The Microsoft Mouse and Keyboard Center is an app that helps you make the most out of your Microsoft keyboard and mouse. Mouse and Keyboard Center helps you personalize and customize how you work on your PC.

Under Windows Update, select Check for updates. Windows Update will tell you if you need any updates or not, and whether the latest updates were successfully installed. 


There might not be any driver updates available.


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Since I use the Dvorak layout, I would like to get one of the Sun Microsystems keyboards with the "Cut/Copy/Paste" cluster on the left. However I have been told that the keyboards don't work with Windows.

Does anyone have a fix for this?

Being the very-smart, highly-intelligent person that I am () I tried to install the Windows Bootcamp drivers on the machine manually. What I mean by manually is, I opened the Bootcamp installer in 7-zip and found what looked like they keyboard drivers' setup component. I extracted this piece and ran the .exe.

Because it was not installed in the conventional manner, I didn't get any prompts and, at first, I didn't notice it did anything, presumably because there were other components I didn't install. Eventually I realized that my many of my Function keys (any with other controls on them, such as F1-F4 & F7-F12) didn't seem to work. I later found out that they only work when pressing the "fn" button above the arrow keys on the keyboard.

I've tried manually uninstalling the Keyboard drivers from the Device Manager in Windows. The device manager shows two keyboard devices (no idea why), so I've de-installed both and re-installed them. This didn't change anything at all.

This should display every driver windows considers compatible with your hardware, hopefully the list will include a few items one of which will be the original driver.

If what you are looking for does not appear there, you can uncheck the "show compatible hardware" box and look through the whole list, mainly under the "(standard keyboards)" category.

This time, when it looks for a keyboard driver, it will not find the Bootcamp one that is considered to be newer (and thus presumably better). Therefore it will search for the next best driver it can, building a new cache and driver database, and then install whatever you used before.

It would be worth a try to install the drivers as they were meant to be, then uninstall them the right way.At least, once their install correctly, there is probably an option in the program to use the F-Keys as normal, and using the "Fn" key as a modifier.

I've gotten myself into a bit of a quandary. I have a Windows 7 x64 computer with USB 3.0 ports. I installed some specialized camera driver software (Point Grey's FlyCapture 2) for use with a high-end USB 3.0 camera.

During installation, there was a option to install a new USB 3.0 driver, with a warning that non-Point Grey devices would no longer work. I (stupidly) ignored this, as I thought my keyboard/mouse were on a different (i.e. non-USB 3.0) interface.

I was wrong. Now when I load Windows, I get to the user log in screen and neither keyboard nor mouse works. (Interestingly, if I turn off my computer without letting Windows shut down properly, I get the text screen asking whether to boot Windows normally or in safe mode -- and in this screen my keyboard works, allowing me to choose which option with the up/down/enter keys.)

neither of my shift keys on my keyboard are working and i think it has something to do with the software on my laptop. i have come across multiple apps that required a payment or subscription so they can update my drivers. is there a way i can manually update them for free without any apps. pls help

While troubleshooting PS/2 keyboard and mouse problems in Windows 8.1, in Device Manager I uninstalled the grayed out "Microsoft PS/2 Mouse" and "Standard PS/2 Keyboard" and rebooted. Those drivers did not reinstall (like I believe they would do in older versions of Windows) when I boot with just a PS/2 keyboard and mouse connected. In Windows 8, how do I reinstall those two drivers?

I've also tried Device Manager > Action > Add Legacy Hardware > where I've tried "Have Disk" and have chosen each of C:\Windows\inf\keyboard.inf and msmouse.inf and still nothing. If I choose list all drives at C:\Windows\inf I can't find "Microsoft PS/2 Mouse" or "Standard PS/2 Keyboard" to manually install (even though both keyboard.inf and msmouse.inf are at that location).

The original Windows 8.1 problem was 

(a) both the PS/2 keyboard and mouse do not work when Windows 8.1 is booted up, 

(b) the PS/2 keyboard works in the computer's BIOS setup and during the F8 BIOS boot device menu, 

(c) when a USB keyboard or mouse is connected they work without problem in Windows 8.1, 

(d) the HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\i8042prt Start value had previously been set from 3 to 1, 

(e) there is no PS/2 keyboard or PS/2 mouse driver in Device Manager with a yellow icon, 

(f) without a USB keyboard or mouse connected the only way to shutdown Windows 8.1 (and do a restart) is to press the power button.

With a USB keyboard and mouse connected, configured Device Manager to also show non-present devices by making this change to the registry which requires Administrator privilege and a reboot for the change to take effect:

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment]

devmgr_show_nonpresent_devices"=dword:00000001

After rebooting, 

(a) disconnected the USB keyboard leaving the USB mouse still connected, 

(b) started Device Manager, 

(c) under View checked the Show hidden devices setting, 

(d) expanded "Keyboards" and Uninstalled each USB and PS/2 keyboard that was there, 

(e) expanded "Mice and other pointing devices" and Uninstalled each USB and PS/2 mouse that was there except for the one being used. Then Uninstalled the USB mouse that was being used and immediately disconnected that mouse (preventing it from re-installing). 

At this point only the PS/2 keyboard and mouse were connected, which were not working.

Used the power switch to shut down the computer. With only the PS/2 keyboard and mouse connected, pressed the power switch to start the computer and, at the first sign of the Windows 8.1 logo appearing on the monitor, turned off the computer with the power switch. Did this a second time. Using the power switch started the computer for a third time but let Windows 8.1 boot all the way up. While booting, a "Windows is updating..." message displays during the boot and the status lights on the PS/2 keyboard were seen to flash.

When Windows 8.1 was fully booted, both the PS/2 keyboard and mouse where working and in Device Manager under Keyboard was a "Standard PS/2 Keyboard" that was not greyed out and under "Mice and other pointing devices" was a "Microsoft PS/2 Mouse" that was not greyed out.

Many Keyboard problems can be fixed by updating the drivers. After you upgrade your computer to a new operating system, such as Windows 11, problems can occur because your current driver may work only for the prior version of Windows. There are two ways you can update your Keyboard drivers.

Option 1 (Recommended): Update drivers automatically - Even computer newbies can update drivers with just a few clicks of a mouse. Use trusted software to identify, download and install the newest driver updates for your PC in one step. Your old drivers can be backed up and restored if you encounter any problems. You'll need novice to beginner level computer skills to use this method.

Option 2: Update drivers manually - Use DriverGuide to find the correct driver for your device and operating system. Next, download and install it by following the step by step instructions. You'll need average to intermediate level computer skills to use this method.

This utility is an intelligent program which will automatically recognize your computer operating system and device. Then, it will find the correct drivers for it. There is no need to know which specific operating system you have, and there is no risk of downloading and installing the wrong driver. Automatic driver updates eliminate mistakes when installing or updating drivers.

Click the Update button next to the out-of-date or missing driver. The correct version will be downloaded and installed automatically. Or, you can click the big green Update All button to automatically download and install the correct version of all the drivers that are missing or out-of-date on your system.

To get the latest driver, including Windows 11 drivers, you can choose from our list of most popular Keyboard downloads or search our driver archive for the driver that fits your specific Keyboard model and your PC's operating system.

Once you have downloaded the new driver, next you must remove the current driver if it is installed. On a Windows PC, you do this by using a built-in utility called Device Manager. It allows you to see all of the devices attached to the PC, and the drivers associated with them.

From there on the data is either passed to DirectInput or the user32 legacy interface. It is not entirely clear, where the layout comes into play, but I think it is implemented on top of the Keyboard class driver.

Keyboard layouts basically seem to be a bunch of data structures, conforming to the KBDTABLES structure defined in kbd.h. Basically the low-level drivers produce a ScanCode and interpretation of these codes is done with this structure.

The first important ones are pusVSCtoVK, pVSCtoVK_E0 and pVSCtoVK_E1, which map the raw scan codes (and extended scan codes) of the driver to the hardware-independent virtual key codes. These key codes describe the key. The character mapping comes later. So the left cursor key produces VK_LEFT, and the S key produces VK_S, even if the layout turns this to something else later.

Numpad seems to do what is required. The scan code of the keys stay the same, but depending on the Numlock state they produce different virtual key codes. I think, however, that windows does some special handling here. Those keys have the KBDNUMPAD flag set in pusVSCtoVK. It seems that windows will detect that and exchange the virtual keys depending on the Numlock state. ff782bc1db

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