(Some knowledge of electronics required as in where to measure what etc.) THe orthodox solution for the adventurous is to open up the keyboard and ensure the grounding on all the keys are correct. It seems this is cause by build up of static in the keyboard. It started on a 8 day old Comfort Curve 2000. You should return it for a refund/replacement. If none of this works, in particular the direct activation of the actuation pad, then this points to a hardware fault. If it now works, then you might have had a corrupted driver. Try rolling back to the standard MS driver that came with Windows. Carefully examine the key, and its location in the keyboard, to see if there is any obvious reason for The keyboard, and we can turn our attention to a stuck key, or one that cannot be depressed sufficiently to activate the switch under the actuation pad. With a suitable implement, carefully tap the pad to see if it works. Prise the key off carefully and you should see the actuation pad that the key acts upon. Notepad so that you can see the results of the following. The first thing to check is whether the key itself is actually operating. Is the N key not responsive in both lower and upper case?Īs the keyboard is brand new, it certainly shouldn't have developed this sort of fault, and I would consider returning it for a replacement.
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