Hi,
this was not the case for my HP Desktop recently purchased in October. It was 
however the case with my new Toshiba laptop purchased at the same time.
It should also be noted however that not all models and makes require that this 
be turned off in bios settings.
Some manufacturers such as Toshiba and Dell have a means to do this in control 
panel keyboard settings once the system is up and running.
Still it’s good to try I emphasize try and find out how a particular model 
handles this when making purchasing decisions as not all sales people or even 
tech support people are good about disseminating such information.
Robin


From: Brian Vogel 
Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2016 5:44 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Action Keys Mode - A Warning to Those Buying Certain New Laptops

For all I know the following may apply to some desktops and/or all-in-ones, 
too, but I've not yet encountered it in these environments.

Since the beginning of the laptop, convention had been that the function keys 
across the very top of the keyboard required the Fn key that's nested along the 
very bottom of the keyboard to be held before hitting a given function key to 
make it perform whatever function the manufacturer defines for that key.  Most 
people are familiar with function keys to do things like:  volume up, volume 
down, mute, wireless on/off, brightness up, brightness down, etc.

There is a new feature that HP, at least, calls "Action Keys Mode" which turns 
this convention on its head.  When activated, this makes a simple press of a 
given function key trigger its function rather than being passed along to 
whatever application as a key press.  This can have some "interesting" effects 
for screen reader users.  This function is currently enabled by default on my 
laptop and the F6 key so happens to be the Mute on/off toggle key.  When using 
NVDA, if I press F6 it simply toggles the mute state.  In order to make it 
behave as F6 normally would I must hit Fn+F6.  This does not apply if the SHIFT 
is pressed along with F6 in order to reverse the direction.  That works 
perfectly well.  I can only imagine the chaos this could unleash if you start 
using the various commands that employ the function keys on a system with 
Action Keys Mode activated.

Action Keys Mode can be disabled, but it is controlled via UEFI/BIOS.  On my 
machine one disables it by activating the UEFI menu by doing a repeated ESC key 
press during boot and selecting F10 choice.  Once the old-fashioned BIOS-like 
screen pops up, you have to transition to the System Configuration pane and 
arrow to the Action Keys Mode entry and disable it.  Since this is done well 
before the operating system is even involved, I don't know of a single screen 
reader that could be active to accomplish the task.

Since this mode is controlled by the hardware ahead of any intervention by 
anything else, you must disable it if you wish your function keys to operate 
"the way they always have."

Brian

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