
"Most desks end up with a nice mechanical keyboard, a separate mouse, maybe a trackpad, a macro pad, and, if you work in 3D, a space controller, all fighting for room. Keyboards stay fixed layouts, even as workflows get more complex and tools multiply. Naya Connect treats the keyboard as the center of a modular workstation instead of just another rectangle, letting the rest of your input tools snap onto it and adapt as your work changes."
"Naya Connect is a low-profile mechanical ecosystem built around the Naya Type keyboard and a dock. Naya Type is a slim 75% board with an aluminum body, Kailh Choc V2 switches, and a 14.9 mm profile, designed to be wireless when paired with the dock. The interesting part is not the layout, but what can snap onto it, a family of input modules that attach magnetically and talk to the same software layer."
"The modules cover different input modes. A Multipad acts as a numpad or macro grid, a six-key strip handles quick actions, a Track module replaces a mouse with a trackball, a Touch module works like a compact touchpad, a Tune dial offers dynamic haptics for scrubbing timelines or adjusting values, and a Float puck gives six degrees of freedom for 3D navigation and camera control."
Naya Connect centers a modular workstation around the Naya Type keyboard and a dock. Naya Type is a slim 75% board with an aluminum body, Kailh Choc V2 switches, and a 14.9 mm profile that becomes wireless when paired with the dock. Magnetic connection points on both sides let input modules snap on wherever they are needed. Modules include a Multipad numpad/macro grid, a six-key shortcut strip, a Track module with trackball, a Touch module touchpad, a Tune dial with dynamic haptics, and a Float puck for six-degree-of-freedom 3D control. Naya Flow software remaps keys, configures module behavior, creates per-app profiles, and builds complex logic via drag-and-drop controls.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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