Custom Query (16363 matches)
Results (1648 - 1650 of 16363)
| Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Owner | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #6501 | obsolete | host keyboard function unnormal | ||
| Description |
installed virtualbox under MacOSX10.6.3 32-bit, guest Linux/wINDOWs also 32-bit, everything good. but, when I reboot snow leopard to 64-bit version, start any guest VM , the host keyboard function unnormal. like CTRL+<arrow> , CTRL+SPACE, COMMAND+SPACE are all corrupt. hope this fixed soon appreciations & thx |
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| #1753 | wontfix | host key defaults to right control key which does not exist on Toshiba Tecra | ||
| Description |
On the Toshiba Tecra there is no right control key so once captured it is not possible to uncapture. I manually changed the host key to be the windows key which works fine. It would be ideal if VirtualBox could detect what keys are actually available on the machine that is being installed and if no right control key exists then pick another one that does so that VirtualBox works out of the box without any configuration or manual reading. I think this would have a major positive impact on the first 15 minutes of use. It was the only thing that stopped me from having a perfect installation experience. |
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| #979 | fixed | host key combinations would be very convenient | ||
| Description |
I often work with my right hand on the mouse and my left on the "asdf" keys, so common key combinations (like control-c, alt-mouse-click, etc.) are immediately accessible. Unfortunately, VirtualBox supports only a single key as the "host key", which means that choosing any key within reach of my left hand is pretty much out of the question, because they all conflict with common operations. This leaves me stuck with a host key on the right side of the keyboard, which forces me to move a hand from its home position to reach the key, and then move it back again whenever I need the host key. That's pretty irritating. QEMU and VMware both solve this problem nicely by using a combination of keys (control+alt) as their "host key". I wish I could make VirtualBox do the same. |
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