Changing the Keyboard 386
Your Mama sent us a funny NY Times bit (yes, you need a free account) about dumbing down keyboards because all those crazy keys confuse the newbies. BUt this begs the question: How can we survive without old friends like the Scroll Lock, the Sys Rq and of course, break?
Nope (Score:1)
---
Put Hemos through English 101!
"An armed society is a polite society" -- Robert Heinlein
Proposal (Score:1)
One thing that would be a very easy thing to do would be to move the caps lock, scroll lock, and num lock keys out of the main layout, and put them where the lights are (and have lights built into the keys).
That way, the num lock could be replaced with a backspace key for the num keypad (which would be much more efficient- I think "clear" on the Mac is exactly that), caps would be replaced with something useful (maybe something related to tab, like moving the cursor one tab forward, or a reverse-tab), and the 3 key block of print screen/sysrq, scroll lock, and pause/break could be replaced with cut/copy/paste keys or something like that. (Print screen, sysrq, pause, and break could be retained by going ctrl-f9/f10/f11/f12.
There already is a help key, after all- F1. But if that was actually LABELLED "Help" in addition to F1, it would probably make it easier for newbies.
The ultimate keyboard would allow it to be instantly reconfigurable, of course: I wonder if it's possible to put little LCDs on the top of the keys so that the labels can change instantly, through software.....
Re:newbies? (Score:1)
The keyboard interface is a syncronous serial interface, and not necessarily well-buffered. Hot plugging a keyboard is a good way to toast out a motherboard's keyboard interface.
It was ages ago, but I remember buying 8088 motherboards back in 'the old days' at swapmeets. A common 'defect' on them (component level troubleshooting is such fun) was the TTL gates with lines connected directly to the keyboard being blown. These days that logic is all buried in a monster "Chipset" part. If you blow the keyboard interface on such a board, plan on telnetting to that box in the future, you won't be typing at it anymore.
Dumb down? No! Smarten up! (Score:1)
I swear by my Kinesis Ergo. The Dvorak is only half of the benifit, the best part is the REAL ergo layout.
Ever wonder why keyboards are layed out with the keys going diagonal?? Beats me, but it's much more comfy to type on on that is in columns.
Best money I ever spent.
Re:Use Windows ! (Score:1)
Now, maybe it was a valid security reason during the first two months of the first NT's release... But not anymore, IMHO.
One-button keyboards for sale (Score:2)
It would sit right smack in the middle of the keyboard. The only label on it would be a little smiley face. (You could put some LSD on it if so inclined).
Then, you think about what you want the button to do REALLY HARD as you press it down. The keyboard would then interpret your thought and send the appropriate message to the computer.
Of course, you'd have to put new typing programs on the market to teach you where on the Home Key to place your fingers.
Some would say that as long as the keyboard is reading your thoughts, why not just eliminate the keyboard altogether and just communicate your thoughts telepathically to the computer? Obviously, that's just hogwash. How are you supposed to convey your thoughts without pressing down on the button??
Anyway, I have a limited number of these special keyboards made, so contact me if you want one. The price is $100 per unit, non-negotiable.
DISCLAIMER: The keyboards only work as long as your only thoughts are, "Do nothing. Do nothing."
One key. (Score:1)
Re:IBM 101 key AT keyboard (Score:1)
--
Re:Happy Hacking (offtopic) (Score:1)
I did it after getting some old workstation hardware--it was just too inconsistent to keep moving that one key in my mind. Now, I'll never go back.
-awc
Re:One key. (Score:1)
Re:But NumLock needs to be off for the arrow keys (Score:1)
Re:The Wonderful Windows Key (Score:1)
I have a calculator with a 'green-diamond' key, but I find myself calling it 'Meta' because it looks like the Sun meta-key symbol.
XON/XOFF equivalent (Score:1)
(or was it the other way around?
Re:What idiot would turn numlock off? (Score:1)
Re:begging the question... (Score:1)
MS Excel uses Scroll Lock (Score:1)
Re:second numpad on the left, instead of the keypa (Score:1)
Fsck%$*&ing "Win95" Keys (Score:1)
Resist it - Get a Sun Layout keyboard for your PC! (Score:1)
I have a Sun layout keyboard on my work and home PC's. For those that haven't used one of those before, they have an extra 11 function keys down the left hand side (with labels like "Front", "Cut", "Help", etc - VERY useful to bind to functions like "bring window to front" etc), and four extra keys in the top right hand corner. Add to that a real Meta key, compose and Alt Graph, and that's a real hacker's keyboard.
The Sun brand keyboards have a different connector than PC's, which gives you two options; either build a converter, or buy an NCD Sun Layout keyboard (X-terminals have standard PS/2 connectors). Part number for that is "N-123 Unix" (or choose an international version [ncd.com]).
If you go with the NCD keyboard, they don't support the clunky protocol that most keyboards use and use the pure PS/2 protocol - so you will have to do some heavy key remapping.
Under Linux 2.0 and current versions of XFree86 you can get all keys except F9 and F10 working. Mail me (see home page for address) to get a copy of keymaps for this.
The Linux Input Driver [mff.cuni.cz] patch to 2.3.12 will make all the keys available, but is not currently at a production stability level.
Caps Lock (Score:1)
It has one useful function, and one only: to instantly mark newbies. While this is nice, there are equally effective ways of spotting newbies that don't leave you pressing your hands to your ears and moaning about Advil.
This godforsaken waste of plastic is positioned right between Shift, A, and tab - as though it were placed next to some of the most common keys on the keyboard specifically to encourage typists to strike it accidentally.
WebTV lost an opportunity to atone for the fact of their existence by including a Caps Lock key on their keyboard. Just think how many newbies could have been saved from ETERNAL LUSERDOM if WebTV's engineers had taken a little thought to the monster they were unleashing on the world and simply omitted it. Then again, if they had been thinking along those lines, they would have blown all their cash on a big party and then quit, which would have pissed off their investors to no end.
OK, enough ranting. I hate Caps Lock.
-Mars
Re:never!!!!!!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:I actually use (Score:1)
I like two control keys. I'm a touch-typist. Most of the useful control chars for emacs and the shell are on the left side of the keyboard (a,s,x,c,d,z,w), requiring a control key on the right side of the keyboard. I can take or leave the caps lock key, but a control key to the left of the 'a' is purest evil for finger injuries.
I spent the first year after coming out here as a contract sysadmin. I spent that year using Sun type-5 keyboards. They seem to be designed specifically to cause wrist injury. They have a horrid feel, a horrid slope, and are way too wide. I always end up remapping one of the diamond keys to be a right control.
Use Windows ! (Score:2)
ctrl + alt + del
Re:second numpad on the left, instead of the keypa (Score:1)
Re:While we're at it... (Score:1)
BIGGER keyboards. (Score:1)
Personally I have an old IBM terminal with a REALLY nice keyboard. It has 24 function keys! Personally I want 36 or so...
I also would like a few dozen more keys all around the keyboard, like another 12 or so on the left and another 12 or so on the right.
256-key keyboards anybody? (hey I wonder if this idea is MARKETABLE??? HRM....)
Why does Xwindows hate NumLock? (Score:1)
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
Amen, Brother! (Score:2)
She said, "Oh, yeah. That thing is ancient. We can probably just throw it all out."
I said, "No way. I'm keeping this keyboard."
Yep. Count 'em -- 101 long-throw keys with easy action and SPRINGS (Can I get a hallelujah!) A case that was made of METAL, man! You could put it on your lab -- provided you didn't need circulation to your knees (it's a little heavy compared to today's stuff). A genuine coiled cable from an era when coiled cables did NOT tangle into a 3" knot of cheap plastic misery within a week.
And the NOISE! I haven't heard that kind of audible feedback from a keyboard in years! Everything now is don't-wake-up-the-guy-in-the-next-cubicle softie soft. (ok, Dell is the exception) Not only did it "click", it would "boing" oh-so-softly with each keystroke!
It went straight on to my #1 box and the cool factor of the machine went up immediately. Trust me -- you could feel it. The only drawback is that when I'm in the office, people can tell whether I'm working (CLACKETY CLACK CLACK) or just goofing in Netscape.
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
I mean, really. Ergonomics exists for a reason. The only redeeming feature of this keyboard is that it doesn't have those damnable windows keys.
What exactly does the Scroll Lock key do? (Score:1)
What do they do? (Score:1)
OTOH, I have configured my win95 keys to act as meta under X. All I need to do is paint on penguins
Re:Kids these days... (Score:1)
Kids these days... (Score:1)
Course I guess there's no pleasing these kids these days with their fancy 'automobiles' and their 'cordless phones' and their 'Internet', so I guess us proper, decent, Ghod-fearing old folk will just have to suffer along with all the clackity-clack of all those keys going at once and them mice oh don't even get me started about those darn mice! You'd have never seen a mouse in MY computer lab, gosh darn it! Those critters fried up real good inside ENIAC, heh-heh-heh...*cough*
Gosh darn it now you've gone and got my emphysima goin' again, you young rascals. Go on, git out of here, you punks, with your 104 keys and your mice and your 'monitors', what kind of garbage is that, kids these days, I'll tell you, can't even read a punched card, or use a keypunch....
Re:IBM 101 key AT keyboard (Score:1)
$1??? wow, I feel ripped off now! I paid $2 for each of my 3 Model M's!!! :) ] As someone mentioned earlier, I hope that by the time PS/2 connecters are no longer put on PC's, there will be an adapter for plugging these baby's into USB...
But, it was well worth it! I hate when I have to type on anything else. Just switching to a different type of keyboard [even when the keys are in the same place] slows my typing down by about 40% [estimated
Ender
Eat right. Stay fit. Die anyway.
Never mind those keys... (Score:1)
Find, Cut, Copy, Paste, Open (my favourite), Front, Undo, Props, Stop, Again..
But I could never figure out the blank key on the sun keyboards ?? ^@ is what it produces
Re:newbies? (Score:1)
It redefines the cursor keys to scroll the window (Score:2)
Timur Tabi
Remove "nospam_" from email address
Re:Any chance of getting that into Emacs/Xemacs? (Score:1)
Re:NumPad is USEFUL. (Score:1)
In defense of Suns.... (Score:1)
Out-of-Box, Suns don't make nearly as nice workstations as SGIs do (I've used both). But, with a little tweaking, they can make a wonderful home. I'm on a SPARCplug (okay, it's not a Sun, but it's based on Sun's technology and runs their software and pretends it's an SS20) running Solaris 7, KDE, and Netscape/IE (depending on my mood). I really couldn't be much happier.
Ultras suck as workstations when they only have the standard TGX framebuffer (stick an old Paradise ISA VGA card in a PentiumII and see if it's really that much more responsive in Windows than a P60 is... you catch my drift). TGXs tend to bug-out on their onboard RAM (mine went out a month ago, so now I'm at half RAM, which means -less- acceleration), which produces very `interesting' video effects (mouse droppings, incomplete redraws, region-swapping, etc.).
However, throw a Creator3D or Elite3D in the Ultra, and you're moving like nobody's business. Suns really shine when you run them headless and X into them or run remote processes on them, as their I/O is superb and their CPUs run phenomenally once you free them from the tethers of a video framebuffer.
The keyboards are weird, especially if it's the Unix layout (and you're a PC-user), but, once you acclimate to them (Sun makes a PC101-like keyboard, BTW), they're a dream in Solaris. I'd love to have copy/paste/help/undo/redo/repeat/open/cut/properti es keys on a WinNT box... it saves from having to remember shortcut keys. But, the keyboards are an acquired taste
As for SGIs, they do make much more impressive workstations. They've got glamourous cases, the spiffiest GUI on the planet, a standard PC keyboard, and a graphics subsystem that works with the CPU (actually uses the same instruction set), instead of adding more work to the CPU. Excellent, excellent workstations.
But, run IRIX machines aren't nearly as impressive remotely or as servers. Challenges and the like were pretty darn good, but, you get more bang-for-buck on Suns if you're doing mostly serving or headless processing.
People buy Suns for CPU speed and Solaris, not for a spiffy GUI or `creature comforts' (well, most don't... I actually enjoy working in the Solaris environment). People buy SGIs because they need the power and flexibility of a Unix workstation, but also want a machine that makes computing an far more enjoyable experience (in terms of `creature comforts').
Oh.. don't talk about stuffing PC innards into an SGI case too loudly around avid SGI users (I'm one of those, too). They just might burn you at the stake for heresy. ;)
"Have lunch, or be lunch."
Re:It does what? (Score:1)
Uhm.. I think you meant to post to segfault.org, not slashdot.org. The lack of Natalie Portman's genitals and Hank the Angry, Drunken Dwarf should have been a clue. Jeeez....
"Have lunch, or be lunch."
the mouse (Score:1)
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Re:Use Windows ! (Score:2)
I could be wrong in the previous statement, and open to flame.
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
standard PC keyboard:
1.) ESC key moved down next to '1' (remap this
on a PC keyboard, where do you put '~/`'?).
2.) ALT keys moved outwards so comfortable to
use with fourth fingers (no keys there to map
to on PC keyboard).
3.) Backspace reachable from home row (although
I always use CTRL-H).
4.) Nice, solid keyboard, very pleasant to type
with.
5.) Takes up half the space of a standard
keyboard.
I bought the 'classic' version, with the Mac and
Sun interfaces. They've got a new, PC-only
version out for about $70 (from memory).
Definitely recommended (http://www.pfuca.com)
Re:Kids these days... (Score:1)
that for each byte (8bits), you have to
hit the button to send a "start bit". If you hit the button, send 8 bits and release the button, no more input will be expected until you again whack it to signal yet another "start bit". Kinda like serial communications.
Re:But NumLock needs to be off for the arrow keys (Score:1)
Re:I actually use (Score:1)
How do you come to this conclusion? I can't see how just moving your finger to the side AND down is better than just a side motion. I speak from personal experience here but it's not a very large data set.
NYT wises to cypherpunk (Score:1)
Oh well.
Re:What exactly does the Scroll Lock key do? (Score:1)
As did Sidekick, by the way.
Win95 key == Ctrl + Esc (Score:1)
I do agree about the power button on the keyboard. I missed this feature from my SS10 when working on peecees (and I curse the placement of CapsLock/Ctrl !). With almost every PC now sold being equiped with software-controllable power supply (ATX?), it sould be doable. Probably another limitation in the name of backward compatibility !
Re:Counting unused keys (Score:1)
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
The Magic SysRq Key (Score:2)
Sorry for the long comment, but
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/sysrq.txt:
MAGIC SYSRQ KEY DOCUMENTATION v1.2
------------------------------------
[Sat May 16 01:09:21 EDT 1998]
* What is the magic SysRQ key?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is a 'magical' key combo you can hit which kernel will respond to
regardless of whatever else it is doing, unless it is completely locked up.
* How do I enable the magic SysRQ key?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You need to say yes to 'Magic SysRq key (CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ)' when
configuring the kernel. This option is only available it 2.1.x or later
kernels.
* How do I use the magic SysRQ key?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On x86 - You press the key combo 'ALT-SysRQ-'. Note - Some
(older?) may not have a key labeled 'SysRQ'. The 'SysRQ' key is
also known as the 'Print Screen' key.
On SPARC - You press 'ALT-STOP-', I believe.
On other - If you know of the key combos for other architectures, please
let me know so I can add them to this section.
* What are the 'command' keys?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'r' - Turns off keyboard raw mode and sets it to XLATE.
'k' - Kills all programs on the current virtual console.
'b' - Will immediately reboot the system without syncing or unmounting
your disks.
'o' - Will shut your system off via APM (if configured and supported).
's' - Will attempt to sync all mounted filesystems.
'u' - Will attempt to remount all mounted filesystems read-only.
'p' - Will dump the current registers and flags to your console.
't' - Will dump a list of current tasks and their information to your
console.
'm' - Will dump current memory info to your console.
'0'-'9' - Sets the console log level, controlling which kernel messages
will be printed to your console. ('0', for example would make
it so that only emergency messages like PANICs or OOPSes would
make it to your console.)
'e' - Send a SIGTERM to all processes, except for init.
'i' - Send a SIGKILL to all processes, except for init.
'l' - Send a SIGKILL to all processes, INCLUDING init. (Your system
will be non-functional after this.)
* Okay, so what can I use them for?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Well, un'R'aw is very handy when your X server or a svgalib program crashes.
sa'K' (system attention key) is useful when you want to exit a program
that will not let you switch consoles. (For example, X or a svgalib program.)
re'B'oot is good when you're unable to shut down. But you should also 'S'ync
and 'U'mount first.
'S'ync is great when your system is locked up, it allows you to sync your
disks and will certainly lessen the chance of data loss and fscking. Note
that the sync hasn't taken place until you see the "OK" and "Done" appear
on the screen. (If the kernel is really in strife, you may not ever get the
OK or Done message...)
'U'mount is basically useful in the same ways as 'S'ync. I generally 'S'ync,
'U'mount, then re'B'oot when my system locks. It's saved me many a fsck.
Again, the unmount (remount read-only) hasn't taken place until you see the
"OK" and "Done" message appear on the screen.
The loglevel'0'-'9' is useful when your console is being flooded with
kernel messages you do not want to see. Setting '0' will prevent all but
the most urgent kernel messages from reaching your console. (They will
still be logged if syslogd/klogd are alive, though.)
t'E'rm and k'I'll are useful if you have some sort of runaway process you
are unable to kill any other way, especially if it's spawning other
processes.
* Sometimes SysRQ seems to get 'stuck' after using it, what can I do?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That happens to me, also. I've found that tapping shift, alt, and control
on both sides of the keyboard, and hitting an invalid sysrq sequence again
will fix the problem. (ie, something like alt-sysrq-z). Switching to another
virtual console (ALT+Fn) and then back again should also help.
* I hit SysRQ, but nothing seems to happen, what's wrong?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are some keyboards which do not support 'SysRQ', you can try running
'showkey -s' and pressing SysRQ or alt-SysRQ to see if it generates any
0x54 codes. If it doesn't, you may define the magic sysrq sequence to a
different key. Find the keycode with showkey, and change the define of
'#define SYSRQ_KEY 0x54' in [/usr/src/linux/]include/asm/keyboard.h to
the keycode of the key you wish to use, then recompile. Oh, and by the way,
you exit 'showkey' by not typing anything for ten seconds.
* I have more questions, who can I ask?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You may feel free to send email to myrdraal@deathsdoor.com, and I will
respond as soon as possible. If that email address does not work, use
myrdraal@jackalz.dyn.ml.org.
-Myrdraal
Re:"properly" :Alt-xxxx is stupid (Score:1)
You're wrong here. The windows key is just like any other key. If you've ever programmed your own keyboard handler to sit on IRQ 1 and poll port 0x60, you'll know what I'm talking about. It's been a while since I did it myself, but IIRC, the windows keys use what would logically be the scan codes for F13, F14 and F15.
Re:Bring on the Megakeyboard! (Score:1)
The Keyboard that came with this HP Vectra VL just FSCKING SUCKS!!! Some marketroid thought it would be 313373ly k3wl to add 13 keys to adjust stuff like the speaker/earphones volume & other stuff that makes no sense to me. Thirteen miserable dirty little eraser stubs above & to the right of the 10-key pads that are already mapped -- or should be mapped -- to other keys. And they sit there untouched, cluttering the appearance of my keyboard.
And then there are those mothra-fscking Winkeys that I only hit when I make a typo. They're about as cute as a 2nd-grader playing three-card Monty on the playground & racking in the lunch money from the first-graders.
Are the PHBs at certain corporations trying so hard to make using computers easy for the average luser that they HAVE to annoy & handicap those of us who know how to use one? Maybe they get flaccid at the thought some of us are better with computers than they are, & do this out of some twisted sense of revenge for their lack of marital (or pre-marital) ability???
Okay, I know this rant's going to get moderated to -1, but I had to get all of that off my chest. Before I took this dead 540MB full-height SCSI drive I have at home & stress-tested the craniums of a few PHBs at certain corporations.
Geoff
Come on, it's one of the coolest keys around! (Score:1)
As systems grew and computers became cheap, about this point dinasours died of lung cancer long story don't want to get into it at this time, the key was carried along since computers could be wired into such a system through a serial connection. I've even seen such a serial connection, the horror!
You might also be interested to know that the SysRq key requires you to press the right alt key as well, shift doesn't work. I don't remember what the scan code from the keyboard is but it's a unique scan code.
In reality all the keys on the keyboard do nothing but send back a number, ctl-alt-del is not some magical configuration that trips the reset switch. It's up to your software to recognize that combination and do what ever is appropriate. If your vagly interested the codes sent back start with 1 from your esc key and go from left to right across the keyboard starting with your 1 key above the q, with a few notable exceptions like pause which sends several codes, as well as num lock and the keypad.
As for not being able to detect several key presses, this is true to some degree. While you can't sent to codes at once, codes are sent as make/break codes, if the code is less than 128 it's a make code if it's more than 128 subtract 128 from it and it coresponds to it's break code, meaning it's been released. So a smart programmer would know how to keep track of what position all the keys are in. However there is a limit to how many keys the keyboard can detect as pressed, I think I've managed 12 simultanious keys. I think it's a problem with the number of circuit traces on the board and that some overlap to more than one key, but I'm just guessing that, you can open one up and take a look for yourself.
Now if this has been utterly fascinating to you, get out and date more before your fate is the same as the dinasours!
Check this one . . . (Score:1)
Re:Okay, pardon my ignorance... (Score:2)
I believe SysRq was added to the AT keyboard to assist with IBM-style terminal emulation.
--
Re: (Score:1)
Re:What exactly does the Scroll Lock key do? (Score:1)
Re:how do you do that? (Score:1)
Print Screen is a fun button to detect, because (IIRC) it sends 3 (or was it 5) scan codes in direct succession. But neither key is "a nightmare" to detect. You just have to special-case for PrintScreen's specific scan code sequence.
How about (Score:1)
You could use this data to design a keyboard for hacking.
IMHO, having the braces and brackets more easily accessible would be cool.
MOUSE terror (was Re:Mac Keyboards are Unspeakable (Score:1)
Yeah, I can think of one thing. Booting windows.
If you do not have a mouse plugged into your computer while booting Win9x GUI, you just get a silly dialog box saying "it's ok for you to plug in a mouse now", and it won't proceed until you do so. Which brings me to a rather silly point....
I installed win98 from scratch on a friend's computer, and I didn't have a mouse plugged in during setup. Everything worked well until the final reboot to start up Win98 for the first time. Then (of course) that stupid "insert a mouse now" dialog box popped up. I inserted a mouse, but it didn't work. Reboot, Reinsert, Check IRQ, Change serial port, it didn't work.
Then i realized: Apparently Windows 98 SETUP did not detect a mouse during install, since, of course, there was no mouse installed; so Win98 SETUP decided not to install a mouse driver. I couldn't get into windows to install a mouse driver, since it demands to detect a mouse first (which isn't really easy to do without the driver).
So I wiped the harddisk, spend another hour reinstalling *WITH A MOUSE PLUGGED IN DURING SETUP*, and what do you know, it worked.
Amazing.
Re:Mac Keyboards are Unspeakable (Score:2)
The sad thing is that many of the extended keys (as you'd find on the PC-style Apple extended keyboard) don't work in most Mac programs. I was always pressing Del on my old system 7.6 Mac with no results.
Apple did get one thing right by mapping cut-copy-paste-undo to the first four F keys.
--
Re:Win95 key == Ctrl + Esc (Score:1)
Spacebar
Double Click
Enter BIOS Password to turn power on (my fave)
Wake on LAN
Wake on Modem
Wake on RTC (Power on at a certain time)
Re:Kids these days... (Score:1)
Re:Any chance of getting that into Emacs/Xemacs? (Score:1)
On Solaris, XEmacs already binds scroll lock but we don't do anything with it:
C-h c
scroll_lock is undefined
Omnikey (Score:1)
I will have to try to find some way to smuggle this one with me when I finally graduate!
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
The remap can be very confusing though.
Once someone using my keyboard got it
jammed under the monitor which pressed
the remap button. They were then baffled
why many of the keys didn't work anymore.
Gateway was obviously aware of this problem,
as the keyboard shipped with a big sticker
telling you how to reset the keyboard.
The only real irritation with the AnyKey
is that the configuration software only
worked under DOS (it would crash in windows).
Remap those window keys! (Score:1)
Second, remap the the "menu" key (the third new one) to I think Hyper. That is now my FVWM2 control key. MENU + INSERT gives me the root menu, MENU + arrows bops among the desktop pages, MENU + HOME moves, etc.
This leaves ALT and META available entirely to prograns, so I don't worry about CTRL-ALT F1 changing consoles on me.
--
Re:newbies... (Score:1)
Any, has ANYONE ever seen any computer idiot ("non-technical person") who actually understood what the directory tree was, or that files are actually organized in directories? I've yet to find one! Many can't even figure out how to save/load with floppy disks!
I actually use (Score:2)
I've seen them selling (refurbished) for around $80.
BTW, when Fire and Darkness was still a DOS game, you used Alt-SysRq to switch to the text mode console. Ever since we switched to Windows, it's been Scroll Lock. So we like all those extra keys.
I have to say, I do like Sun keyboards with the Ctrl where the Capslock is on all other keyboards (except the original 88-key that came with my IBM PC...now that was old school...)
Re:No Stop-A in real servers (Score:1)
Don't try this at home^H^H^H^Hwork unless you really know what you are doing (i.e. you really need to do it)...
Ino!~
PS: Magic incantations removed to protect the inocents
Lotus Notes (Score:2)
If you ever use Lotus Notes, Ctrl+Break is a god send because it stops Notes from whatever crazy task it's hung on.
Scroll Lock also works in Notes and I actually use it (although less now that I have a scrolly mouse.)
--
Re:backspacebar (Score:1)
Fortunately there's a switch on the back side of the keyboard to select BackSpace or normal Space.
Re:Mac Enter key (Score:1)
I've noticed that some of the lisp/scheme/ml interpeters/compilers differentiate between the enter and return keys. Return goes to the next line and enter submits the current line to the compiler/interpeter.
Re:Happy Hacking (even further offtopic) (Score:1)
sequences is that you accidently learn various
neat features of vi. I had no idea control-p
did word completion in vim until I mistyped
control-[. And most of the features of screen
I've learned through poor typing skills.
One use... (Score:1)
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-Rich (OS/2, Linux, BeOS, Mac, NT, Win95, Solaris, FreeBSD, and OS2200 user in Bloomington MN)
Re:Win95 key == Ctrl + Esc (Score:1)
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me too was [Re:In defense of Suns....] (Score:1)
Ultra 5s were first shipped with a crappy frame buffer device - but since January this year (I am not sure though) they're much better equiped when it comes to video (and they're at about the same price the old ones were).
Speaking of keyboards - I'm using Sun's for about 6 years - and there was a time when I was so used to the Cut/Copy/Paste/Open/Undo that I was literally trying to use them even when at home on my PC - go figure, my left hand falling off the keyboard in the attempt to press those keys!
On the other hand - the GUI that comes with Solaris isn't that nice (IMNSHO), but one can twist-and-whack (!)it to suit the needs. For me Window Maker is the best choice, and if you're smart enough you can make the DT apps work just fine under almost any other window manager rather than using CDE ad nauseam...
Ino!~
PS: when Sun switched from KBD Type4 to Type5 I was most annoyed by the new key positions
Re:Happy Hacking (Score:1)
My previous keyboard was a Northgate Ultra 102, which was also very cool (though large). It had the function keys on the side, the control key next to the "a", and there was a complete duplicate of the number pad that was used for the direction keys. It had a numlock, but I never figured out why.
mike
Chordal Keyboard (Score:1)
Re:NYT wises to cypherpunk (Score:2)
Happy Hacking (Score:2)
I have the same number of options, they're just on a smaller number of keys :)!
The other day one of the network admins (novell guy, not a unix guy) came by to do something to my machine (gotta love remote admin!). Took one look at my keyboard and said "What the hell is that?" I offered to stay and type for him, he said no. I came back 10 minutes later and he was saying "I don't know how to do control alt delete!" :) (Del on this keyboard is "fn+'".
Duane
Re:Mac Keyboards are Unspeakable (Score:2)
Well, you'd think that's what the "Help" key would be for, except when it doesn't do anything (which is usually).
So much for Human Interface Guidelines...
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newbies? (Score:2)
Actually, Macs have Command instead of Alt (on the old keyboards) and still have a control. The Option key is there also.
Nothing is more useless, imho, than the Windows95 keys, which seem to serve the unique purpose of making the spacebar 3 inches long.
The best keyboard layout would be the PowerBook's if not for a few problems. First, it has a useless "Enter" key to the right of the spacebar, where there is traditionally a Cmd key. Fortunately this can be remapped. Second, the arrow keys are too small. Third, you should be able to use the f-keys to do anything. I mean, doesn't the F stand for function? I should be able to launch Netscape by pushing f5 if I want. The iBook lets you do that. Diehard keypad users who need to enter tons of numbers can set the numlock and the keypad gets mapped to the 789-uio-jkl-m,. keys. It fits the most useful stuff in the smallest space while maintaining a "full size" keyboard and drops the useless "print screen," "scroll lock, " and "pause" keys that I have never pressed. There, I pressed them. Wow.
Also, the Powerbook and iMac have the light for the Caps Lock button INSIDE the caps lock button. So if you want to see if it's on, you don't look on the other side of the keyboard.
The most useful key on the entire keyboard, of course, is the power button. Why have no other manufacturers picked up on this?
Re:the mouse (Score:2)
If I'm sniping, it means that no one is shooting back (yet) so I have more time to delicately move the mouse into position and blow some poor creature's head off. I wouldn't use the mouse in the thick of things, but then I wouldn't use a sniping rifle then either.
I don't have anything against analog control however; Goldeneye 007 uses a thumbstick pretty extensively for aiming and that's fine. But there's a big difference between the amazingly comfortable and well-thought out N64 controller and my keyboard and mouse.
What's NumLock got to do with Quake? (Score:2)
I don't play Quake, but I do play games like it. I've never had to turn NumLock on to play these games with the number pad. So what is this guy talking about?
Timur Tabi
Remove "nospam_" from email address
A solution! (Score:2)
That's an enormous amount of space saved!
Then, because it's a VR model, you can give it as many or as few keys as you like, placed where you like. Don't like QWERTY? Design your own style!
Finally, with everything in VR, and people getting to design things the way that works for them, we can get rid of condescending IBM keyboard designers and half-brained journalists, and get some work done!
Save the main numeric keys, too! (Score:2)
While I agree about the numeric keypad being very useful, IMO the main numeric keys are too. They let me type occasional numbers without having to move my hands. Doing something like coding while having to move my hand to another area of the keyboard to enter numbers would slow me down a lot.
Re:It's Ctrl+Alt+Del NOT Alt+Ctrl+Del!!! (Score:2)
:)
Re:Funny. (Score:2)
Once in a while I switch to the mouse (for sniping) but never in the thick of things. The mouse is too inaccurate for my tastes, unless I carefully aim. The keypad is great, OTOH. Since I've got aiming also mapped to left hand keys, I usually don't play with the mouse at all. And I play real good.
Mac Enter key (Score:2)
The PowerBook has an "Enter" key because for some reason Macs treat "Enter" and "Return" differently. Most applications treat them the same, but there were some older apps (Excel 2?) where Enter and Return have different meanings. This used to pose a problem on the original Mac keyboard, which only had a Return key.
Just file this post under "More useless information".
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Personally... (Score:2)
No, I don't mean in terms of layout or size. I'm stuck on Grandma's iMac at the moment and I hate the keyboard. But consider: 12 function keys, the standard character set, the standard modifiers, Caps, Tab, the arrows, a standard numpad, Help, Home, Page Up, and Page Down. What else do you need, except perhaps a couple more function keys if you're an F-key freak?
Scroll Lock, SysRq, PrintScreen (unless you're on a Windoze box where the key supposedly takes a screenshot but doesn't even save the picture on the disk), and others like that have served their purpose. They were designed for ancient terminals, so few of which are in use today (with the ones that are in use being phased out, and no new ones being sold) that you certainly don't have to make new keyboards for them (especially since simply being able to use one renders a user non-clueless by definition, so you're not dumbing the keyboard down by removing them).
I'm for getting rid of superfluous keys that even the average Linux user has probably never used. Just don't cut out too many keys.
backspacebar (Score:2)
d
Re:Is this REALLY a problem? (Score:2)
Hey - have you looked at the cost of keyboards lately? $8 for your typical squishy 104 key model!
I can understand the "let's get rid of all the useless keys" movement. After all, it might increase the profit margin of some taiwanese company by 10 cents per keyboard or something.
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Re:begging the question... (Score:2)
That's true in logic, but not in colloquial speech. Treating both definitions as being valid leads to the least frustration. I doubt the colloquial use will disappear any time soon.
I want a Space Cadet keyboard. (Score:2)
Does anyone know where keyboards of this type can be obtained, or even where I could find a picture of one?
But NumLock needs to be off for the arrow keys (Score:2)
In fact, I expect that it doesn't matter if you leave it on or off with Quake - you can always reassign the keys.
Timur Tabi
Remove "nospam_" from email address