Bill Longman <[email protected]> [10-08-17 20:16]:
> On 08/17/2010 10:56 AM, Albert Hopkins wrote:
> > On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 19:20 +0200, [email protected] wrote:
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >>  on YouTube there was a Blender-2.5 tutorial with audio. 
> >>  There was an interesting detail: While there were spoken
> >>  instructions one can hear one typing on its keyboard.
> >>  Each hit on one of the keys made the sound of an old
> >>  typewriter (no, it was not the sound of the legendary
> >>  "IBM Model M" keyboard ;) ).
> >>
> >>  How can I achieve this?
> >>  What software can I use to make this geeky feature to
> >>  come true.
> >>  Unfortunately I have no idea, how to name this kind
> >>  of what(?) ...
> >>
> >>  Thank you very much for any hint in advance!
> >>  Best regards,
> >>  mcc
> > 
> > There probably a number of ways to do this.
> > 
> > A cheap and easy way would be to use xev to monitor a window and then
> > pipe the stderr to a a program that waits for a keypress event and then
> > plays an apropriate.
> > 
> > A less cheap way would be to have our program do what xev does instead
> > of using a pipe.
> 
> Or you could set your X keyclick using xset.
> 

Hi,

 thanks a lot for your replies! :)
 Is there any program already, which does this?
 A daemon or...<insert missing words here>

 Best regards,
 mcc


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