Example:
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The quick brown foooooooooooooooox jumps over the lazy dog
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The quick brown foooooooooooooooox jumps over the lazy dog
I don't nearly have the expertise to be able to do this myself, any idea where I can pay someone to do it for me?EDIT: Best way to fix this is a bolt mod, you can pay someone else to do it or do it yourself. I believe it is definitely worth the effort.
It can happen to any key that I was typing on.fohat wrote: ↑If it is always the same key, pull the key stem, examine and clean everything well, and carefully re-seat it.
I'm running Windows 7 on one computer and 10 on another. Happens on both machines.dwasifar wrote: ↑I have had that happen on my laptop keyboard. It's usually the result of some sort of fatfinger tangle-up where I press too many keys at once. I can't reproduce it, but it always follows that kind of thing. What OS are you running?
Yeah I'm using a cheap converter. Could that be the reason?Muirium wrote: ↑Strange.
Your SSK looks in good shape. And Model Ms are typically very well behaved at debouncing. Are you using a cheapo PS/2 > USB converter by any chance?
Those are cheap! Good to know, I have two of those blue USB converters from clickeykeyboards.comshreebles wrote: ↑These have been proven quite reliable for me so far:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/USB-PS-2-Adapte ... SwuTxV-E8h
Soarer's / Teensy is a whole "thing" unto itself and is very versatile. You can program it with your key mappings, for example, and not have to worry with software if you take it to another computer.suclearnub wrote: ↑Unfortunately I don't think of them ships over to where I live. I saw a... Soarer's Converter? on eBay, and they're quite expensive. Are those worth taking a look at?
Got a link to where to buy it? I'm new to all of this vintage stuffMuirium wrote: ↑A Pro Micro can handle this kind of work on the cheap. But involves soldering etc.
Go for one of Orihalcon's pricey but good converter cables. They're worth it for the effort saved!