Look Ma, No Batteries! Hands On With Lenovo's Self-Charging Keyboard (www.pcmag.com)
from 01011@monero.town to technology@beehaw.org on 09 Jan 14:06
https://monero.town/post/5353773

Among the many laptops and desktops that Lenovo announced at CES 2025 is an intriguing peripheral: the Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard. This unique productivity keyboard ditches the traditional battery, instead utilizing solar and ambient light to charge and store energy.

The Lenovo Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard might seem like your run-of-the-mill keyboard, but it comes with a party trick that might just save you a buck in the long run. Using advanced photovoltaic technology and fast-charging supercapacitors, the keyboard actually harnesses ambient light to store energy, eliminating the need for disposable batteries.

#technology

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TheButtonJustSpins@infosec.pub on 09 Jan 14:19 next collapse

That price is better than I feared. If I needed a keyboard, this one might be it.

jjjalljs@ttrpg.network on 09 Jan 14:45 next collapse

Huh. That’s neat I guess.

My initial guess was it would somehow capture the energy from hitting keys. I guess that’s implausible? Too little energy without making the key press resistance too high?

Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz on 09 Jan 14:53 next collapse

Yeah that was my first thought as well for some reason. Obviously solar calculators/etc have been around for longer so that makes more sense, but I fully clicked on this hoping it was energy from key presses.

strawberry@kbin.earth on 09 Jan 15:29 collapse

yeah me too, I was curious what sort of mechanism they shoved in the switchea

Anivia@feddit.org on 09 Jan 15:48 next collapse

There already exist wireless doorbells and smart home light switches that harness the energy of clicking the button using a piezo crystal to use for transmitting the signal. But at least the one I have has way too much resistance to use for a computer keyboard

saigot@lemmy.ca on 13 Jan 02:55 collapse

Ianother problem is whatever you have that charges the keyboard, you’d need ~109 of them. I still think it’d be cool tho

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 09 Jan 14:51 next collapse

I’ve got a battery-free efficient keyboard already… it uses this cable connected to the computer to supply power when keys are pressed. Very energy efficient. Never needs to charge. And unlike these keyboards with a built-in lithium battery, it will last indefinitely.

JaymesRS@literature.cafe on 09 Jan 14:57 next collapse

The keyboard uses super capacitors which are much longer lasting than lithium batteries, it also has an USB C wired connection port hidden under a cap.

Boomkop3@reddthat.com on 09 Jan 15:03 next collapse

No lithium, it’s got a capacitor. Those things can handle a lot of charge cycles

B0rax@feddit.org on 10 Jan 13:06 collapse

But they still have a limited lifetime of a maximum of 10 years, regardless of cycle count.

Boomkop3@reddthat.com on 10 Jan 14:55 next collapse

I suppose you’ll have to do a 10$ repair on your decade old keyboard, and recycle the remains

saigot@lemmy.ca on 13 Jan 02:47 collapse

Where are you getting that number? There are many different types of supercapacitors, which vary in lifespan quite a bit, the conditions (mostly voltage and temp) also have a big impact. The article doesn’t specify the type of cap used.

For instance this paper tests a supercapacitor rated for 2.7V at 2.5 and 3v. At 2.5v the cap is estimated to have a lifespan of 100yrs, with 3v scenario it’s 10.

Keyboards don’t get very hot, and the voltage draw is very predictable so I don’t think designing a long lasting capacitor for this usecase is particularly tricky.

I would be worried about the lifespan of the solar panel, but at least it’s still usable without that.

jerakor@startrek.website on 09 Jan 16:21 collapse

I think this looks great. I’m not going to run a 20 foot USB cable accross my living room so wireless is pretty much a must. I think the only concern I have is if it discharges if I store it and if so what the bringup time would be.

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 10 Jan 00:17 collapse

Good point; I’ve used a USB extender that had WiFi at either end to handle the distance thing. Maybe it’s just me, but outside of laptops I don’t generally have a need to move my keyboards around much.

Boomkop3@reddthat.com on 09 Jan 15:02 next collapse

Holy damn! The tiny solar panels from 2010 are back!

F### all the stupid disposable battery requiring garbage

joyjoy@lemm.ee on 09 Jan 15:33 collapse

I used to have a Logitech K750 solar keyboard. The battery was always dying. The only difference from a traditional charging keyboard is instead of a charging cable, I had a charging desk lamp.

Boomkop3@reddthat.com on 09 Jan 15:35 next collapse

hahaha, that’s a solution!

infeeeee@lemm.ee on 09 Jan 17:21 next collapse

I have a K750, the battery is about 15 years old with daily use. The original battery was dead when I opened it, I just bought one when it was new, and it’s still going.

In another thread some days ago others shared similar experiences as you, so maybe I’m the lucky one.

I live in a bright flat, and my computer was always near to the window, it’s charge never went below 80-90%, so maybe that’s the reason for its longevity.

DdCno1@beehaw.org on 09 Jan 18:21 collapse

Reminds me of the at least 40 year old calculator my mother is still using, even though you need essentially a search light both for it to power on and to make out anything on the dim LCD screen. It’s always been like this though.

darklamer@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Jan 15:43 next collapse

Incompatible with Dark Mode.

HootinNHollerin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Jan 15:58 collapse

It’s got super capacitors to store so can use in dark until they drain at least. And a usb c

howrar@lemmy.ca on 09 Jan 16:15 next collapse

Unlike conventional batteries, supercapacitors have an exceptionally long lifespan, lasting hundreds of thousands of charge-discharge cycles, whereas lithium batteries typically last only five years or less.

So, what’s the conversation rate between charge-discharge cycles and years?

Flipper@feddit.org on 09 Jan 16:33 next collapse

It doesn’t say what type of capacitor is used, but electrolytic capacitors can basically be charged and discharged indefinitely. They don’t wear down . However they age based on temperature. The ones at my work have 2000h @ 105°C. For every 4 °C coolor the lifetime doubles as a rule of them.

Isoprenoid@programming.dev on 09 Jan 19:50 collapse

It doesn’t say what type of capacitor is used

Yes, it does. They’re supercapacitors.

Isoprenoid@programming.dev on 09 Jan 19:51 collapse

It says in the article

Unlike conventional batteries, supercapacitors have an exceptionally long lifespan, lasting hundreds of thousands of charge-discharge cycles, whereas lithium batteries typically last only five years or less.

Corgana@startrek.website on 09 Jan 17:45 next collapse

From an e-waste perspective not having a battery is really cool. The article doesn’t mention this, but the plastic appears recycled too. I wonder how it types?

luciole@beehaw.org on 09 Jan 17:58 next collapse

From a design perspective I like how the black variant has these keys that are just the right hue of green to remind us of those solar calculator screens. On the other hand Bluetooth is pretty finicky and is not available into UEFI setup, so meh. For peripherals as fundamental as keyboard & mouse, I much prefer a wireless 2.4GHz dongle connection.

Michal@programming.dev on 09 Jan 20:34 collapse

Too bad full size usb ports have mostly disappeared from laptops, so Bluetooth is the only way. Unless they started making usb C dongles?

skrlet13@feddit.cl on 09 Jan 23:02 collapse

Yes, USB C dondles, adapters and docks exist.

Michal@programming.dev on 10 Jan 08:58 collapse

You mean you still need a dongle for the dongle?

skrlet13@feddit.cl on 10 Jan 12:26 collapse

I meant there’s a variety 😅

OmegaLemmy@discuss.online on 09 Jan 18:03 next collapse

wtf this looks fucking cool

biber@feddit.org on 09 Jan 22:33 collapse

I have such a keyboard since >4 years (Dell iirc)