Greetings, Bryan Berns! > On Wed, Aug 26, 2015 at 8:23 AM, Andrey Repin <anrdae...@yandex.ru> wrote: >> Greetings, Corinna Vinschen! >> >>> On Aug 26 12:56, Helmut Karlowski wrote: >>>> > > Guess that's better than to stick with the kludges, migration to 10 is >>>> > > on the way. >>>> > From what I've seen and heard W10, while mostly stable, still coerces >>>> > users >>>> > towards the software as (an expensive) service model and follows the >>>> > dictum >>>> > that Microsoft knows more about what you want than you do (default saves >>>> > to >>>> > microsoft cloud storage, grabs your pictures for background slide show >>>> > without asking, etc.). >>>> >>>> I hope I can customize it to behave like XP (only the goodies of >>>> course). >> >>> http://classicshell.net >> >> That doesn't solve the hotkeys bound at driver levels, unfortunately. >> Half of my keyboard dead now thanks to the move to Win7. >> >> Anyway, on the topic: All I could ask is to give us a notice when the final >> build for XP is available, so that we could prepare own mirrors.
> If you're passionate about it and you have any programming experience, > keyboard filter drivers are quite easy to write. You don't even need to write anything - standard driver allows key remapping through registry, if that's what you have in mind. The driver is not a problem, though, it is OS that register hotkeys in the kernel. > Only annoying thing > is you need a signing certificate that is authorized for kernel code > signing -- which is only available to companies and some slightly more > expensive issuing authorities for individuals. Now, that is not an issue. :) At all. -- With best regards, Andrey Repin Sunday, August 30, 2015 04:51:17 Sorry for my terrible english... -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple