I’ve not tried it, but found aMicrosoft Keyboard Layout Creator, which you might be able to use to create a different keyboard layout that you can set as the default in Control Panel.
I probably should mention that I am in Sri Lanka at the moment , where laptops specific spare parts aren’t readily available, especially for laptops that are not current. This is a Dell D620 Latitude thats a couple of years old.
I tried your link, no luck because to switch keys, both keys need to work .
Remapkey is Microsoft’s own tool for this and the best that I’ve found. It makes a registry change and doesn’t take up any more resources (i.e. no software running in the background).
It normally comes as a part of a bigger resource kit that you have to install, but you can also download the .exe directly from me if you prefer.
Most laptops remap some keys on the main keyboard to act as a makeshift numeric keypad (what I call the phantom numeric keypad).
If you look closely, your M key probably has the digit 0 on it, J has a 1, K has a 2, U has a 4, etc. And 7, 8 and 9 are at their usual locations at the top of the keyboard.
So, for a capital C, you would hold Alt + Fn and press the letter O, then release it, then press 7, then release it, then release Alt + Fn.
The remap software is your best bet, but remember you can copy a “C” or “c” from your web browser or a document and paste them to wherever you’re entering text. Tedious but it would work fine.
This is kind of a clunky solution but what about plugging in a USB keyboard? We had to resort to that solution on our home laptop after our 2 yr old granddaughter managed to rip about half of the keys off the keyboard. No way I was going to try to put all those keys back on.
$30 for a new D620 keyboard online. Not sure if they ship to Sri Lanka or not, but there are plenty of other parts suppliers online if you search for “Dell D620 keyboard”.
Laptop keyboards, Dell especially, are really easy to fix yourself. $30 and 20 minutes of your time isn’t too expensive. Although a key mapper is a great short term fix, I would hate to get used to a non standard layout like that.
I would try the replacement route when I return to the US.
For the time being I’d like an alternative to copy/pasting the alphabet every time I need it. I don’t mind unorthodox position for the reassigned keys, it’s a heckva better solution than what I am doing now.
I tried the solutions mentioned here, the last being the Microsoft one, but I must be doing something wrong or it plain doesn’t work.