Personal computing discussed
Moderators: renee, mac_h8r1, Nemesis
DancinJack wrote:Ditch that Logitech monstrosity with its 25 experience "enhancing" keys and buy a real keyboard. ###not trying to derail thread - just a suggestion###
yogibbear wrote:Changed a USB speed setting from "HiSpeed" to "FullSpeed" (where full speed is either lower wattage, or at least lower bandwidth)...
yogibbear wrote:unless I force the USB ports to run slower
A_Pickle wrote:I want a Logitech G110. I really don't understand the hype for mechanical keyboards. Like, I really, really don't.
yogibbear wrote:yogibbear wrote:unless I force the USB ports to run slower
Yeah, I know. It is pissing me off.
just brew it! wrote:A_Pickle wrote:I want a Logitech G110. I really don't understand the hype for mechanical keyboards. Like, I really, really don't.
I suspect that quite a few of the die-hard mechanical fans learned how to type on them when they were younger. To me, nothing else has ever felt quite right. The younger converts are people who really like the tactile feedback and don't mind the noise. It's a personal thing.
PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.
derFunkenstein wrote:While this is not going to be helpful for getting into the BIOS, what if you get a USB 2.0 card separate? Does it work that way in the OS?
just brew it! wrote:derFunkenstein wrote:While this is not going to be helpful for getting into the BIOS, what if you get a USB 2.0 card separate? Does it work that way in the OS?
I already suggested that... but given that I'm also guilty of not carefully reading the whole thread, I guess I shouldn't criticize.
just brew it! wrote:Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.
This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.
notfred wrote:just brew it! wrote:Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.
This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.
notfred wrote:just brew it! wrote:Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.