I haven't seen Ubiquity's 'I'm fine with a default keyboard layout'
checkbox.  Is that new in Jaunty?  I'll check.

I agree that automatically choosing it is very hard.  Too hard to assume
we can get right.  Though, there is a UI for changing it once the user
is logged in, as a fallback.  So if we get something wrong, the user
isn't 100% screwed, but yeah, I don't want to rely on the user finding
that.

As for 'dead' keys, like Loye says, as an English speaker, 'compose
keys' at least make some sense to me (oh, yeah, you're 'composing' one
key from two).  I don't know what 'dead' is translated to for other
languages, but maybe translators would understand 'compose' better.

For that matter, it doesn't even look like layout names are translated
(is that true?  It doesn't seem to be for me...).  That would be a big
help.  I don't know how we expect someone that doesn't speak English to
find the right layout at all.  This page just becomes a big scary widget
for them if it's all in English.

And the other point I brought up, 104/105/106 keys...  I don't know the
technical details of what that changes.  Does it just enable more keys?
Does it hurt to tell Ubuntu I have 106 when I only have 104?  I mean,
the 2 keys just never get hit, right?  Could we not ask, and just assume
the larger set of keys?  I assume the answer is no.

Maybe one way of making it less confusing would be to allow showing
layout pictures, like the GNOME preference app does.  Let the user press
a button to see if it matches what they have.

I'm just brainstorming.  :)

-- 
Keyboard screen is confusing to non-techies
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/341879
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