The New KONYIN KB-210UW-US 106-Key Standard size U.S. Multilingual Keyboard w/wrist-pad, USB (White) Unique keyboard with additional function keys for multilingual direct
access easy typing, wrist-pad for comfortable palm rest during typing. This keyboard uses patented Shift?keyboard driver technology for Windows 2000/XP/2003 or later.
KONYIN Keyboards uses Shift2 Keyboard Technology - The First Truly Complete Computer Keyboard Technology designed to accommodate combined character-sets for multiple
Language Groups on a single keyboard layout, with no layout switching required between languages, no dead key typing process and using Unicode standard for handling fonts.
Who is it for?
- The millions of people who use foreign words or communicate in other languages and would like to type in these languages more easily. This includes the enormous number
of Hispanic Americans in who accept English as their primary educational language but need tonal marks and accents to properly type in Espal.
- Educational institutions from elementary to college level.
- Media corporations, journalists, publishing houses, and news companies that produce multilingual print.
- Lawyers and law firms. The KONYIN Multilingual keyboard includes commonly used symbols in the legal profession such as section sign (??), paragraph signs (??) and
copyright sign (??).
Is it actually easier to use than its competitors? Most other multilingual input devices in the market today require users to awkwardly switch from one
keyboard layout to another in order to access the character sets and diacritical marks necessary to type in various languages. The KONYIN Multilingual Keyboard for United
States solves these problems by adding 8 common extended Latin characters and 15 combining tonal marks? without altering the traditional QWERTY layout that U.S. users
currently know and use. The KONYIN physical keyboard also incorporates easy access to international currency symbols, such as $ and ?. In other words, it doesn?t change the
way American users currently type.
How do I use it?
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