keyboard
23 TopicsMaking the everyday easier: Behind the scenes with the Surface Pro 12-Inch Keyboard
Everyday barriers in plain sight Most people don’t spend much time thinking about their keyboard. That’s part of what makes it work. You open your device, start typing, and the keyboard fades into the background—until it doesn’t. Until the lighting changes, or your eyes are tired, or you can’t quite tell which key your finger is on. For millions of users, that slight friction isn’t just annoying—it’s a daily barrier. A more visible experience The new Surface Pro 12-inch keyboard features thoughtful changes designed to make typing easier for more people. It started with a simple observation: the key legends were hard to see. That insight led to exploration of overlays used in education, typefaces developed for low vision and dyslexia, and the effects of lighting, spacing, and iconography on legibility. Through rounds of prototypes and refinements, the design team shaped characters, adjusted stroke weights, and tuned backlighting to avoid visual washout—all while keeping the familiar Surface feel. The result is the optional Bold keyset: a high-contrast, larger-font version of the standard keyboard. Letters are clearer, spacing more deliberate, and labels that once faded into the keycaps now stand out with clarity. These changes quietly reduce effort, one keystroke at a time. Surface Pro 12-inch Bold keyset Designed for wayfinding We also looked at how people navigate the keyboard by touch. For users who are blind or who rely on tactile orientation, the standard F and J bumps are helpful—but limited. The raised indicators on the F4 and F8 keys that became standard with Surface Laptop 3 and Surface Pro 8 keyboards are also used on the Surface Pro 12-inch keyboard. These positions are intentionally chosen: many common keyboard accessories leave these keys uncovered, making them valuable landmarks. We also included a tactile bump on the down arrow key. For users who navigate interfaces using screen readers, distinguishing up from down by feel is critical. This subtle addition reduces error, speeds up interaction, and supports confidence in every movement. Adapting to different inputs Another shift is adaptive touch mode, built directly into the Surface touchpad and easily toggled on through the Surface app. For many people with limb differences, Cerebral Palsy, or mobility conditions such as arthritis, standard touchpads can be difficult or impossible to use. Adaptive touch mode changes that. When active, it allows users to adjust how the touchpad responds to their input—whether from a fingertip, palm, edge of the hand, foot, or residual limb. Users can also fine-tune settings such as touch sensitivity, the time between clicks for a double-click to register, and the size or location of the right-click region. The result is a touch surface that adapts to the person, not the other way around. For people with limited mobility or a wide range of dexterity capabilities, that flexibility turns the touchpad into a customizable, comfortable, and precise tool for daily computing. Faster access to AI assistance The keyboard also includes a dedicated Copilot key. One press brings up Microsoft Copilot in Windows 11, giving users immediate access to AI-powered assistance. That could mean summarizing a document, rewriting an email, answering a question, or navigating the system itself. For users with cognitive load limitations, memory challenges, or motor delays, this shortcut eliminates several steps—replacing multi-step workflows with a single action. Surface Pro 12-inch keyboard No extra cost, no added steps We made a deliberate decision not to make accessibility a premium option, so these updates don’t come with an added cost. The Bold keyset version is priced the same as the standard Surface Pro 12-inch Keyboard and is available in English only, in select markets, including the US, Canada, and China. The built-in features mean that technology decision makers don’t have to choose between cost and comfort. Users don’t have to identify as needing something different. And no one has to explain why they want a keyboard that’s easier to read or more comfortable to touch. The value of quiet inclusion This is the kind of work we value most. Not chasing a trend or shipping something flashy—but solving a real problem that someone flagged because their experience didn’t feel as seamless as it should. The Surface Pro 12-inch keyboard with Bold keyset isn’t a new category. It’s a better version of something you already know. It shows up quietly. It gets out of the way. It supports more people without asking anyone to justify their needs. That’s what inclusive design can be. Thoughtful. Uncomplicated. Built into the core of the product from the start. And when it works, most people won’t even notice. They’ll just keep typing. Try our latest Surface Keyboards with the Bold keyset and discover how thoughtful design can make your everyday work easier. Visit the Microsoft Store to explore the difference in visibility, comfort, and accessibility for yourself. Enterprise customers can visit the Enterprise customers can get accessibility support here.209Views0likes0CommentsAndroid keyboard not working in AVD web client
Hi, I am able to connect my Android tablet to our company's AVD via the web client, however, the Bluetooth keyboard is not working. Further, there's no Input Method Editor option whenever I click the gear icon. I also tried to install another soft keyboard like SwiftKey, which is available in our work profile, but the Bluetooth keyboard is still not working in AVD web client. Please help me fix the issue. Thanks!592Views0likes1CommentCannot customize keyboard shortcuts and new shortcuts are overriding my plugins
Two things: 1. Why can we still not customize/disable keyboard shortcuts for new features? Specifically, Command+Shift+X on mac (which is used by just about anyone using 1Password, so I assume quite a few) now pops up some drag and select copy text thing which I didn't want in the first place. Can't find anywhere to disable it. 2. The Command key on mac is not detected in the shortcut box, so effectively we cannot make shortcuts that use it. You must fix this. Also--extensions and system shortcuts should override Edge's shortcuts, not the other way around.1.2KViews0likes3CommentsSpacebar doesn't work after hitting the 'i' key
This only happens when I'm using Microsoft teams and it only happens with the 'i' key, if I go to type a sentence like "I am thinking" it types out as "Iam thinking" ive tried multiple different keyboards and I've tried to replicate it on other programs. it only happens on teams but I would love a solution on how to fix this. If I type 'i' and then wait a second and then hit spacebar, it will add the space but if I do it too quickly, then it doesn't add the space which is really frustrating when I'm trying to send messages, which i spend about 30% of my workday doing to communicate with my team members.1.5KViews0likes1CommentIt's not possible to use the sidebar shortcut on Nordic keyboards
The shortcut for the sidebar is Ctrl+Shift+/ which prevents it from being able to be utilized at all on Nordic keyboards (and likely others), since slash requires you to press Shift+7. Unfortunately, as far as I know, there's no way to rebind hotkeys in Edge. I tried rebinding the shortcut using AutoHotkey, but not even that seems to work. Although let's be honest, you shouldn't need a workaround for basic shortcuts in a browser. Please add an alternative shortcut. Ctrl+Shift+. works, period is right next to comma which is used for the vertical tabs shortcut so it would make a lot of sense.543Views0likes0CommentsAssign a shortcut to Touch Keyboard in Windows
I need to launch Touch Keyboard without the need to going to the bottom of the screen and click on its icon, because it's time consuming and I have to do this repeatedly. I use mechanical keyboard but in order to write in foreign alphabets, I need to use Touch keyboard which is on my screen and I can use mouse to select words. It'd be great if I could launch Touch keyboards quickly with a keyboard shortcut. Upvote in feedback hub: https://aka.ms/AAdps2m1.3KViews0likes1CommentMicrosoft Surface7 and windows 11 Upgrade Now keyboard wont come up
I've had my Surface 7 for a year with the snap on keyboard. Whenever I wanted to use it like an iPad I would just pull off the keyboard, and the onboard keyboard would take over. Since I installed Windows 11 the onboard keyboard will not pop up. Help!1KViews0likes1CommentKeyboard mis-behaving
I run Win10 32 bit and Razer Blackwidow keyboard. I recently had a meltdown of Win10 and I had to reinstall Windows and all of my programs. Following this, I had the following problem with my keyboard. When I hit the symbol @ on the keyboard, the symbol " is displayed. When I hit the symbol " on the keyboard, the symbol @ is displayed. I have tried using a different keyboard but with the same result. How can I fix this? Help would be appreciated.631Views0likes0Comments