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I'm working at an IT company in Budapest where we do a LOT of pair programming.
While I'm American with 30 years of muscle memory dictating where the characters aught to be on my keyboard, I always want (need) to use an English layout.
My colleagues are Hungarian and whether they touch type or look at the keyboards, an English layout is less than optimal for them.
I actually have two distinct keyboards at my desk (a Genius and a Dell).
My OS is Windows 10.
Is there any way I can tell the computer to treat the Genius input as English and the Dell input as Hungarian?
1Works great! Except one thing. We use Oracle VM VirtualBox with CentOS to do a lot of our work... It seems the input isn't processed at quite the right level to work within the VM. Any further solution to fix that piece of the puzzle? – Brian Kessler – 2015-11-11T11:06:29.607
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I have found this artcle, HTH: http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1033435 . The point is to edit the .vmx file to include: usb.generic.allowHID = "TRUE" usb.generic.allowLastHID = "TRUE"
– duDE – 2015-11-11T11:47:59.990cheers for the article. Unfortunately the inability to use the second keyboard concurrently in both the host and the guest OS make this solution less than ideal as we are often going back and forth between the two. :-( – Brian Kessler – 2015-11-12T09:29:45.887