Buddy: It's interesting to me that you get a scan code for the fn key. That should prove valuable in the end, though I'm not in a position to advise how to code for it. What I think would be very useful on the Thinkpad is to create a key function, perhaps FN+Control that pops up the keyboard. Thinkpads are great machines, but the Shift+ScrollLock thing to access the pop up numeric has got to go. On Mon, 12 Nov 2001, Buddy Brannan wrote: > Hi guys, > > OK, I actually have a keyboard layout that I like better than the last > one I submitted. I shifted everything down one row for the most part, > moved the stuff on the bottom up to the number keys on the top, > changed a couple of other keypad assignments...but it's more > consistent with the keypad definitions on the numeric keypad. I think > I might build a kernel with that keypad so I can use right alt-q to > silence the Speakup boot messages on my laptop. But I'm running into a > little behavior, and I wonder if anyone has a clue what I can do about > it? ("Don't press that key" is an answer I've already thought of.) > > The FN key on my Thinkpad A21M does not, as I mentioned, activate an > embedded numeric keypad. It does do some other things (at least in a > non-Linux OS). In Linux, however, all it seems to do is stick a > message like > Keyboard: Unknown scan code 0e 63 > > It's something like that, but obviously i'm not typing this on that > keyboard. > > I tried running showkey, but it did the same thing with that > particular key. > > Anyone have any ideas about this particular key and how I can make use > of it (or at least get rid of the error message)? > -- Janina Sajka, Director Technology Research and Development Governmental Relations Group American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) Email: janina at afb.net Phone: (202) 408-8175 Chair, Accessibility SIG Open Electronic Book Forum (OEBF) http://www.openebook.org Will electronic books surpass print books? Read our white paper, Surpassing Gutenberg, at http://www.afb.org/ebook.asp Download a free sample Digital Talking Book edition of Martin Luther King Jr's inspiring "I Have A Dream" speech at http://www.afb.org/mlkweb.asp Learn how to make accessible software at http://www.afb.org/accessapp.asp