On Wed 15 Dec 2021 at 16:53:54 (+), Tim Woodall wrote:
> I run the following command to switch my caps-lock to escape:
> xmodmap -e 'clear Lock' -e 'keycode 0x42 = Escape'
>
> However, if I disconnect and reconnect my keyboard (I have a KVM switch
> box so this happens quite a lot) the setting
isn't related to
pm-utils or suspend or hibernate. I have the same annoyance as the OP,
USB keyboard connected to a USB switch so that I can switch between my
work and personal computers in my home office easily. I have an alias fk
for fix keyboard which just runs xmodmap with some input, b
On 16/12/2021 01:53, Tim Woodall wrote:
I run the following command to switch my caps-lock to escape:
xmodmap -e 'clear Lock' -e 'keycode 0x42 = Escape'
However, if I disconnect and reconnect my keyboard (I have a KVM switch
box so this happens quite a lot) the setting is lost.
Before I start w
r-xorg: XKB settings lost after suspend (hibernate) / resume
or USB keyboard plugged in"
> Before I start writing udev rules to auto reapply this setting when the
> keyboard is (re)attached, is there some other, better, way to make this
> setting stick?
Note that this is a bit tricky
I run the following command to switch my caps-lock to escape:
xmodmap -e 'clear Lock' -e 'keycode 0x42 = Escape'
However, if I disconnect and reconnect my keyboard (I have a KVM switch
box so this happens quite a lot) the setting is lost.
Before I start writing udev rules to auto reapply this se
Hello,
i was also fighting with the same issue after upgrading to newer kernel.
The wiki
https://wiki.debian.org/Keyboard#How_to_enable_USB_keyboard_in_initramfs
helped me to figure out the problem. In short:
1. identify all kernel modules your USB keyboard is using/depends on
2. add those modules
I'm forced to work with an initrd to at least build the raid,
> decrypt the 2nd partition and provide the virtual disks before the full
> system is able to boot.
>
> Unfortunately I can't get my USB Keyboard to work. Neither in a rescue shell
> nor to type the decryp
rtual disks before the full system is able
to boot.
Unfortunately I can't get my USB Keyboard to work. Neither in a rescue shell
nor to type the decryption password.
I tried it with the 3.16.0-4-amd (generic) kernel by loading the proper
modules. The newer 3.16.7 Kernel I compiled myself bu
On 05/07/15 19:50, Andrew McGlashan wrote:
Most certainly the Debian of old, being stable and trustworthy has
been lost due to systemd adoption. I want old Debian back, not
Devuan, not Gentoo .. bring back the /real/ Debian, if only for server
use which has no need for systemd whatsoever. Leave
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On 6/07/2015 2:44 AM, Alef Farah wrote:
> On 2015-06-28 19:00, Don Armstrong wrote:
>> Contentless maligning of systemd and/or other parts of Debian are
>> not on topic on Debian mailing lists, and certainly not on topic
>> on -user. Please stop.
>>
On 2015-06-28 19:00, Don Armstrong wrote:
Contentless maligning of systemd and/or other parts of Debian are not on
topic on Debian mailing lists, and certainly not on topic on -user.
Please stop.
On the other hand, if there are bugs, file them with details, so they
can be fixed, like this very
On 29/06/2015 8:00 AM, Don Armstrong wrote:
> It's a bug in udev, which is now part of systemd.
EXACTLY, just why systemd is a problem, creeping in to other areas and
causing grief. So sad.
A.
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On Mon, 29 Jun 2015, Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> On 29/06/2015 2:36 AM, Michael Biebl wrote:
> > This might be
> > https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=789723
> >
> > Try upgrading to udev 221-1 or disabling
> > /lib/udev/rules.d/42-usb-hid-pm.rules by creating an empty file in /etc/
>
On 29/06/2015 2:36 AM, Michael Biebl wrote:
> This might be
> https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=789723
>
> Try upgrading to udev 221-1 or disabling
> /lib/udev/rules.d/42-usb-hid-pm.rules by creating an empty file in /etc/
> e.g. via
> "touch /etc/udev/rules.d/42-usb-hid-pm.rules"
Am 12.06.2015 um 12:08 schrieb Nicos Gollan:
> Hi all,
>
> Since I did a dist-upgrade (running unstable) on 2015-06-01, I'm having a
> rather annoying issue that the system will seemingly randomly drop keystrokes
> from my USB keyboard I tried disabling power management
On Fri, 12 Jun 2015, James Ensor wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 6:08 AM, Nicos Gollan wrote:
> > Since I did a dist-upgrade (running unstable) on 2015-06-01, I'm having a
> > rather annoying issue that the system will seemingly randomly drop
> > keystrokes
> &
On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 6:08 AM, Nicos Gollan wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Since I did a dist-upgrade (running unstable) on 2015-06-01, I'm having a
> rather annoying issue that the system will seemingly randomly drop keystrokes
> from my USB keyboard I tried disabling power manage
Hi all,
Since I did a dist-upgrade (running unstable) on 2015-06-01, I'm having a
rather annoying issue that the system will seemingly randomly drop keystrokes
from my USB keyboard I tried disabling power management for that device, but
that doesn't help.
This is happening on two
deloptes wrote:
> For me it is still a big question why this is not working after system
> boot
The answer is that the new laptop uses usb3 with xhci_hcd/pci.
The resolution was to put those modules including usbhid and hid_generic
in /etc/initramfs-tools/modules and update the initramfs.
Now aft
strings: Mfr=1, Product=2,
SerialNumber=0
[ 5322.724339] usb 2-4.2.1: Product: USB Keyboard
[ 5322.724340] usb 2-4.2.1: Manufacturer:
[ 5322.724499] usb 2-4.2.1: ep 0x81 - rounding interval to 64 microframes,
ep desc says 80 microframes
[ 5322.724504] usb 2-4.2.1: ep 0x82 - rounding interval to 64
Never give up - after trying different options examining different files I
manage it to break all setup and no kbd or mouse working.
Than I did
apt-get --reinstall install xserver-xorg-input-kbd xserver-xorg-input-evdev
xserver-xorg-input-evdev-dbg
and all is working fine - the multimedia keys a
Petter Adsen wrote:
> On Sun, 29 Mar 2015 19:38:14 +0200
> deloptes wrote:
>
>> Petter Adsen wrote:
>>
>> > xev -event keyboard
>>
>> No they do not - any idea what direction I should dig.
>
> Do you use a DE or a WM? Which one?
I use trinity KDE3 that is now TDE r14
>
>> I see this in the
On Sun, 29 Mar 2015 19:38:14 +0200
deloptes wrote:
> Petter Adsen wrote:
>
> > xev -event keyboard
>
> No they do not - any idea what direction I should dig.
Do you use a DE or a WM? Which one?
> I see this in the Xorg.0.log
>
> [143241.089] (**) Option "xkb_rules" "evdev"
That's OK.
> [14
Petter Adsen wrote:
> xev -event keyboard
No they do not - any idea what direction I should dig.
I see this in the Xorg.0.log
[143241.089] (**) Option "xkb_rules" "evdev"
[143241.089] (**) Option "xkb_model" "a4techKB21"
[143241.089] (**) Option "xkb_layout" "us,de,bg"
[143241.089] (**) Option
o use.
> On the notebook the multimedia keys (Volume Up/Down and Mute) work
> fine, but on the external USB keyboard they stopped working.
> I see evdev in Xorg.0.log and information related to the usb keyboard.
If you run "xev -event keyboard", focus the window and press some of
the
, but
on the external USB keyboard they stopped working.
I see evdev in Xorg.0.log and information related to the usb keyboard.
Thanks in advance
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On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 22:19:59 +0100
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Joe a écrit :
> >
> > USB is a moderately complex networking protocol
>
> USB is not a networking protocol.
> It is a master-slave peripheral communication bus, just like PCI or
> SATA.
>
>
It is not peer to peer, but neither is it
Joe a écrit :
>
> USB is a moderately complex networking protocol
USB is not a networking protocol.
It is a master-slave peripheral communication bus, just like PCI or SATA.
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> On Fri, 6 Mar 2015 12:26:40 + (UTC)
> "Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum" wrote:
>
>
>> The keyboard is a custom build and cannot
>> be replaced.
I don't know what was done to customize the keyboard. But can it be replaced
for a few days/weeks (longer that it takes the regular one to crash), to see
On Fri, 6 Mar 2015 12:26:40 + (UTC)
"Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum" wrote:
>
> At the (obvious in retrospect) suggestion of someone elsethread, I
> did just get a 6" extention cable, thus making it trivial to re-plug
> it when this happens. I'd rather it just works in the first place,
> but this wi
- Original Message -
> From: Gary Dale
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Cc:
> Sent: Monday, March 2, 2015 11:05 AM
> Subject: Re: USB keyboard required replugging--how to avoid?
>
> On 02/03/15 08:22 AM, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
>
>> Hi, i h
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On 03/03/15 02:22, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
> The problem is that the new box has hard-to-access USB ports, so in
> order to replug the keyboard, I have to remove a panel, so its not
> just a quick step.
In the event you can't fix it properly (fau
On 02/03/15 08:22 AM, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
Hi, i have a USB keyboard that, every week or three, will drop off, and require
replugging to work again. It is immediately recognized and works fine after I
do this This was the case on a previous Wheezy system, and it still happens on
a
Hi, i have a USB keyboard that, every week or three, will drop off, and require
replugging to work again. It is immediately recognized and works fine after I
do this This was the case on a previous Wheezy system, and it still happens on
a Jessie box I built.
The problem is that the new box has
On Thursday, July 10, 2014 7:30:02 AM UTC+5:30, Kitty Cat wrote:
> I have two questions:
> 1. Would anyone be willing to give me a link to a simple USB keyboard that you
> think would work with this machine at boot time? Perhaps on Amazon.com or
> Newegg.com, etc.?
> 2. Do you know
On 07/09/2014 06:50 PM, Kitty Cat wrote:
I have two questions:
1. Would anyone be willing to give me a link to a simple USB keyboard
that you
think would work with this machine at boot time? Perhaps on Amazon.com or
Newegg.com, etc.?
2. Do you know of a Debian CD of some type that will load
I have two questions:
1. Would anyone be willing to give me a link to a simple USB keyboard that
you
think would work with this machine at boot time? Perhaps on Amazon.com or
Newegg.com, etc.?
2. Do you know of a Debian CD of some type that will load a kernel without
the
need of a key press
On Sat, 28 Jun 2014 10:57:23 -0700
"Thomas D. Dean" wrote:
> Maybe you need to clear the BIOS settings? I have never had to do
> that.
From what he said, he's done that (although removing the battery
don't work, except if you wait for "some time" because of the
capacitor(s) power backup).
IF th
There is sometimes a very short window to access the BIOS.
On my (different) system, as soon as I power up, I start tapping the F2
key, about 2 times per second. After several seconds, I get into BIOS.
There may be some exact moment to press F2 one time, but, I have not
found it.
I can not
On 28/06/2014 11:35 PM, Kent West wrote:
> I had a computer once which exhibited this behavior. It's not
> Debian-related; it's hardware related. I couldn't even get into the
> BIOS, etc. i never found a solution. I gave up on the computer and gave
> it to a friend who was happy running Windows. I'
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 03:39:57PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> No, she doesn't. Mea culpa. I shouldn't dive in etc.
Oops, sorry. Replied to your previous message before reading this one.
Perhaps I should follow your advice.
Cheers,
Tom
--
A tall, dark stranger will have more fun than you.
s
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 03:31:51PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> She's got a USB keyboard. She needs a ps/2, and tehse are almost
> unobtainable.
Except a PS/2 keyboard won't help either since the computer doesn't have
PS/2 ports.
Cheers,
Tom
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10.0 times 0
On Saturday 28 June 2014 15:31:51 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> She needs a ps/2, and tehse are almost
> unobtainable.
No, she doesn't. Mea culpa. I shouldn't dive in etc.
Lisi
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On Saturday 28 June 2014 08:39:45 Kitty Cat wrote:
> since there is no option for a PS/2 keyboard,
Sorry. I reacted too glibly. :-(
Lisi
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On Saturday 28 June 2014 08:02:39 Terence wrote:
> A quick hardware fix is to buy a cheap (and some are very cheap- even in
> the UK!) usb key-board.
She's got a USB keyboard. She needs a ps/2, and tehse are almost
unobtainable.
Lisi
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On Fri, 27 Jun 2014 23:11:48 -0600
Kitty Cat wrote:
> http://www.intel.com/support/motherboards/desktop/sb/CS-023466.htm
Don't trust the manufacturer specs as most of the time
your mobo has been modified according to the (big)
purchaser specs.
Did you try all Fn keys (several times, some BIOS
On 6/28/14, 8:42 AM, Kent West wrote:
On 6/28/14, 8:35 AM, Kent West wrote:
On 6/27/14, 9:12 PM, Kitty Cat wrote:
I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until
Windows loads.
I had a computer once which exhibited this behavior. It's not
Debian-related; it
On 6/28/14, 8:35 AM, Kent West wrote:
On 6/27/14, 9:12 PM, Kitty Cat wrote:
I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until
Windows loads.
I had a computer once which exhibited this behavior. It's not
Debian-related; it's hardware related. I couldn'
On 6/27/14, 9:12 PM, Kitty Cat wrote:
I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until Windows
loads.
I bought a used MPC computer that only has USB ports -- No PS/2 ports.
The machine currently has Windows installed.
When installing Debian, it is required to pres
On Fri, 27 Jun 2014 20:12:11 -0600
Kitty Cat wrote:
> I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until Windows
> loads.
OK. So do the early stage of the install from Windows.
http://people.debian.org/~rmh/goodbye-microsoft/
You might also want to complain to you
y keyboard didn't work I couldn't tell
> the computer to start the Debian installer from the Windows bootloader
> menu, so I only had the option of starting Windows. I had the same problem
> with booting the Debian DVD directly. My USB keyboard was not working yet,
> so I could
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 03:34:23AM -0600, Kitty Cat wrote:
> After all my poking and prodding, I am thinking that maybe it needs a
> certain type of USB keyboard in order to have a working keyboard at boot. I
> know that some USB devices have to have drivers before the computer knows
>
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 11:11:48PM -0600, Kitty Cat wrote:
> So, what I think I need to do is find a way to get the Debian install DVD
> to bypass the need to press a key until such time that a USB keyboard
> driver loads or something like that.
I'd try a 'Live CD' first
ng, I am thinking that maybe it needs a
certain type of USB keyboard in order to have a working keyboard at boot. I
know that some USB devices have to have drivers before the computer knows
what to do with them. I'm thinking that may be the case with my keyboard
but not sure. Maybe the mobo s
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 01:39:45AM -0600, Kitty Cat wrote:
> I'm thinking that a previous owner turned off the legacy USB keyboard
> support in the CMOS and since there is no option for a PS/2 keyboard, I
> think it may be stuck without keyboard access at boot time.
If you can fin
My USB keyboard is connected directly to the computer. I have also tried it
in every USB port on the computer.
The keyboard doesn't even work at the Windows bootloader menu or the Grub
menu or the menu I get when I boot the Debian DVD.
I did manage to get Debian installed as I said in my
When you try to access BIOS from thekeyboard, make sure the keyboard is
connected directly to the computer, not through a hub.
Tom Dean
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so I only had the option of starting Windows. I had the same problem
with booting the Debian DVD directly. My USB keyboard was not working yet,
so I could not start the installer.
So, after some thinking, I found this free program for managing the Windows
bootloader:
https://neosmart.net/Ea
On 06/27/14 22:11, Kitty Cat wrote:
Yes. I have previously searched and found such things like this:
Bios may access the keyboard without turning on any leds.
Look at
http://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch000192.htm
Turn on power to the computer. As soon as you do this, start pressing
the F
._
>
> I can only use USB keyboards and mice with it. The keyboard does not work
> until _after_ Windows loads.
>
> If I boot the Debian install DVD, the menu comes up, but I am unable to
> press any buttons because the USB keyboard driver is not loaded or
> something similar.
>
I can only use USB keyboards and mice with it. The keyboard does not work
until _after_ Windows loads.
If I boot the Debian install DVD, the menu comes up, but I am unable to
press any buttons because the USB keyboard driver is not loaded or
something similar.
So, what I think I need to do is fin
On Fri, 27 Jun 2014 20:12:11 -0600
Kitty Cat wrote:
> "MPC CLIENTPRO 385"
There are plenty of answers on… search engines (even how to
access the BIOS on a MPC).
--
M.AimeDormir : So, how is it going with your new boyfriend?
AoiSora : Super great, I love him! He'll be the father of my children
I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until Windows
loads.
I bought a used MPC computer that only has USB ports -- No PS/2 ports.
The machine currently has Windows installed.
When installing Debian, it is required to press a button during the boot
sequence in order
On Sun, 2014-06-08 at 10:46 -0400, Stephen Allen wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 08, 2014 at 12:14:56AM +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> > On Sat, 2014-06-07 at 15:04 -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
> > > Hmmm...
> > >
> > > I originally reported this back in November.
> > >
> > > After a while, it went away for me.
On Sun, Jun 08, 2014 at 12:14:56AM +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Sat, 2014-06-07 at 15:04 -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
> > Hmmm...
> >
> > I originally reported this back in November.
> >
> > After a while, it went away for me. Downloading the latest (about January
> > time-frame) "netinst" imag
On Sun, 2014-06-08 at 00:14 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Sat, 2014-06-07 at 15:04 -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
> > Hmmm...
> >
> > I originally reported this back in November.
> >
> > After a while, it went away for me. Downloading the latest (about January
> > time-frame) "netinst" image worke
On Sat, 2014-06-07 at 15:04 -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
> Hmmm...
>
> I originally reported this back in November.
>
> After a while, it went away for me. Downloading the latest (about January
> time-frame) "netinst" image worked fine -- both Jessie and Wheezy. I haven't
> tried it recently, th
Hmmm...
I originally reported this back in November.
After a while, it went away for me. Downloading the latest (about January
time-frame) "netinst" image worked fine -- both Jessie and Wheezy. I haven't
tried it recently, though.
Possibly a regression?
Rick
PS: Jessie on a powerpc64 (Appl
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 5:15 PM, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have a Bus 004 Device 002: ID 047b:0011 Silitek Corp. SK-1688U Keyboard
>> that works perfectly.
>> But not with the mondorescue DVD. So I need to find out what modules are
>> needed for that keyboard
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Hi,
I have a Bus 004 Device 002: ID 047b:0011 Silitek Corp. SK-1688U
Keyboard that works perfectly.
But not with the mondorescue DVD. So I need to find out what modules are
needed for that keyboard to function. How do I do that?
Thanks!
when I do a 'lsusb -t' I see f
Hi,
I have a Bus 004 Device 002: ID 047b:0011 Silitek Corp. SK-1688U
Keyboard that works perfectly.
But not with the mondorescue DVD. So I need to find out what modules are
needed for that keyboard to function. How do I do that?
Thanks!
Hugo
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AMD64 computers with
wireless keyboards and mice. However, i had no problem after I plugged
in a USB keyboard.
Perhaps you could try another USB or standard keyboard for installation,
and change it back afterwards.
Good luck!
Terence
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Hi, all!
I just downloaded the powerpc netinst installer from
/cdimage/daily-builds/daily/arch-latest/powerpc/iso-cd
debian-testing-powerpc-netinst.iso 2013-11-24 23:02 257M
I checked the md5 and sha1 sums, and burned it to CD. All went well.
But when I booted it (on two different G4 m
On Wed, 20 Mar 2013 19:39:22 -0700 (PDT)
Paul Zimmerman wrote:
> A cheapie USB keyboard seems to cause a problem for the current kernel. It
> DOES work, and I am typing this message with it. But every time the system
> boots with this keyboard plugged into a USB port it takes an unusu
On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 7:39 PM, Paul Zimmerman wrote:
> A cheapie USB keyboard seems to cause a problem for the current kernel. It
> DOES work, and I am typing this message with it. But every time the system
> boots with this keyboard plugged into a USB port it takes an unusually lon
A cheapie USB keyboard seems to cause a problem for the current kernel. It DOES
work, and I am typing this message with it. But every time the system boots
with this keyboard plugged into a USB port it takes an unusually long time
sitting at the "waiting for /dev to be fully populated"
On 16/07/12 15:52, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 16 iul 12, 11:27:52, Steve Brumby wrote:
How can I log a bug with Keyboard USB?
With Debian Squeezy (arm) on the Raspberry Pi and Raspbian the keyboard
gets random repeats, but with Archlinuxarm no problems.
As there's no problems with exactly the
Hello Steve Brumby,
Am 2012-07-16 11:27:52, hacktest Du folgendes herunter:
> How can I log a bug with Keyboard USB?
>
> With Debian Squeezy (arm) on the Raspberry Pi and Raspbian the keyboard
> gets random repeats, but with Archlinuxarm no problems.
> As there's no problems with exactly the same
On Lu, 16 iul 12, 11:27:52, Steve Brumby wrote:
> How can I log a bug with Keyboard USB?
>
> With Debian Squeezy (arm) on the Raspberry Pi and Raspbian the keyboard
> gets random repeats, but with Archlinuxarm no problems.
> As there's no problems with exactly the same hardware configuration with
On Mon, 16 Jul 2012 11:27:52 +0200, Steve Brumby wrote:
(please, no html posts... thanks)
> How can I log a bug with Keyboard USB?
>
> With Debian Squeezy (arm) on the Raspberry Pi and Raspbian the keyboard
> gets random repeats, but with Archlinuxarm no problems. As there's no
> problems with e
How can I log a bug with Keyboard USB?
With Debian Squeezy (arm) on the Raspberry Pi and Raspbian the keyboard
gets random repeats, but with Archlinuxarm no problems.
As there's no problems with exactly the same hardware configuration with
Archlinux I suspect there's something in the Debian build
19. März 2012 18:25 schrieb Kelly Clowers :
> On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 04:55, Christian Frey
> wrote:
>> OK, let's write it up properly ;)
>
>
>> Then I attached the Logitech K340 USB keyboard, the keyboard
>> works but the language settings don't, i.e. I hav
On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 04:55, Christian Frey
wrote:
> OK, let's write it up properly ;)
> Then I attached the Logitech K340 USB keyboard, the keyboard
> works but the language settings don't, i.e. I have obviously a GB
> layout. The only way to change this so far is to
On Mon, 19 Mar 2012 12:55:35 +0100, Christian Frey wrote:
> OK, let's write it up properly ;)
(...)
I already replied to this in your first thread.
Greetings,
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El 2012-03-19 a las 12:54 +0100, Christian Frey escribió:
(resending to the list)
> Additional remark:
>
> 1.) What is then the difference between xkbmap and xkblayout? maybe one
> could write xkbmap into the /etc/default/keyboard.
>
> thx
My guess is that the above file is respected but not i
ard format" :-?
> >
> > Greetings,
> OK, let's write it up properly ;)
>
> 1.) During Installation of Wheezy, I had to exchange my Logitech K340 with
> a PS/2 keyboard in order to install Wheezy as the USB-Keyboard did not
> react in the installer of Wheezy (a
OK, let's write it up properly ;)
1.) During Installation of Wheezy, I had to exchange my Logitech K340
with a PS/2 keyboard in order to install Wheezy as the USB-Keyboard
did not react in the installer of Wheezy (although it did in the BIOS
and also, interestingly, in Squeeze installer -
On Sat, 17 Mar 2012 20:36:18 +0100, Christian Frey wrote:
> Hey together,
Wow... what a mess. Sir, no html postings, please.
(...)
> I have to say that I want to have the system language English and the
> locale Region setting set to Switzerland as well as the Keyboard. The
> System Setting GUI
>
> Hey together,
>
> I have installed Debian Wheezy without larger problems, except that I have
> used an old PS2 Keyboard Swiss German for installation instead of the USB
> Swiss German one as this did not work - also not in the text mode. After
> first start of Debian, my PS2 Swiss German keyboa
finds this
message useful. thanks Bob.
--
Ram.
On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 1:40 AM, Bob Proulx wrote:
> ramasamy t wrote:
> > I have a problem with usb-keyboard while installing the debian squeeze. I
> > mean the key board is not detected after DVD booting starts, so the
> screen
>
ramasamy t wrote:
> I have a problem with usb-keyboard while installing the debian squeeze. I
> mean the key board is not detected after DVD booting starts, so the screen
> keeps waiting for input from user to press 'install' in the first GUI that
> appears from DVD
>
Hi
I have a problem with usb-keyboard while installing the debian squeeze. I
mean the key board is not detected after DVD booting starts, so the screen
keeps waiting for input from user to press 'install' in the first GUI that
appears from DVD
I am trying to install debian squeeze us
> I'm thinking of getting a USB keyboard to use with my laptop. Is there
> anything I should know about compatibility issues?
>
Some of the extra features of the fancier usb keyboards might take a
bit of a configuring, but I've never had a usb keyboard which - as a
basic key
I'm thinking of getting a USB keyboard to use with my laptop. Is there
anything I should know about compatibility issues?
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Bob Proulx wrote:
> Maybe one day all computers can use a free software BIOS that we can see and
> understand.
>
> http://www.coreboot.org/Welcome_to_coreboot
Nice project.
Although I love your idea, I believe, as long as MB-manufactors don't use that
project - or at least support it, your id
Geronimo wrote:
> Bob Proulx wrote:
> > In which case an update to the BIOS may be needed.
>
> I was pretty faithless about your hint. But ...
> ... I went to hell for that fu...nny BIOS update (without any M$-System and
> without floppy - no way :(
> I had to dig for my old floppy drive) and a
Hi Bob,
first of all thank you for your attention.
Bob Proulx wrote:
> It sounds like your BIOS is not supporting legacy usb devices. Boot
> to your BIOS setup page and look for an option that says something
> like Enable Legacy USB Devices.
My BIOS was dated from this year and it had no opti
Geronimo wrote:
> I have some trouble with grub2 and usb-keyboard.
> The keyboard works with BIOS and after booting with X - but grub2 does not
> accept any keystroke.
>
> If I wonna change the boot device selection, I have to plug in a ps2
> keyboard, which is quite a bit a
Hi,
I have some trouble with grub2 and usb-keyboard.
The keyboard works with BIOS and after booting with X - but grub2 does not
accept any keystroke.
If I wonna change the boot device selection, I have to plug in a ps2 keyboard,
which is quite a bit annoying.
What can I do to get grub2 accept
On Thu, Nov 25, 2010 at 10:03 AM, Klistvud wrote:
> Dne, 25. 11. 2010 12:06:17 je Andrei Popescu napisal(a):
>
> Good point! Is there any chance of /etc/default/grub being overwritten when
> the Grub package is updated?
You're prompted whether to install the maintainer's version or keep
your own
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