** Changed in: gnome-settings-daemon (Fedora)
Status: Unknown => Won't Fix
** Changed in: gnome-settings-daemon (Fedora)
Importance: Unknown => Undecided
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** Also affects: gnome-settings-daemon (Fedora) via
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816764
Importance: Unknown
Status: Unknown
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root@ignacio-laptop:/var/log/gdm# tail :0.log
(II) XKB SlowKeys are now enabled. Hold shift to disable.
(II) XKB SlowKeys are now enabled. Hold shift to disable.
(II) XKB SlowKeys are disabled.
(II) XKB SlowKeys are disabled.
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I consider myself an experienced user and had a very hard time figuring
out this. I have had this problem many times, and the only solution I
figured out until now was to reboot.
The problem is "Slow Keys" are being enabled in GDM even though I'm long
ago logged in, and that anti-feature should be
Sorry, I had to set this to "confirmed" as I think is a problem that
affects many people. The only request that many of us are doing is to
disable this function as default. This is my story:
Using: Xubuntu Quantal 32bits
I use one of my servers remotely using x11vnc + remmina. Sometimes it
happen
** Changed in: gnome-control-center (Ubuntu)
Status: Invalid => Confirmed
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Title:
"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause co
For a solution that worked for me, you can look at the comment linked
here: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816764#c42
Pasting here:
Create a new file in /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/ with a number prefix (the highest one
in the directory, e.g. 01-no-a11y-keyboard) with the following content:
Yet another highly irritated Xfce user here. Just use gdm instead of
gdm3.
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Title:
"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause confusio
I was hit by this on 12.04 with Xfce (not sure if this belongs in a
different bug), which doesn't seem to have any way to permanently
disable from its config panel. Took we a while to figure out how to
type at all in order to search for what I'd done -- and it was very
difficult to hold the key ex
My proposal is simple: just KILL this "feature".
Rationale: just count number of related bug reports. It is constantly
causing problems. It's very hard to google properly (especially with
keyboard that types one character per second). Just recently I
discovered that Gnome 3 doesn't actually offer
Based on the very good points in the many comments, with regards to both Gnome
and KDE, I suggest:
- reopening bug
- marking as Critical or highest level
- tagging as 'keyboard' and ' usability'
- also affects Kubuntu
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See bug 758335: this can happen very easily in gdm and the results are
very confusing.
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Title:
"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause confu
Wrong solution, sorry: this works (for me!) I think there should be a faq about
this somewhere.
And that default behaviour should be changed.
The solution? To go into the settings for the assistive technologies:
System > Preferences > Keyboard > /Accessability/ > [ ] Accessability Features
can b
Forgot to write the terminal command for the prefrence menu:
is is.
gconf-editor
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ubu
I also ran in to this usability bug.
Which was very annoying, i as other didnt see any window popup before it was
activated.
I lost about 1 hour of work time just before a deadline. Because there was no
clue
that slow keys was enabled. I also tried reinstalling Xorg, an many other
workarounds
b
Umm... never mind my last comment about the left_handed mouse... I
logged out and back and input worked with left-handed set (but not
cursor_size)
$> cat .gconf/desktop/gnome/peripherals/mouse/%gconf.xml
The only other change I made was to synchronize my password (login) with my
ke
reboot and the same thing happened.
this time I removed 1 peripheral file at a time and the problem (for me)
is when you set the mouse to be left handed -- I don't recall changing
the cursor size. Removing this file fixed it so my input (from keyboard)
works. Here are the details:
~/.gconf/deskto
I have hit this bug before many times on previous versions of Ubuntu and
now on Lucid (10.04). Usually, I go to tty1 (CTRL+ALT+F1 works) and then
I kill compiz, which magically restores my keyboard and mouse input.
This time that didn't work so I left the window open and went to another
computer t
I'll add my vote here, I inadvertently enabled this and even after
looking at the setup didn't think to disable the accessibility or even
to disable "slow keys" it just didn't seem intuitively related (nor did
I know what slow keys was). I had a good hour in this bug before I
found this and was ab
you will not convince hacker working for free on the software you are
using to look at your issues by using this tone or trying to give them
orders
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"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause confusion.
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Adding my vote that this feature, and all ways to accidentally activate
it by keys or gestures, MUST BE OFF BY DEFAULT.
I just had this problem with Kubuntu 9.04. Apparently it was turned on
by some "gesture" I did while playing in Google Earth. There was no
warning whatsoever. This is unacceptabl
Shouldn't the package of this bug be changed? This is not only an issue
in gnome-control-center, but also in KDE. It looks like it is disabled
by default in KDE4, but I can not confirm this.
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"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause confusion.
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You re
Thanks for the bug report. This particular bug has already been
reported, but feel free to report any other bugs you find.
** Changed in: gnome-control-center (Ubuntu)
Importance: Medium => Low
Assignee: (unassigned) => Ubuntu Desktop Bugs (desktop-bugs)
Status: Confirmed => Invalid
** Changed in: gnome-control-center (Ubuntu)
Sourcepackagename: None => gnome-control-center
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Could we please have 'Allow to turn accessibility features on and off
from the keyboard' disabled by default? I just spent nearly an hour
trying to figure out why my keyboard stopped working (somehow I enabled
Slow Keys without knowing it). Or could we at least get a HUGE,
obtrusive confirmation wi
Since this report is for Ubuntu (Gnome), for the same issue in KDE there
is bug 69969.
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You can disable that feature permanently by unchecking the option
'Keyboard Preferences' -> 'Allow to turn accessibility features on and
off from the keyboard'.
There's by the way a duplicate of this bug:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-control-
center/+bug/59616
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"slow keys" c
Chiming in again. It looks like noone is listening.
Since gnome is supposed to be within the open-source sphere, there MUST
be an author for this aspect. Apparently s/he did this nefarious stupid
thing and is no longer involved (or did a disgruntled user put out a
contract?).
But, isn't there som
Someone should come up to tell us how to permanently disable this
feature so that it never turn up on any kind of shortcut keys. Its
really very necessary for ubuntu. Today I wasted my one hour on gconf-
editor in which I tried modifying /desktop->gnome->accessibility and on
many other ways so that
Could the author of this "feature" have enough integrity (balls) to
identify himself/herself and explain why h/she thought this was so
clever ?
Come on, face up to the music, whoever you are.
Otherwise, what use is open source ? Might as well have Bill Gates
deciding what users want, unilaterally
The hold shift down hotkey on windows was one of my biggest pet peeves,
and it still is here. I thought my keyboard was broken because of this.
And on top of it all, I can't see the reasoning behind needing this
feature at all. It must be the dumbest most useless feature ever, and I
can't see anyon
It seems like this issue is being largely ignored, but I'm going to
submit my $0.02 anyway.
I just wasted over an hour of my (valuable) workday trying to figure out
why my keyboard would intermittently stop working. As it turns out,
yes, I was activating "slow keys" by lazily holding down the shi
Ideally this feature to offer end-user to activate slow keys should be removed
at all.
It reminds me MS approach to action on behalf of end-user. I think I can do it
better for my wife then Bill G. would do.
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I'm sure there was a reason for a developer to implement such feature as a slow
key for certain category of end-users.
Unfortunately it happened that the developer treated a headache by cutting the
head.
I had exact scenario that GKinal reported above, i.e. set up a laptop for my
wife with kubun
[rant] PLEASE give us a way to turn this "feature" OFF FOREVER. How
annoying is it to be constantly asked by your OS if you need help with
the same issue. Please leave me alone, If I want to change the
configuration I'll do it myself. Does any other program pre-emptively
prompt you to change its c
This is an INCREDIBLY STUPID "Feature" (known to the most people as a
BUG - I thought only Redmond could be so DUMB).
I had set up Kubuntu for my wife, and yesterday she activated the slow
keys mode accidentally.
I have used all manner of PCs and operating systems for 30 years and
have NEVER enco
I can't say I've ever not noticed the dialog -- but the dialog itself is a
particularly
aggravating issue. Like Cory, I tend to hold down Shift while thinking about
what to type next -- it's not an indication that I need help.
A "never ask me again" tickbox on that dialog would be perfect.
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hi i have, i am having the same problem with kubuntu fiesty. i often use
gimp in which zooming and scrolling requires holding down the ctrl and
shift key. periodically the ctrl and shift key stop working. sometimes i
see the slow keys dialog and others i don't. anyone know how to reset
this feature
Right now, the only workaround is to disable all of the keyboard
accessibility stuff.
I think that each of the accessibility features need an independent
option to disable their keyboard shortcut key under
system->preferences->accessibility->keyboard. If people that don't have
problems with keybo
In feisty, a warning box appears. However, there are problems with it:
1. the warning box is not a normal window, so it is not visible with a
task button.
2. for some reason, it often appears underneath the currently focused
window, and that combined with the lack of a task button makes it
ent
Confirmed. Having slow keys disabled by default is probably an acceptable
solution to this.
On the other hand, if you hold down the Shift key in Gutsy, a warning box
appears, which is also acceptable. Is this the case in Feisty and other older
versions?
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"slow keys" can turn on surreptitious
Confirmed, spent a few hours on figuring that out. Although googling
"kde keyboard problem" helped a lot. Still a very confusing and probably
unnecessary feature.
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The auto-expire bot set this to invalid. I'm setting this back to
confirmed, because although there has been no activity for a while, I
confirm that this bug still occurs in ubuntu feisty.
** Changed in: ubuntu
Status: Invalid => Confirmed
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"slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cau
[Expired for Ubuntu because there has been no activity for 60 days.]
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Hmm, it seems the time can only be set to zero when the feature is
enabled, and as soon as it is disabled in any way, it sets itself to 1
and the dialog is re-enabled.
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Actually, it looks like setting the time to be zero actually disables
the prompt. The shortcut still causes a beep, but the dialog no longer
comes up, and the feature is effectively disabled even if it does
actually turn on. (dang, I wish we could edit posts, even if limited
to, say, 5 minutes or
This also still happens in Gutsy. I'd call this a MAJOR bug.
At the very least, PLEASE don't make the dialog turn the feature on unless you
press YES! What's worse is that even pressing escape does NOT disable the
feature. I've finally had to set the slowkeys time to 1 millisecond, in order
t
This happens to me dozens of times a day -- I often hold down the shift
key while writing, as I prepare to type the first word of a sentence,
with the rest of my fingers poised over the keyboard. Then i start
typing and nothing comes out. I have to minimize several windows to find
the "You held dow
** Summary changed:
- "slow keys" can turn on surrepitiously & cause confusion.
+ "slow keys" can turn on surreptitiously & cause confusion.
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