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More recently, Wooting’s competitors have started to catch up with the 60HE+, but there are still a lot of reasons you should buy this 60% keyboard, as long as the compact format works for you. Pros ...
Wooting is also shipping the 60HE v2 with a new “Lekker Tikken” switch, a closed-bottom Hall effect switch with a 4.0 mm actuation range. Hall effect switches use a magnet so the board can ...
The Wooting 60HE is also a success in once again proving a company needn't be a massive operation to create a practical, fully-featured, and fairly priced product.
The Wooting Two HE offers analogue key control: if you depress a key, say the W key, rather than send a simple on/off signal to your PC, the keyboard will measure the full range of that key's motion.
Wooting’s Two HE keyboard is an attempt to bridge the gap between gamepad and keyboard. It has Gateron-manufactured analog “Lekker” switches, which use magnetic Hall effect sensors rather ...
The Wooting 60HE V2 has many layers, literally, including the PCB, switch plate, Poron, bottom case dampening, silicone, and optional EPDM foam. All of this is wrapped in a full aluminum case that ...
Wooting’s new 80HE keyboard takes its popular 60HE formula and adds even better features. A new light bar and 8kHz polling are the standout additions.
The Wooting 80HE is an 80% keyboard, but it’s probably not exactly what you’re thinking of. When companies use that term, most often they mean that the keyboard is tenkeyless: a full-size ...
The Wooting One ticks all the boxes, and the Flaretech switch is a breath of fresh air among the onslaught of Cherry boards. As for price, the Wooting One starts out at $140 / €140.
The Wooting 80HE improves on the design set by the 60HE in a handful of ways, but some strange design choices have me scratching my head. Skip to main content Menu ...
The Wooting 80HE scans and polls at 8,000Hz, meaning it both scans itself for inputs and sends them to the computer 8,000 times per second (A.K.A “true 8K polling”).