Jump to content

Comet 1626864951

Members
  • Posts

    916
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    1

Comet 1626864951 last won the day on February 6 2017

Comet 1626864951 had the most liked content!

Reputation

10 Good

About Comet 1626864951

  • Birthday November 22

Converted

  • Interests
    Hobbies include creating and editting 3D video and surround-sound, mathematics, and origami

Converted

  • Occupation
    Ethical Hacker

Converted

  • Homepage
    http://www.linkedin.com/in/comet
  • Yahoo
    Com3t
  1. Without iCUE installed, your profile functionality is greatly reduced, but your stored profiles will still work.
  2. The Corsair keyboards are programmable, so you can unplug the keyboard from your home computer and plug it in at a gaming competition machine. In order for this to work, the USB keyboards must follow the USB specification, specifically, Chapter 10 on Keyboard (page 253). There are 231 defined keys, and a total of 65535, if you include the reserved ones. iCUE lets you rebind different physical keys to act like different defined keyboard keys. Note that Unicode comprises 1.1 million code points -- there simply is no way to even specify that a keyboard key should be like a key labelled with an arbitrary glyph in Unicode. There are, however, workarounds. You can use iCUE to define each key in a profile to send a particular string, and that string can be copy/pasted from Character Map or BabelMap or any other source, and pasted into the TEXT definition for the key, which you would use in iCue in lieu of macro recording.
  3. I'd like to be able to DISABLE a button, so iCUE doesn't have it doing anything, but have the input still register. If a button is disabled, it shouldn't register input on the computer. If you want a button to register input on the computer, use iCUE to indicate what input to register.
  4. You do not need to open and set CUE; it should remember your last profile settings. CUE does support accented characters.
  5. :faceslap: Hold onto your sanity! It's not that it "can't be implemented"--it will come... eventually.
  6. See Tutorial: Switching Modes by Modifier Keys and Modifier Key Combos. For CUE 2, use profiles instead of modes. You can define a profile switch on the first key, and in the switched-to profile define lighting to light your other keys. I have demoed this technique in other posts, where pressing the WinLock key toggles a red color on my Windows keys while they are disabled.
  7. Take a look at Tutorial: Switching Modes by Modifier Keys and Modifier Key Combos. (For CUE 2, one would use profiles instead of modes.) The idea is that while pressing your CTRL key, you switch to a profile that illuminates the keys for which CTRL is part of a valid combo (e.g. a, x), and you can also assign actions to the second key from within the CTRL profile -- just remember to retain original output of the keys, if you still wish the CTRL sequence to act as originally intended.
  8. The feature you request has existed within CUE even in version 1, using modes. In CUE 2, one would use profiles. See: Tutorial: Switching Modes by Modifier Keys and Modifier Key Combos
  9. Until such time as Linux is officially supported, you should see the (Unofficial) Linux Driver.
  10. :thinking: My favorite game that I play using my Corsair keyboard and mouse is certainly Correspondence chess. :hihi: Feel free to sign up for a free account and challenge me to a game. :wall: I also play backgammon, but that is not on the computer, but with my local backgammon league.
  11. To see if software reprogramming via CUE can be effective for setting a desired color, I recommend trying to set the LED to a few settings, and observing the result: 100% RED, 100% GREEN, 100% BLUE. If any of these colors is not showing anything, then you may need to RMA. If all the colors are simply switched around, then you can use CUE to figure out how to program to rogue light. Also, once you have achieved the desired HUE, if your intensity is too low, then you need to RMA, otherwise, you can most likely reduce the settings using CUE to make the LED match the others.
  12. The ability to set the advanced option for a macro to execute uninterrupted is present in CUE 2.15.83.
  13. If you are not using every key that FFXIV allows you to use, then just define these extra mouse buttons to act like any of those keys.
  14. You can use the CUE SDK, and define the lighting based on the window title of the active window, for example.
  15. You are describing the behavior when the keyswitch may have gotten dirt, dust, or grit in it; the "switch hitter" helps determine if physical contact is being made--people usually use compressed air to blow out any grime to help the keyboard switches make more consistent contact.
×
×
  • Create New...