No, didn't try safe mode yet.have you tried booting into safe mode to see if it does it?
you can also remove all keyboards under device manager.
Oh. It was a funny thing to update to something no longer supported because I'm already running something that's no longer supported. Why does everybody think just cuz it's no longer supported that that is the issue?no it ended at the beginning of this year.. I think he's just screwing around with ya..
When an OS is unsupported it does NOT receive security patches for **newly-discovered** vulnerabilities. This is very, very, very unwise.Oh. It was a funny thing to update to something no longer supported because I'm already running something that's no longer supported. Why does everybody think just cuz it's no longer supported that that is the issue?
They quit making the Grand Prix. So if something's wrong with my grand prix does that mean because they stopped making it?
yup.. unsupported has nothing to do with why the system is acting odd with the / key repeating itself. You're 100% correct. The fear mongering is just to sell more operating systems, but wait til someone mentions getting linux, all hell will break loose! lol..Oh. It was a funny thing to update to something no longer supported because I'm already running something that's no longer supported. Why does everybody think just cuz it's no longer supported that that is the issue?
They quit making the Grand Prix. So if something's wrong with my grand prix does that mean because they stopped making it?
No. This is mostly incorrect. Security vulnerabilities have absolutely zero to do with viruses in the way they intrude on your system. A virus is literally just a normal application that does stuff you do not want, done without your knowledge or consent; but still instantiated by you (i.e. clicking on the malicious attachment in an email). A security vulnerability allows a bad actor to assume some measure of control over your system and its data **without** your involvement. Anti-virus software and the patches that are issued by an OS developer are entirely mutually exclusive.And the worst thing that could happen is I get a virus and I have to reinstall Windows correct?
Or buy a new computer?
SOS booting in save mode!have you tried booting into safe mode to see if it does it?
you can also remove all keyboards under device manager.
Sorry, must 0 been wrong post.Jessie Colter with Vince Gill! Also the Country singer guitar player from Australia, I forget his name ATM. (Keith Urban!)
I basically grew up listening to Waylon and Jessie, Willie, Hank Williams Jr, Johnny Cash! and all of them guys, well probably starting around 1977 when I started getting into country.
My mother and step dad basically got me into country!
Yes!!!!The key can get stuck on a keyboard with a mechanical switch, for example, when the torsion bar under the ley becomes unhooked. You can pop off the key cap and take a look if something looks off. The typical membrane switch that you find in cheap keyboards on most laptops can mechanically wear out and fail.
So Just run something like Spy-Bott or the like, or is the infection too sophisticated to find?There are malicious USB devices which infect a computer by simulating a keyboard and sending keystrokes instead of (or alongside) what they are supposed to do such as being a memory stick.
N0! My Mistake, It is/was a 8GB.Where did you get a 10GB DIMM?
I'm running that Flash SlimJet Too. Plays real nice with my total system(s).N0! My Mistake, It is/was a 8GB.
Sorry for the confusion.
I once did that to an ac condenser. Sometimes these objects need a reminder that they work for us. NOT, the other way around.Clearly you need to pick the PC up and slam it down on the desk a few times.