With QPC2, you just define the country in the set up and the keyboard
matches. In the USA, by setting this the keyboard is the North
American one automatically.
jim
On 3-Oct-08, at 10:51 AM, Bill Loguidice wrote:
We're talking about a modern keyboard, right, not a North American
QL? We
have all the slashes \/, otherwise we'd have a hard time getting on the
Internet...
=================================
Bill Loguidice, Managing Director
Armchair Arcade, Inc.
http://www.armchairarcade.com
A PC Magazine Top 100 Website
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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of George Gwilt
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 10:38 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Ql-Users] I must test, No traffic my way for 2 weeks
On 3 Oct 2008, at 15:38, Bill Loguidice wrote:
We don't have a British Pound symbol (was the C-64 the last keyboard
in the US to have that?), but we certainly have a \. I can't imagine
any other major modern day differences. We have the $ sign above the
4 key, so I would assume that you have the British Pound symbol above
the same, no?
I wouldn't dare try for a British Pound in NY NY. It must have been the
other slash. One of / \.
George
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