Just a little while ago, a cat walked across the keyboard of my laptop and decided to sit down in the middle of it. Usually he just walks across to the other side and doesn’t cause any significant problem. Maybe scrolls the window but that’s about it.
This time, he managed to lock up the keyboard. The mouse pointer would move around but none of the keys, including the left mouse key, had any effect. I ended up having to reboot because I couldn’t figure out a way to unlock otherwise. It’s running Ubuntu. I tried Ctrl-q, just in case he hit a Ctrl-s, but that didn’t work.
So what’s it likely that he did? And how do you unlock it?
No idea what your cat did, but mine has managed to get my keyboard completely borked on more than one occasion (Windows, in my case). A reboot is the fastest way out of it that I have found.
I’ve seen the keyboard lockup complaint enough that this must not be some specific key combination. Rather just too many keystrokes at once causes keyboards to enter a safe state or something like that. You’d think keyboard manufacturers would build in some escape from this state. After all, some people will be in a situation where they’ll lose a considerable amount of work if the computer is rebooted.
I’m often in a situation where random reboots are inconvenient. But still Micro$oft has rebooted me without warning four times in the last week. :mad:
And we don’t even have a cat. (There are 2 or 3 hoopoe birds right outside my window but they’ve not been in the house for many months — and AFAIK have no interest in playing Windo$e anyway.)
This is exactly what I did when Annie turned my screen sideways a few months ago. I had heard somewhere that it was a common problem, and probably inevitable in my case since Annie frequently likes to sit on the laptop keyboard if I don’t close it; I can feel that the keyboard is slightly warm and that attracts her to it.
Yes, a specific set of keystrokes rotates the display left or right. Easy to undo when you know what it is. No one seems to have come up with such a set for unlocking.
Google adjusts your results based on what sites you visit a lot. You (and lots of others here including me) visit here a lot, so it moves results from those sites to the first page. Same reason Wikipedia hits are usually near the top, at least for me and lots of other people.
At 20 bucks, it seems a bit expensive given the relatively low risk of disaster, but if you have cats who like to make a nuisance of themselves, it might be worth it.
heh our cats get annoyed by phones and tablets my aunts cat has figured out that if you tap the screen it makes noise…well she ended up buying my aunt a 30 dollar upgrade box for her game …but a few months ago I made the screen black and white …figured the video card went out …bought a new one put it in and didn’t help
come to find out theres a specific combo of keys that if pressed and permanently puts windows in B&W until you undo it and we had to dig on how to find out how…
I used to have cow-orker who would fall asleep at his desk. When he did, he would press some keys for an extended period of time and his computer would go into some kind of “disability” mode. It would assume the person using the computer had some type of coordinational difficulty and would only allow 1 keystroke per some unit of time. (like several seconds) It required going somewhere into the settings to turn off.
I believe PawSense is only available for Windows. The OP is running ubuntu. I’ve never seen a Linux keyboard lock up except when ctrl-S was involved, but the OP says he checked for that.