Has anybody tested the new RasPi Keyboard?
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Alan Williams (2601) 88 posts |
Does anybody know if the new Raspberry Pi keyboards are RISC OS compatible? Particularly do they handle BREAK, CTRL-BREAK and ALT-BREAK? I have some of those small format keyboards which don’t seem to do this, and I am wondering if replacing with Pi ones would be better. Alan |
Stuart Painting (5389) 714 posts |
I bought one roughly 18 months ago, and it looks exactly like the the one currently advertised on the Raspberry Pi website. I’m hoping this is the same one.
The keyboard I’ve got doesn’t, no. KeyMapper can be used to map another key (e.g. PrtScn) to behave as Break, after which Alt-PrtScn invokes System Monitor and Ctrl-PrtScn will reboot the machine. Also, bear in mind that the keyboard has a built-in hub, so will trigger the “No keyboard present – autobooting” bug on a Pi 1, Pi 2 or Pi 3. |
Frederick Bambrough (1372) 837 posts |
… and Pi 4. Lightbulb! Thanks. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
I’m curious, why is everyone so fascinated with having a small, cramped keyboard with missing keys when they could use a normal layout keyboard? |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Easy, Steve. A little 7 inch screen like the one I bought, a Pi, a largish dual output battery, a small keyboard, an old Kleenex box, and half a roll of gaffer tape… …instant RISC OS portable for under a hundred quid. ;-) |
Stuart Painting (5389) 714 posts |
In my case it’s for ease of storage. A compact keyboard – including the Official Raspberry Pi keyboard – fits comfortably inside a well-known box manufacturer’s 4-litre box: this allows me to store the Pi 4, keyboard, mouse, PSU and cables in one box. If I wanted a full-sized keyboard I’d have to use an 18-litre box (with the keyboard stored diagonally) – a decidedly more bulky solution. Bear in mind that the Pi 4 is still “under test” (my main RISC OS machine is a Pi 3B+ with a full-size keyboard) so the keyboard on the Pi 4 doesn’t get much use at present. If I were planning to write a magnum opus I’d switch to a full-size keyboard. |
John WILLIAMS (8368) 493 posts |
Is there a construction guide page on your site? |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
and
Ah, understand now. A generation or so on from my Beagle-xM in a DD3 (IIRC) tape box with drill outs for the various ports. Has anyone done the wireless keyboard/mouse thing and established which work? For your boxed up packages the lack of cables reduces clutter. |
Andrew McCarthy (3688) 605 posts |
I recently purchased a new mouse, wireless and it works out of the box – RISC OS – Logitech M220: No issues so far… :-) |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Since all my often-needed systems are now HDMI- and USB-based, I returned to the good old “one screen, one keyboard, one mouse” setup with the help of a 4K-capable 16 port KVM switch. Works a treat with three PCs, ARMX6, Titanium, MISTer and a selection of Pis. |
George T. Greenfield (154) 748 posts |
How do you choose which one to use – toss a coin? ;-) |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
It would need multiple coin tosses, so I have instead a sophisticated random number generator running on an IGEPv5 and a BeagleBoard-xM and a PandaBoard ES, and rolling a dice chooses the machine to supply the result ;-) Seriously – MISTer is for the Retro Archimedes (and C64 and Amiga and Atari and Amstrad…) experience without having to keep a museum of old machines ready-to-run. The PCs are for browsing and using RPCEmu to develop software. Titanium if I need the speed. ARMX6 if I need some speed and also 4K video. The Pis (especially Pi3 and 4) are mostly for compatibility testing on ARMv8. So every machine has its strengths and uses. |
David J. Ruck (33) 1635 posts |
I assume it’s the raspberry-pi-keyboard-and-hub we are talking about? It’s a laptop keyboard as used my 11.3" ASUS Vivobook, with small unpowered USB hub stuck underneath. It’s ok for very occasional use (such as typing in this reply), but I’d opt for a full size keyboard with full travel keys for any serious use. |
Frederick Bambrough (1372) 837 posts |
Except it works now with 5.28 and RPi4 and the hub works with all 3 sockets. Shame about the Break key. |
Jessica Bennett (8655) 1 post |
I’m curious, why is everyone so fascinated with having a small, cramped keyboard with missing keys when they could use a normal layout keyboard? |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Not everyone is, Jessica 8~) But a great big heat sink is interesting. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
That’s exactly what I said, including comma’s, 1 month and 4 days ago. |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Long enough that only the original writer would notice…I’m in the unhappy position of having, many moons ago on this forum, failed to notice my own words echoing back, and agreeing with the apammer…I think it may have been you, Steve, who drew my attention to the fact. |
Alan Williams (2601) 88 posts |
The solution to not having a BREAK key on a small ‘Apple’ like usb keyboard was to get KeyMapper from here: Make a ‘keymapper’ directory, I put it in $.utilities RMEnsure 0.00 RMLoad <Obey$Dir>.KeyMapper I then added this obey file to “Run at Startup” list in !Boot → Boot → Run Use the key codes from here: Now I have ALT-PrtScr and CTRL-PrtScr instead of ALT & CTRL BREAK. |
David J. Ruck (33) 1635 posts |
I’ve just treated myself to a very expensive Logitech keyboard and mouse, got it all working with Linux then switched to RISC OS. After a while I need to Alt+Break a stalled application, and disaster – I realised I didn’t have a break key! Luckily after a bit of googling I found that Break could be done with an Fn+B, so Alt+Break and Ctrl+Break work, but require more fingers. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
Expensive and switching? K780?
Keymapper. |
David J. Ruck (33) 1635 posts |
Its the MX Keys and MX Master 3. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
I’m trying to think of something to express how f’n expensive the two are individually and collectively. |
Stuart Swales (1481) 351 posts |
Eeeh, that’s nowt. I remember paying over £100 for a replacement Archimedes keyboard in early 90s. |
David J. Ruck (33) 1635 posts |
Worth it for something that’s used 16 hours a day while working from home. The previous keyboard and mouse which I’d borrowed from Louie’s Iyonix Aria Cube 11 years ago, were past their best. |
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