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.

The post Lenovo and AngryMiao Built a Keyboard With a Studio-Grade Knob first appeared on Yanko Design.

$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.

The post $239 Angry Miao Silent Keyboard Channels Tadao Ando’s Concrete Church first appeared on Yanko Design.