![]() ![]() Now, what about installing Parallels and then installing Windows (or ARM Windows for M1 users). If you want to reprogram the keyboard to use with your iPad, you’re going to need Windows and the stock software to do it. That means it won’t help anyone with an iPad because you can’t install drivers. ![]() Unfortunately this doesn’t reprogram the keyboard, it installs a macOS driver which monitors keystrokes and changes what the operating system thinks they do. If you look around online you’ll be told to use Karabiner Elements to remap keys as you want. Now we come to the next issue with an RK keyboard for Apple users…they software they provide to program your keyboard is Windows only. ![]() To use Play/Pause or Volume keys you’ll still need to press FN. It doesn’t flip function keys so that they can be used primarily as media keys. If you put it in iPadOS mode but power the keyboard off it doesn’t remember the setting so every time I power the keyboard down I have to remember to press FN + S to get it to be back in iPadOS mode.Īnother issue with iPad mode is that it only switches the ⌥ and ⌘ keys so that they’re setup how iPadOS expects. You can do this by pressing FN + S and here is where my first problem is with this keyboard. Once you got your keyboard connected it’s time to look at getting it in macOS/iPadOS mode. For something I’d even think about USB 2.0 for, I’ll just use AirDrop or let the file sync via iCloud. Most of the data I need to transfer is huge video files or lots of photos which leaves me feeling that USB 2.0 ports are wasted space. The advantage to this mode is that the keyboard has dual USB 2.0 ports on it. It also can connect via USB with a USB C connector on the keyboard end. I tested it and it works but I don’t have anything else to say because I don’t use it. To put it in dongle mode flip the keyboard over flip the bottom switch to G. If you want to skip bluetooth it also has a 2.4Ghz USB A dongle. I found it paired fast and doesn’t have any latency for my standard office use. By pressing and holding FN + Q/W/E you can choose which profile you’re going to pair with. Connect RK84 to your iPadįor Bluetooth pairing you have three different profiles you can use. Not terrible, but I’ll stick with my cables from Kraken if I’m going to use a wired keyboard. The cable is typical cheap for an inexpensive keyboard. Then you get the keyboard and a USB C -> A cable. There are a few extra switches if one dies on you. The RK84 comes with a dual key cap puller and switch puller so you can swap out either the keycaps or the switches. As far as I can tell RK uses their own branded switches. I got the white version with a Tactile Blue switch that is MX compatible. The RK84 is a hotswappable wireless keyboard. ![]() I spent a bit of time looking and ended up purchasing a RK84 from Amazon to replace it. Then it stopped being reliable with it’s wireless connection, and to stream from my iPad I need it to work wirelessly. I embrace the trackpad change because it makes sense to anyone who uses an iPhone or iPad (and I use both) but I'm not willing to rewire my brain's way of using the mouse.For a number of months I was using the Anne Pro 2 as the keyboard for my iPad Pro while it was at my desk. I don't want to change a decades-old habit with the mouse, just because Apple changed their idea of how a trackpad should work. The idea that Apple treats these as the same thing, when they are conceptually completely different is very odd to me. On the other hand, I'm perfectly willing to use Apple's "natural" scrolling for trackpads, because the metaphor here is that you're moving your fingers across a page, just as if you were using an iOS device's touchscreen. This is, in my opinion, the most natural way to do things, even though it is the opposite of what Apple calls "natural". Mice have had scroll wheels for decades, and the direction of the wheel turning has always been in sync with the motion of the scrollbar. (In case you can't understand the rationale for wanting them different, and think this is a ridiculous question, here is the reasoning. How can you have different settings for mouse and trackpad? The problem is that this also unsets the setting for Trackpad, which I do like. In System Preferences > Mouse there's a setting "Scroll direction: natural", which I don't like, so I unset. ![]()
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