile -kb karlb/kbic65 -km default
```
See the [QMK setup documentation](https://docs.qmk.fm/#/newbs_getting_started) to set up the QMK tools. I recommend flashing using
```bash
qmk flash -kb karlb/kbic65 -km default
```
## Bootloader
Since the keyboard is designed to have an exposed ProMicro the bootloader can always be entered by short circuiting the `RST` and `GND` pins on the ProMicro. If the keyboard is configured with the default keymap, the bootloader can be entered by pressing `R_GUI/FN + B`