Perhaps our unit got set on one handed mode.  This has happened to
folks, and I don't know why, but somehow the one handed mode comes on.  

  

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Paul
Henrichsen
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2004 5:39 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Braillenote] How could this have happened?

Hi, everyone. This is so bizarre, you won't believe it, but if you have 
ever seen this, I sure could use some suggestions.
I couldn't get active sync to work last evening. My systems disk had
some 
files in it that made it down to 6 mb instead of 7 where it usually is.
I 
decided to do a hard reset with j k l. I held down the keys and pressed 
reset. I let up on the keys as soon as it started talking adgain and
reset 
the date and time wehn prompted.
Still, active cync wouldn't work. I decided to do a soft reset with s d
f. 
Active sync then worked.
However, somewhere between the hard reset, It could have happened here,
or 
the soft reset, every key on the home row from a to the semicolon and
the 
left shift key no longer responded. Every other key on the keyboard
works 
just fine, just not those eight keys.
I have done hard and soft resets before without incident. Why this time,

would the bn fry eight keys on the home row?
The tech person figured it was a hardware issue and needed repair. He
said 
he always presses reset first then holds down the keys. Guess I will try

that next time, but now, I am afraid to ever do another reset<grin>.
So, it cost me $66 to send in my unit insured to get this repaired.
I just can't figure out what could have happened to screw up this
keyboard. 
You'd think with the cost of these things there would be better
cirrcuitry 
to ensure against power spikes or better keyboards so that holding down 
three keys while pressing reset wouldn't gry the entire row.
The tech person thought the keyboard might have been ready to go out,
but 
after only four months? I get less problems with a 20 dollar keyboard.
And the keyboard worked just fine until I did the reset. I figure it has
to 
be a voltage thing.
But, still it is pretty disappointing. I have been using my desktop 
keyboard for two years or more. My daughter has a 1500 dollar laptop
that 
she has had for over a year and neither keyboard has gone out.
What could have caused this and how can it be prevented in the future 
because I will most surely have to do another hard or soft reset at some
time?
Thanks.
Paul Henrichsen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<home.pacbell.net/paulh52>



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