From: Arne Vajhøj on
On 30-04-2010 13:54, Roedy Green wrote:
> On Mon, 26 Apr 2010 06:01:55 -0700 (PDT), Lew<lew(a)lewscanon.com>
> wrote, quoted or indirectly quoted someone who said :
>> Actually, it's a really, really terrible point since the numpad is
>> very useful.
>
> What do you use it for?

What symbols are on those keys?

It seems as a good guess that he use the keys because he want
those symbols.

Arne

From: Lew on
Lew wrote, quoted or indirectly quoted someone who said :
>>> Actually, it's a really, really terrible point since the numpad is
>>> very useful.

Roedy Green wrote:
>> What do you use it for?

Arne Vajhøj wrote:
> What symbols are on those keys?
>
> It seems as a good guess that he use the keys because he want
> those symbols.

Arne, you are a genius! You have unlocked the puzzle that has baffled the
greatest minds in our field! That's exactly what I use it for! Amazing!

--
Lew
From: Arne Vajhøj on
On 30-04-2010 13:43, Roedy Green wrote:
> On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 11:39:29 -0500, jebblue<n(a)n.nnn> wrote, quoted or
> indirectly quoted someone who said :
>> It only supports Windows and Mac, that makes it useless.
>
> Huh? I thought any Windows keyboard automatically worked on Linux.
> Does it need a special driver?

If it is a standard keyboard: yes.

If it has special keys that are not just sending sequences of
existing keys, then something is necessary to handle those keys.

Arne
From: Andreas Leitgeb on
Lew <noone(a)lewscanon.com> wrote:
>>>> Actually, it's a really, really terrible point since the numpad is
>>>> very useful.
>>> What do you use it for?
>> What symbols are on those keys? [...]
> Arne, you are a genius! [...] That's exactly what I use it for! Amazing!

There are of course also other uses than those: E.g. when I press Win+3/PgDn
my windowmanager will slam the currently active window into the lower right
corner. (and with Win+5 center it) These uses do not obviously follow from
the *symbols* on the keys as much as from their position.

I'm of course not disputing Arne's "likeliest guess" :-)
From: Andreas Leitgeb on
Arne Vajhøj <arne(a)vajhoej.dk> wrote:
> On 30-04-2010 13:43, Roedy Green wrote:
>> On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 11:39:29 -0500, jebblue<n(a)n.nnn> wrote, quoted or
>> indirectly quoted someone who said :
>>> It only supports Windows and Mac, that makes it useless.
>> Huh? I thought any Windows keyboard automatically worked on Linux.
>> Does it need a special driver?
> If it is a standard keyboard: yes.

"yes", as in: if it is a standard keyboard, then it works with linux...

> If it has special keys that are not just sending sequences of
> existing keys, then something is necessary to handle those keys.

Typical extra keys (open browser, open calc, forward/back, Home,
Mail, Vol-Up/Down, Play,Pause,...) work with Linux. They're usually
pre-assigned to reasonable application-launchers, and can be
re-assigned to whatyouwant by means of some dialog). So, this
"something" is already present in all the common linux-desktops.

Those mega-configurable keyboards had better support some default-
profile resembling a standard keyboard, or will give users a hard
time during bios-setup. Beyond that, there may be extra features
that may require (at least for the time until they're successfully
reverse-engineered) some special windows-driver.

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