On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 2:00 AM, Christopher Havel <[email protected]> wrote: > Regarding the keyboard... here's the secret. Get hook probes for your > multimeter. The little springloaded ones. (Google Image search if you don't > know.) That reduces it to a non-invasive half-hour process (or > thereabouts)... that's what it took me with an Adesso ACK-595 USB compact > keyboard. > > Hook to one row, one column, with your multimeter set to continuity. (This > may or may not be a challenge to identify.) Press a key. If you get a > match, move to the next column and the next key. Proceed systematically.
yep.... that's what i did. four hours later i had destroyed the connector because the graphite had come off. what partial information that did have was of no use. destroying a keyboard and examining the flexible PCB was what did it: i found that the layout was ROW1 ROW2 COL1 ROW3 COL2 ROW4 ROW5 COL3 nothing that was even remotely sensible! > As for the AnyTop. Body is a standard three-ring binder with the ring > module removed (that's what the drill is needed for -- #(^&$#@!! rivets). > Display is a Chinese clone of the WaveShare 7" 1024x600 "Type C" HDMI touch > display, ignoring the touch input. Keyboard and mouse are cheap compact > wired USB models. There is a four-port bus-powered USB hub (system unit has > only two ports... ew) that's an IOGEAR model I'm personally familiar with, > it's a gem from them. (I'd prefer a self-powered hub, but those get too > expensive too fast.) System unit is a WinTel CX-W8 or similar... Atom > Z3735F CPU, 2gb RAM, 32gb eMMC SSD.. so not a shabby amount of processing, then. not bad. l. _______________________________________________ arm-netbook mailing list [email protected] http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook Send large attachments to [email protected]
