Lenovo and AngryMiao Built a Keyboard With a Studio-Grade Knob

Most keyboards disappear into the desk. That’s by design, usually, since the keyboard’s job is to get out of the way and let the work happen. The trouble is that creative workflows don’t always work that way. Editing a podcast or cutting a video involves a lot of scrubbing, a lot of precise back-and-forth through a timeline that a mouse handles clumsily and a keyboard typically doesn’t handle at all.

The Lenovo Yoga Creative Keyboard AngryMiao Edition, announced at MWC 2026, takes a position on that gap. Developed with peripheral maker AngryMiao, it’s a full 98-key mechanical keyboard with a numpad, built around a 2.6kg aluminum base under a frosted polycarbonate top plate. The weight isn’t incidental. It keeps the board planted during longer sessions and damps the vibration that makes cheaper keyboards sound hollow, which matters more than it sounds when you’re spending hours at a stretch on a project.

Designer: Lenovo x AngryMiao

The knob is the detail that does the most explaining. Sitting at the top right of the chassis, it’s an oversized machined cylinder with concentric ridging and a recessed lens cap on top, sized and weighted to feel like something from a piece of studio equipment rather than a computer peripheral. For video editors, it controls the playhead directly, letting a thumb roll through footage frame by frame with tactile feedback that a mouse scroll wheel doesn’t come close to matching. It’s a simple addition that addresses a specific friction point, which is usually the best kind.

For users running the full Yoga setup with a Yoga Pro 9i Aura Edition laptop and a Yoga Pro 27UD-10 Monitor, there’s a dedicated YOGA key that cycles audio between the laptop’s speakers, the monitor’s speakers, or all twelve across both devices combined. That last option, spreading audio across the full speaker array, is a genuinely useful thing for anyone mixing or reviewing audio without headphones and wanting to hear how it sounds in a room rather than a pair of earbuds.

Per-key RGB lights diffuse through the translucent top plate rather than projecting harshly upward, giving the board a softer ambient glow that doesn’t compete with the screen. Two USB-C ports on the rear spine expand connectivity without requiring a separate hub on the desk. The pricing sits at $299 when it goes on sale in May 2026.

The AngryMiao collaboration brings credibility that the keyboard market takes seriously. AngryMiao’s builds are known in enthusiast circles for their material quality and acoustic tuning, and the ATM 98 platform this borrows from has a track record that Lenovo’s branding alone wouldn’t have provided. With the right setup, it ties everything together, pairing a well-built mechanical keyboard with a very good knob.

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Stop Carrying Three Devices: This Keyboard Has a 4K Screen Built In

Working away from a main desk often means a laptop balanced on a café table or airplane tray, maybe a separate portable monitor propped up on a stand, a compact keyboard wedged in front, and a tangle of USB-C cables. This works in theory, but often feels like overpacking, especially when all you wanted was a bit more screen space and a better typing angle without turning a small table into a tech puzzle.

KeyGo Gen2 is a response to that clutter, an ultra-slim folding keyboard with a built-in 13-inch 4K touch screen and speakers that carry like a thin notebook. When it’s closed, it is a flat CNC-machined aluminum slab that slides into a sleeve. When it opens, it becomes a low-profile strip of keys and glass that turns any USB-C laptop into a dual-screen workstation.

Designer: KeyGo

Click Here to Buy Now: $279 $658 ($379 off). Hurry, only 383/500 left! Raised over $41,000.

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The original 720p panel has been replaced with a 4K/60 Hz IPS display, stretched to 13.0 inches and bright enough for offices and cafés, with adjustable brightness for late-night sessions. That upgrade means editing footage at native resolution, keeping dense spreadsheets visible without squinting, parking timelines, chat windows, or reference material on the lower screen so the main laptop display can stay focused on the primary task.

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The 10-point capacitive touch layer sits just above the scissor-switch keys, so you can drag windows, scrub through a timeline, or tap controls directly on the display while your hands stay near the keyboard. Key travel has been shortened by 1 mm compared to the first generation, making keys feel snappier and more responsive for long writing or coding sessions.

The CNC aluminum body and under-2-cm profile matter when you are actually on the move. The 32cm x 15 cm footprint fits on a tray table or narrow counter without overhanging. The 1,000g weight feels substantial enough not to slide around, yet light enough to carry daily without feeling like you’re packing a second laptop.

Built-in speakers mean video edits, calls, or background music come from the same strip you are typing on, avoiding the weak audio of many laptops and the need for extra gear. The sound comes from right where you’re working, which makes video playback and calls feel more focused without hunting for a dongle or Bluetooth pairing.

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The KeyGo Gen2 moves between roles, plugged into a Windows laptop in a coworking space as a second screen for tools, attached to a compact Linux machine at home as a primary display and keyboard, or paired with an Android tablet for streaming and note-taking. Compatibility with Windows, macOS, Linux, and Android means it can follow your devices rather than being locked to one ecosystem.

The 180-degree fold and single USB-C connection change how quickly you can set up in tight spaces. Instead of assembling a portable monitor stand, routing cables, and finding room for a separate keyboard, you unfold one piece, plug in, and start working. That reduction in friction means you are more likely to actually deploy the dual-screen setup instead of making do with a cramped laptop panel.

The KeyGo Gen2 feels like a thoughtful second pass. It has sharper 4K visuals, a slightly larger 13-inch canvas, a thinner body, refined key feel, brightness control, and audio all tuned to the way hybrid workers, creators, and coders actually move through spaces. With so many separate pieces and improvised stands flooding the market, a single folding strip of aluminum, glass, and keys that opens into a complete little command center feels like an integrated design worth carrying every day.

Click Here to Buy Now: $279 $658 ($379 off). Hurry, only 383/500 left! Raised over $41,000.

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Bring The Touch Bar Back… And Maybe Put An Intelligent Siri Or Gemini On It

Sounds radical, doesn’t it? The Touch Bar was such a waste of space on the MacBook Pro when it was first introduced exactly a decade ago in 2016. It shipped with a lot of potential but barely any real-world use, and Apple even considered swapping it out for a slot that housed the Apple Pencil back in 2021. While that feature never really came to pass, something else happened in 2021 that blew everyone’s minds – OpenAI’s Dall-E. For a lot of people, this was the first time you could just ‘tell’ an AI to make an image for you and it would. It was the birth of generative AI, and only a year later, OpenAI would break the internet with ChatGPT.

This is also around the time that Apple quietly killed the Touch Bar, but here’s my opinion… bring it back. Maybe not on the MacBook, but the Touch Bar definitely deserves a place on any independent wireless keyboard. With AI LLMs, progressive web apps, widgets, and vibe-coding going mainstream, a Touch Bar on a keyboard finally makes sense. It’s a place for your AI agent to live, alongside tasks, shortcuts, toolbars, and widgets. Apple pioneered the Touch Bar, but one could argue they were way too early to realize its potential. Now, a concept keyboard by Eslam Mohammed and Ahmed Yassen shows how the Touch Bar should be resurrected.

Designers: Eslam Mohammed & Ahmed Yassen

Mohammed and Yassen’s LUMO x700 keyboard comes with a few tricks up its sleeve. Sure, it sports a sleek, metal-forward Magic Keyboard-inspired design, but the thing also packs an end-to-end Touch Bar that’s about as tall as your standard key, making it a lot more usable than the actual Touch Bar, which was just as slim as the function key row. However, that isn’t all there is to this. A snap-on module turns the keyboard into a music player so you aren’t listening to tunes on your iMac or laptop’s fairly tinny speakers. All in all, this turns your keyboard into something a little more versatile than just ‘something you type on’. It now has an identity of its own, and can channel a level of productivity you’d only get with an Elgato-style accessory.

But wait! That modular soundbar isn’t just keyboard-dependent! It works independently too, allowing you to place it underneath the monitor or anywhere else on your desk for a wireless sound experience. The dual speakers fire stereo audio, buttons and a knob help tweak volume and playback, and the part that attaches to the LUMO x700 keyboard, well, there’s a hidden light-bar there to give your desk some ambient lighting. It’s all cleverly designed to ensure the module isn’t useless on its own. However, that Touch Bar is my predominant focus.

Why does a Touch Bar matter now more than ever? Well, we’re all multitasking, we’re all looking for extra real estate for displays, and almost all of us are running agents of some kind to automate tasks. That’s what this Touch Bar is for. Shortcuts to apps live in the center, widgets on the left, and maybe an AI chatbot on the right that you can deploy to talk to, ask questions to, or delegate tasks to. Claude just debuted a desktop-controlling agent called Claude Cowork that can run tasks and perform duties on your desktop on your command, and the infamous OpenClaw’s been taking the internet by storm for doing pretty much the same thing too. Obviously, such an AI will need to be vetted, and probably contained by a set of restrictions so it doesn’t go around leaking your data on a ‘Reddit for AI Agents’ or spending your cash (as OpenClaw has done in a few instances).

The rest of the Touch Bar experience goes on as originally intended. Active programs can reside within the bar, like a recorder interface, the player for music or video apps, allowing you to seek to different parts of a song/video, or even the emoji keyboard that lets you easily cycle through emojis before pasting them. The potential is endless, and while independent Touch Bars like this one exist, we need to design one for an era of AI agents, applets, shortcuts, and widgets. It really is about time.

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Razer Just Built the Pokémon Desk Setup Every ’90s Kid Wanted

A lot of people who picked their first starter Pokémon on a Game Boy now sit in front of multi-monitor setups, pretending to be adults. Their desks are full of neutral black peripherals that say serious work, even though their playlists are lo-fi Pokémon remixes and their browser tabs tell a different story. The gear stays boring because that is what grown-up keyboards and mice are supposed to look like, apparently.

That is where Razer’s Pokémon collection comes in. Instead of one Pikachu mousepad, Razer built a full ecosystem that includes the BlackWidow V4 X keyboard, Cobra mouse, Kraken V4 X headset, and Gigantus V2 M mat. The line is officially licensed and leans into Kanto nostalgia, wrapping every peripheral in Pikachu, Bulbasaur, Charmander, and Squirtle graphics across bright yellow surfaces with synced Razer Chroma RGB lighting.

Designer: Razer x Pokemon

The BlackWidow V4 X Pokémon Edition keyboard anchors everything. Underneath the graphics, it is a mechanical keyboard with Razer’s clicky switches, six macro keys, and programmable RGB. You can map macros for raids or productivity shortcuts, and the mechanical switches help with both gaming and marathon typing. The Pokémon skin does not change performance; it just turns something you already needed into something that feels like a personal trophy from childhood.

The Cobra mouse and Gigantus V2 M mat work as a paired set. The lightweight wired mouse uses optical switches for durability and precision, with RGB lighting that syncs with the rest of your setup. The soft mat underneath is optimized for fast swipes, whether flicking through game menus or dragging layers in design software. Together, they turn everyday cursor movement into something that feels like your oldest digital companions are right there.

The Kraken V4 X headset pulls audio into the same universe. It supports surround sound for positional cues, has a clear mic for calls or streaming, and features RGB lighting around the earcups. You hear footsteps in matches, but you also use it for music while answering emails or video meetings without switching gear, which makes it more versatile than something covered in Pikachu art probably should be.

Of course, Razer points out the collection works for productivity and content creation, not just gaming. Mechanical keys help with typing speed, the mouse and mat work in design software or spreadsheets, and the headset handles conference calls. The Pokémon layer is simply a visual narrative on top of hardware you could justify buying even in plain black, which means you get function and nostalgia without compromise.

The collection treats your desktop as more than a neutral workspace. It acknowledges that the same person editing spreadsheets might still know every line of the Pokémon theme song, and both can coexist. Instead of hiding that part of yourself in a drawer of old cartridges, Razer lets it sit under your fingers, lighting up every time you log in and reminding you that being functional and still loving Pikachu are not mutually exclusive.

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$239 Angry Miao Silent Keyboard Channels Tadao Ando’s Concrete Church

Cheap office keyboards sound like plastic rain, which becomes unbearable in open-plan offices or when working late while someone else is trying to sleep. Custom mechanical keyboards feel better, but they tend to be loud, visually aggressive, and often shrink to compact layouts that sacrifice the numpad. Most people end up compromising on sound, feel, or functionality, rarely getting all three at once.

Angry Miao’s ATM 98 tries to bridge that gap with a silent-first philosophy. It keeps a full 98-key layout with a numpad and function row, wraps it in an aluminum shell that weighs around 2.6 kg, and centers a large Star Ring knob on the top right. The whole thing reads more like a desk sculpture than office equipment, built for people who type all day and want something that feels deliberate without announcing itself.

Designer: Angry Miao

The design references are specific. One version channels Tadao Ando’s Church of the Light with a matte concrete-gray shell and controlled RGB lighting, treating the keyboard like a minimalist architectural object. The translucent Frost Whisper and Night Ink editions take inspiration from Off-White x Rimowa’s see-through luggage, revealing the gold-plated PCB and mounts underneath. The structure and lighting become part of the composition, not just decoration.

What matters more on a Tuesday morning is how it feels to type all day. Angry Miao worked with Bsun to develop custom Light Sakura silent linear switches with an S-shaped damping stem and low-friction LY material that delivers smooth, crisp bottom-out without the mushy rebound typical of silent switches. Paired with an eight-layer gasket stack, the board kills hollowness, letting you type emails without sounding like you are auditioning for a contest.

The 18.8mm front height and 8-degree typing angle let you skip a wrist rest without cramping by lunchtime. The 98% layout keeps the numpad for spreadsheets and shortcuts while fitting on a normal desk, and the Star Ring knob becomes a habit for volume, timelines, or switching layers. It is the kind of control you miss when you go back to a plain keyboard.

Tri-mode wireless with tuned 2.4GHz lets you jump from Bluetooth on a laptop to low-latency gaming on a PC without swapping dongles. The board runs QMK firmware for deep remapping, but Angry Miao also built a web-based configurator for people who just want to drag and drop keys and RGB effects without learning command-line tools, making it approachable even if this is your first custom board.

The Angry Miao ATM 98 treats quiet as a design material alongside aluminum and light. It is built for people who live at their keyboards and want something that feels deliberate under their fingers without turning every keystroke into a sound effect that echoes across the room. When loud gaming slabs and forgettable boards dominate the office space, that kind of architectural silence feels oddly refreshing, like finally getting a desk object that understands the difference between personality and noise.

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iKKO MindOne Snap-In Case Turns a Card-Sized Phone into a Pocket Writer

Typing long messages on glass feels clumsy, juggling Bluetooth earbuds means pairing headaches and dead batteries, and using wired headphones now requires a tiny USB-C dongle you will lose three times before accepting defeat. Phones have become powerful but strangely less tactile, and that clashes with people who write a lot, listen a lot, and still like the certainty of a cable and the click of a real key under their thumb.

The card-sized iKKO is a small AI-centric smartphone built for always-on connectivity and lightweight productivity. The MindOne Snap-In Case is where it changes character, a snap-on expansion shell that adds a physical QWERTY keyboard, a proper 3.5 mm headphone jack, a dedicated DAC, and a small backup battery in one compact piece, turning the minimal phone into a tiny writing and listening machine.

Designer: iKKo

The QWERTY keyboard changes the way MindOne is used. Raised, separated keys and a slightly sloped surface make thumb typing feel more deliberate than tapping on glass. It is something you reach for when drafting emails, capturing ideas, or editing text while AI handles summarizing and organizing in the background, treating the phone as a tool for active writing rather than just passive messaging and scrolling through feeds.

The case adds a 3.5 mm headphone jack backed by a Cirrus Logic CS43198 DAC, the kind of chip usually found in dedicated portable players. It supports Hi-Res audio with 32-bit/384 kHz PCM and DSD256, low-noise playback, and enough dynamic range to make lossless playlists and long podcasts feel crisp and detailed without worrying about pairing or battery levels in wireless earbuds that will die halfway through the flight.

The built-in 500 mAh battery is a quiet safety net rather than a second fuel tank. It tops up MindOne during long typing or listening sessions and helps offset the extra draw from the DAC and keyboard, extending comfortable use without turning the phone into a brick of battery cells. The point is not doubling battery life, but making intensive sessions feel smoother and less anxious.

MindOne stays slim and card-like on its own, then becomes a different kind of device when it snaps into the case. You might carry the phone bare for quick AI tasks and navigation, then drop it into the case on a flight, in a café, or at a desk when you know you will be writing and listening for a while, using the same object in two distinctly different modes.

Customizable keycap stickers and a range of colors that match or complement the phone are not just fashion accessories; they are small ways to make a very compact device feel personal. The case is tuned to MindOne’s proportions and personality, not a generic keyboard sled trying to fit every phone, which makes the combo feel considered rather than cobbled together from unrelated parts.

The iKKO MindOne Snap-In Case is less about nostalgia and more about choice, letting a tiny AI phone become a pocketable notebook and Hi-Fi player when needed. Most phones today are sealed slabs, which makes this case feel like a quiet reminder that hardware can still click, plug in, and feel like something you work and listen with, rather than just stare at until the next notification arrives.

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HP Eliteboard G1a keyboard is a next gen AI PC in disguise

It’s CES time, and we’re not expecting anything short of extraordinary at the event. The other day, we saw the Pentagram x Caligra c100 keyboard, which houses computing hardware inside. Now, HP has announced its own version of a keyboard PC, and it looks even better, with practicality at the forefront. At first glance, you might not realize the desktop keyboard has computing power inside, but that’s where the surprise lies.

According to HP, the Eliteboard G1a is “the first and only AI keyboard PC,” and is capable of doing most of the day-to-day tasks you desire while being mobile. Rather than going the AIO route (slamming a PC into the screen), HP chooses a piece of hardware that goes portable with you. The screen PC idea is novel, but it restricts you to one place. A keyboard PC is a more practical idea, and I’m glad it’s here.

Designer: HP

The EliteBoard G1a keyboard is a tad thicker than normal peripherals, and it’s completely understandable as computing hardware requires space. Measuring 58 x 118 x 17 mm and weighing just 726 grams (with the battery included), the keyboard is ideal for tasks like browsing the internet, opening the odd survey form for input, listening to music, and more. The spill-proof peripheral has 93 keys, including the number pad. In retrospect, it makes the Bapco mechanical keyboard that houses a working PC inside look bulky.

If you’ve used the HP Elitebook range, the keyboard has the same tactile typing experience, with the key travel (2mm) fine-tuned for desktop space. The keyboard PC comes with the choice of AMD Ryzen AI 300 Pro mobile processors, capable of a maximum of 50 NPU TOPS, making it a Copilot+ equivalent PC. You can connect up to two 4K monitors (running at 60Hz) since it has an integrated Radeon iGPU. Memory capacity is capped at 64GB DDR5-6400, which should be enough to handle sizeable tasks on the fly. The user can install up to 2 TB PCIe Gen4 NVMe SSD, while the Ryzen AI 7 350 SKU variant can be configured for 32GB of eMMC storage.

The Windows 11-powered EliteBoard G1a has a built-in 32 Wh battery that can be charged at speeds of up to 65 Watts. You can connect monitors via the USB4 and USB-C ports on the back, or any other compatible hardware. The keyboard has a claimed 3.5 hours of battery run time on a single charge, but that’ll vary depending on usage and connected devices. There are vents to channel airflow, and the keyboard even comes with stereo speakers for a holistic setup. The keyboard comes in two models, with the high-end version having an optional fingerprint reader and a detachable USB-C cable.

HP is slated to release the keyboard PC in March 2026, and there’s no word on the pricing yet.

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This $1,999 Computer Hides an Entire PC Inside Its Minimal Keyboard

There’s something oddly nostalgic about Caligra’s c100 Developer Terminal, yet it feels completely modern at the same time. At first glance, it looks like someone took a pristine keyboard from the early computing era, polished it up, and reimagined it for 2026. But this isn’t just a keyboard. It’s an entire computer, cleverly disguised as the thing you type on.

Designed by Pentagram’s Jon Marshall in collaboration with London startup Caligra, the c100 is what happens when you strip away everything unnecessary and focus on what actually matters for people who build things. It’s described as a “computer for experts,” which is a refreshingly honest way of saying this isn’t meant for scrolling through social media or binge-watching Netflix. This machine is built for developers, designers, engineers, and anyone whose work involves deep focus and technical precision.

Designer: Jon Marshall for Pentagram

The design itself is absolutely gorgeous in its restraint. The entire body is CNC-milled from a solid block of aluminum, giving it a weight and solidity that modern tech rarely has anymore. That bead-blasted metal finish manages to evoke both sleek consumer electronics and industrial tools simultaneously, walking a line between approachable and professional. There’s something satisfying about a device that doesn’t try to hide what it is. No glossy plastics, no unnecessary curves. Just clean geometry and honest materials.

What makes the c100 truly clever is how it solves the problem of desk space. The keyboard sits at an angle, with the computing hardware tucked into the thicker rear section, creating a wedge shape that echoes those chunky terminals from the ’70s and ’80s. But here’s the genius part: there’s a central magnetic pivot structure that lets you detach and fold the keyboard without any visible external hinges. It’s the kind of detail that seems simple until you realize how much engineering went into making it look effortless.

Open the removable lid and you’ll find tool storage built right in. It’s such a practical touch that it almost feels subversive in an era where most tech companies would rather you never open your device at all. The message is clear: this computer expects you to tinker, to maintain it, to actually use your tools. One photo even shows calipers and a pen tucked inside, the kinds of things you’d need if you’re working on something physical alongside your digital projects.

The keyboard layout itself is unusual and deliberate. Keys are grouped into separate clusters rather than the standard continuous layout most of us are used to. There’s a numeric pad on the left, arrow keys grouped together, function keys in their own section. It takes a moment to understand, but the logic becomes clear when you think about workflow efficiency. The design uses Fitts’ law to accelerate task management, meaning every key placement has been optimized for speed and minimal hand movement.

Even the mouse is thoughtfully designed, with that same geometric clarity as the rest of the system. And yes, it’s wired, which might seem retro until you consider that wireless connections mean batteries, charging, and occasional lag. For someone writing code or working on time-sensitive projects, that reliability matters more than the convenience of going wireless.

The c100 runs Workbench OS, a Linux-based operating system that Caligra built specifically for technical work. It has no decorative elements, no pop-ups, no need for “do not disturb,” which honestly sounds like a dream compared to the constant notifications and distractions modern operating systems throw at us. The whole philosophy behind Workbench is to create a clear space for deep thought, getting out of your way so you can actually focus on making things.

Under that elegant exterior, the specs are serious: an 8-core AMD Ryzen 9 processor, 96GB of DDR5 memory, and 1TB of storage. The terminal includes two USB4 ports, two HDMI outputs, ethernet, and all the connectivity a professional setup needs. The aluminum body isn’t just for looks either; it helps with thermal performance, keeping things cool without noisy fans disrupting your concentration.

At $1,999, the c100 isn’t cheap, but it’s also not trying to compete with mass-market laptops. This is a statement about what computing could be when it’s designed for creation rather than consumption. In a world where most tech products feel disposable and designed for obsolescence, there’s something genuinely refreshing about a computer that’s built like a tool, looks like an artifact, and functions like it’s been optimized for the way professionals actually work.

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Naya Connect Keyboard Lets You Snap On a Trackball, Numpad, or Dial

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.

Designer: Naya

The keyboard and dock have magnetic connection points on both sides, letting you attach modules wherever they make sense. You can add a Multipad as a numpad or macro pad, a six-key strip for extra shortcuts, or build a full console by chaining modules along one edge. The system grows sideways with your workflow instead of forcing you into a single configuration that never quite fits once your needs shift or projects change.

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.

The hardware only works because the software is flexible. Naya Flow is the configuration app that lets you remap keys, tune module behaviour, and build complex logic with drag-and-drop tools. You can set per-app profiles, change how the Tune dial feels depending on what you are doing, and decide what each touch zone or trackball gesture should trigger, without writing scripts or diving into config files.

The aluminum body, low-profile keycaps, and clean black aesthetic keep the keyboard from looking like a science project, even when it is covered in modules. The modules share the same design language, so a trackball, dial, and macro pad feel like parts of one system rather than a pile of mismatched gadgets. The result is a desk that looks intentional even when it is heavily customized and adapted to very specific tasks.

Naya Connect is aimed at people who live in code editors, timelines, spreadsheets, or 3D scenes all day and want input tools that can evolve with their work. It is not trying to be a mass-market keyboard. Instead, it’s trying to be a platform that grows and reconfigures as often as the projects do, without asking you to keep buying entirely new peripherals or cluttering the desk with orphaned tools.

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DeckTop Makes the Steam Deck and ROG Ally Feel Like Tiny Laptops

The Steam Deck, ROG Ally, and Legion Go are powerful little PCs that still behave like oversized controllers when you actually need to type, browse, or use desktop mode. Most people end up juggling a separate keyboard, mouse, and stand. DeckTop by Invensic takes a different approach, a clamp-on keyboard and trackpad that tries to give these handhelds a laptop posture without turning them into dock-only machines stuck next to a monitor.

Invensic frames DeckTop as a Bluetooth keyboard and trackpad you can mount to your Steam Deck, with a 360-degree swivel and multicolor LED backlighting. It is sold as a Steam Deck accessory but is also designed to work with Steam Deck OLED, Killswitch cases, ROG Ally, and Legion Go, so it is really a general handheld shell that treats all of them like screens on a tiny notebook.

Designer: Invensic

The folding clip has spring-loaded arms that grab onto the handheld and connect to the keyboard via a swivel hinge. The hinge lets you tilt and rotate the device through a full circle, so you can find a comfortable viewing angle on a desk, on a tray table, or on a couch. When you are done, the clip folds flat over the keyboard, bringing the whole thing down to about 1 inch thick, so it actually fits in a bag.

The low-profile keyboard has multicolor backlighting, and the integrated trackpad sits below the space bar. Brightness and color can be changed with simple key combos, and the trackpad supports single-finger tap for left-click and two-finger tap for right-click, just like a laptop. The idea is to give you a familiar input surface for desktop mode, emulators, and web browsing without reaching for a separate mouse.

DeckTop connects over Bluetooth, so there is no cable between the keyboard and the handheld, only whatever USB-C cable you are already using for power or docking. Invensic calls out low latency, which is fine for typing, navigation, and most games, but serious competitive players will still prefer a wired or 2.4 GHz setup. For travel and couch use, though, the wireless link keeps the whole rig clean and portable.

The spring-loaded arms are wide enough to handle bare devices and chunky cases like Killswitch, and the same deck can be swapped between different handhelds. The dual cinch straps on the back let you mount a power bank, turning the whole thing into a self-contained clamshell with extra runtime. It is a small detail, but it acknowledges that these devices burn through batteries fast when you treat them like laptops.

DeckTop does not magically transform a Steam Deck into a MacBook, but it does make writing, modding, remote desktop, and light productivity feel less like a hack and more like a supported mode. Whether or not you use it every day, it sits in a useful middle ground between treating a handheld as a pure gaming device and wishing you had brought a laptop instead.

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