Re[2]: [list_b] Re: Renaming Short-Cuts?

2003-01-20 Thread mm Meister
Hello Bats,

Yesterday, Adam and Alec wrote:

>> Yes. There was some program PCMAG produced for this. Can't recall the
>> name at the moment, but I used it when I used Windows 98.


AB> TradeKeys (PCMag) http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,770479,00.asp
>>>
AB> This issue's utility gives you the keyboard of your dreams. TradeKeys 2 lets


Blessings upon you. May the flowers grow in your garden. I am logging
onto their webpage as we speak.

This thread actually bifurcated into editing shortcuts in TheBat! and
changing the keys themselves, one of which is OT. So, apologies to the
group for the accidental OT branch.

Thank You!
-- 

 mmmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Current version is 1.62 | "Using TBUDL" information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html



Re: [list_b] Re: Renaming Short-Cuts?

2003-01-19 Thread Alec Burgess
> Yes. There was some program PCMAG produced for this. Can't recall the
> name at the moment, but I used it when I used Windows 98.


TradeKeys (PCMag) http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,770479,00.asp
>>
This issue's utility gives you the keyboard of your dreams. TradeKeys 2 lets
you map your keyboard almost any way you want. Under Windows 95, 98, and Me,
you can change, swap, or disable any of the standard keys (those that
existed on the original 84-key keyboard layout). Under Windows 2000 and XP,
you can also remap extended keys such as Right Ctrl and Right Alt, the
Windows logo key, and the navigation cluster. You can save your mappings to
a file for reloading later. This lets different users on a system switch
quickly between different mappings.


TradeKeys 2 is an update of our earlier keyboard mapping utility, ZDKeyMap.
In addition to supporting NT-based operating systems, this new version
offers an improved interface. We provide the Microsoft Visual C source code
for TradeKeys with the utility for those interested in seeing how the
program works. Note that PC Magazine programs are copyrighted and cannot be
distributed, whether modified or unmodified. Use is subject to the terms and
conditions of the license agreement distributed with the programs.

<<

Regards ... Alec
-- 

 Original Message 
From: "Adam" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "mm Meister" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "TBOT" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, January 19, 2003 15:23
Subject: [list_b] Re: Renaming Short-Cuts?

> Hello mm,
>
> Sunday, January 19, 2003, 1:10:58 PM, you wrote:
>
> mM> Hello Geoff,
>
> mM> Sunday, January 19, 2003, 6:45:40 AM, you wrote:
>
>>> On 19 January 2003, 10:58, mm Meister wrote:
>
>>> Is this a quirk of Toshiba keyboards, or has your machine not got
>>> your preferred keyboard layout installed? If the latter, I suspect
>>> you'd be better off changing your keyboard definition to match your
>>> other machines. You can change it (on XP Pro) like this:
>
> mM> Actually, I think it is the quirk part. The keyboard isn't
> symmetrical mM> the tilde is to the left of the space bar - the Ins
> and Del keys are mM> on the other side of the space bar - Win key up
> in the right - in mM> other words, a mishmash. If I could reassign
> those keys and move the mM> key caps around. Is that actually
> possible?  Maybe easier than mM> trying to change the various
> programs...
>
>
> I think generally you are supposed to be able to change your keyboard,
> by a file, as Geoff said. But before I found any software, there
> didn't seem to be any way to change the keyboard just from Windows
> itself. Perhaps is this any different with Windows XP and their ilk?



Current version is 1.62 | "Using TBUDL" information:
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