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  3. the new keyboard knows what's best for me ?

the new keyboard knows what's best for me ?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • B Offline
    B Offline
    BillWoodruff
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

    «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

    W OriginalGriffO L I M 6 Replies Last reply
    0
    • B BillWoodruff

      Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

      «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

      W Offline
      W Offline
      W Balboos GHB
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      BillWoodruff wrote:

      but, I'm not complaining ... yet.

      It's good to get yourself ready so as not to cause to much a shock to your system.

      Ravings en masse^

      "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein

      "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • B BillWoodruff

        Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

        «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

        OriginalGriffO Offline
        OriginalGriffO Offline
        OriginalGriff
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Do you mean that SHIFT+3 gives £, and SHIFT+' (two right from "L") gives @ ? If so, that's a UK layout. Which OS are you using?

        Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

        "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
        "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • B BillWoodruff

          Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

          «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          I remember my favorite keyboard. I had a Tandy 1000 (8086) with a mechanical keyboard. It felt so great, I loved typing on it. I miss those days of typing away at the DOS prompt and programming in Turbo Pascal. :sigh: Many respects to your old kit. :((

          When you are dead, you won't even know that you are dead. It's a pain only felt by others. Same thing when you are stupid.

          J S 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • B BillWoodruff

            Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

            «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

            I Offline
            I Offline
            Ian Shlasko
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            BillWoodruff wrote:

            The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted.

            Your language is set to American English, but is your keyboard layout set that way? I think they're distinct settings.

            Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
            Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • B BillWoodruff

              Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

              «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Mark_Wallace
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              BillWoodruff wrote:

              he keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character

              Control Panel > Region and Language > Keyboard and Language > Change Keyboard. Don't be tempted by the US International keyboard, it turns all your quote marks into accents.

              I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • L Lost User

                I remember my favorite keyboard. I had a Tandy 1000 (8086) with a mechanical keyboard. It felt so great, I loved typing on it. I miss those days of typing away at the DOS prompt and programming in Turbo Pascal. :sigh: Many respects to your old kit. :((

                When you are dead, you won't even know that you are dead. It's a pain only felt by others. Same thing when you are stupid.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Jeremy Falcon
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Donathan.Hutchings wrote:

                Tandy 1000 (8086)

                My first machine, well the 8088. Old skool.

                Jeremy Falcon

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • L Lost User

                  I remember my favorite keyboard. I had a Tandy 1000 (8086) with a mechanical keyboard. It felt so great, I loved typing on it. I miss those days of typing away at the DOS prompt and programming in Turbo Pascal. :sigh: Many respects to your old kit. :((

                  When you are dead, you won't even know that you are dead. It's a pain only felt by others. Same thing when you are stupid.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  stoneyowl2
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  Yeah, I really liked mechanical keyboards. My first was a Teletype Model 15 attached to a homebrew 8080 system using the S-100 bus. When the keyboard got really dirty, we used to take it out of the teletype and run it through the rinse cycle of the dishwasher and re-oil it.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • B BillWoodruff

                    Today, I replaced my venerable, antiquated, near falling apart, ten year-old mouse and keyboard with a new LogiTech G910 kb, and a LogiTech G602 mouse. I almost feel I should bury the old kit with some kind of farewell ceremony in thanks for their long service. I went for the G910 partly because, after trying various types of key-action mechanisms, I decided I liked the Romer-G switches more than I did the available models with Cherry MX switches, and (major factor) the Thai equivalent to NewEgg had a special on the 910 that made it substantially cheaper than other better-quality keyboards from Corsair, and other vendors. Of course, I studied the reviews of the different keyboards, trying to find reviews not written for hard-core gamers. Adjusting to both will take some time; the mouse feels quite natural, the keyboard is requiring more attention to my fingers' (fast) speed-typing. I'm not a gamer, and I wasn't aware of the fancy lighting capabilities of this keyboard, and I am rather amazed by them: but, why would I ever want my keyboard to run an animation where it cycles through the spectrum of colors moving from left to right across the keys ? Well, okay, that does save the cost of a lava-light, I guess :) Whether I'll find a use for nine dedicated macro-keys each of which can store 3 macros, is also ... uhhhh ... up in the air, as is whether I'll ever mess around with mouse's gamer features. The one strange thing ... and, this keyboard did not come with an alternate set of Thai characters on the keyboard ... is that the keyboard maps the shifted quote key to produce the at-sign, and shifted 2 key to double-quote. And, shifted 3 produces the British Pound character. I've gone into Win 10 and checked that the Language is set to American English, not British. The tilde key produces: ` unshifted and ¬ shifted. @It's like this when I try to use a double-quote, and C-Sharp becomes C£.@ The at-sign now: " I'm sure I'll find some software trick to undo this re-mapping, perhaps by asking LogiTech a support question. There is always a price to be paid when you ... upgrade, but, I'm not complaining ... yet. cheers, Bill

                    «There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle ca

                    N Offline
                    N Offline
                    Nagy Vilmos
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    As others have remarked, there are two distinct 'languages' at play - your machine will display in Mercan, but you need to set up your keyboard layout to Mercan too.

                    veni bibi saltavi

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