The Math Keyboard Normal Keyboards Forgot
Typing math on a computer still feels strangely slow.
If you need a Greek letter, an integral sign, a square root, or a scientific symbol, you often have to stop writing and look for it somewhere else.
Symbol menus. Old documents. Search results. Equation editors for something that was not really a full equation.
That was the frustration behind Nitrax Mathematical Keyboard.
It is a compact physical keyboard for mathematical, Greek, and scientific symbols. The symbols are printed directly on the keys, with blue and gray printed layers typed through key combinations.
It is not a virtual keyboard, not a calculator, and not a generic keypad.
The goal is simple: everyday math typing.
Notes. Homework. Lab reports. Slides. Technical explanations. Any document where you need the symbol now and want to keep writing.
On Windows, the companion app uses AutoHotkey to send Unicode characters into the active application when Math Mode is enabled.
More here: https://mathematicalkeyboard.com/
If you had a physical keyboard for math symbols, which symbol would need to be easiest to type?