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Date:      Thu, 10 Nov 2011 20:20:21 +0100
From:      Michael Cardell Widerkrantz <mc@hack.org>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: X server and xinit works excellent....almost.
Message-ID:  <86lirniy2y.fsf@kropotkin.hack.org>
References:  <4EB88225.9020702@bredband.net> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1111080806260.70888@wonkity.com> <20111108205600.7a8e0205.freebsd@edvax.de> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1111081321010.72738@wonkity.com> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1111081331150.72921@wonkity.com> <20111108215114.24d336e6.freebsd@edvax.de> <4EBA5EBD.7020501@bredband.net> <86pqh1njww.fsf@kropotkin.hack.org> <30329CB5-03FA-4717-81E6-43CC9CE43713@mac.com> <86ipmsl1ee.fsf@kropotkin.hack.org> <0953CCAB-C764-413C-9A13-ED5E77D1AEC4@mac.com>

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Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com>, 2011-11-10 20:12 (+0100):

> Different keycaps means a different product SKU, at least. If they use
> the same USB product ID

Yes. I think this is a quite common scenario.

> FreeBSD's users generally are more technically inclined and might be
> willing to deal with this, but even so, I suspect that most folks
> would appreciate the system trying to figure out that an AZERTY
> keyboard layout means French, that JIS means Japanese, that QWERTZ
> probably indicates German / Swiss / Hungarian, etc.

Certainly.

> To my mind, though, that's a fallback for when you have a KVM or a
> PS/2-to-USB converter or suchlike in the way that prevents the device
> from being correctly recognized.

Or when you have, say, a keyboard that physically is an ANSI keyboard
(one less physical key compared to ISO keyboards) but still want, say, a
Swedish keymap or, indeed, your very own keymap, unlike any other. Like
me when I'm using one of my Happy Hacking Keyboards. Topre switches FTW!

-- 
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