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2007-12-08
, 09:16
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Posts: 203 |
Thanked: 47 times |
Joined on Jun 2007
@ St.Petersburg, Russia
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#2
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2007-12-08
, 21:37
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Posts: 477 |
Thanked: 118 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
@ Munich, Germany
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#3
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2007-12-08
, 22:28
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Posts: 95 |
Thanked: 27 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Miami & London
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#4
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to sparkling For This Useful Post: | ||
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2007-12-08
, 23:02
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Posts: 57 |
Thanked: 10 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#5
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2008-08-02
, 12:29
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Posts: 226 |
Thanked: 47 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Poland / Bialystok
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#6
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2008-08-02
, 13:43
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Posts: 2,361 |
Thanked: 3,746 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Berlin - Love this city!!
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#7
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2008-08-02
, 14:18
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Switzerland
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#8
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I ask because I'd like to know if the keyboard can be used to enter diacritical marks (accents, umlauts, characters like ü, ä, è, à, etc). The keyboard has far less keys than a standard keyboard and on the US version all the keys are used already. What dead keys are available and where are they placed? I'd like to know how usable the hardware keyboard is when you enter non-English text.
It may look like something minor to the English speaking users of this forum, but I can assure you that keyboard layout can be a major annoyance. Taking the example of the Nokia SU-8W bluetooth keyboard, the top row (the one with the number) is not present and you need to press a special key to emulate it. This renders this keyboard next to unusable if you use the standard French (azerty) layout, because this top row of keys is used a lot (it carries all the accents, apostrophe, etc...), so that you end up having to switch keyboard modes every second word, forgetting to switch it back and typing the wrong characters, etc... Personally, I use the Swiss French layout (it is adapted to both French and German), and I already find it annoying, essentially because of the apostrophe, present on the top row and used a lot in French.