The ONN Soft-Touch Wired Keyboard is exactly what you?ll need to make your laptop or desktop workstation more functional and help you get your work done with precision, speed and accuracy. The slim black keyboard connects easily to your PC using a USB port. To install the latest Windows support software, you need a 16GB or larger USB flash drive formatted as MS-DOS (FAT). Start your Mac from macOS. Plug the USB flash drive into your Mac. Open Disk Utility, which is in the Utilities folder of your Applications folder. Choose View Show All Devices from the menu bar.
USB (Universal Serial Bus) is an industry standard for connecting computers and other devices. It's available with many types of ports, and each type has a unique shape. On Mac computers, USB is available with these ports, depending on your Mac model:
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Type USB-A ports are commonly called USB, USB 2, or USB 3 ports, depending on the USB specification they support. They aren't reversible, so a USB-A connector plugs into the port only when oriented correctly.
Type USB-C ports are available as either standard USB-C ports or Thunderbolt 3 ports that also support USB-C connections. They both look the same, and the connector plugs into the port in either orientation.
Learn more about identifying the ports on your Mac, as well as the adapters and cables you can use to connect older devices to type USB-C ports.
USB specifications are important primarily when you want the most speed and power for your USB device, or your device needs more power or is using too much power. Every USB port supports a particular USB specification, which determines the port's maximum>USB specifications on MacData transferPowerUSB 3.1 Gen 2
Also known as USB 3.2 Gen 2
Up to 10 GbpsUp to 15W at 5VUSB 3.1 Gen 1
Also known as USB 3.2 Gen 1 or USB 3
Up to 5 GbpsUp to 900 mA at 5VUSB 2.0
Up to 480 MbpsUp to 500 mA at 5VUSB 1.1
Up to 12 MbpsUp to 500 mA at 5V
To learn which specification is supported by a type USB-A or type USB-C port on your Mac model:
USB specifications all work with each other, but speed and power are limited by the cable or device that uses the earliest specification. For example, if you connect a USB 3 device to USB 2 port, your device is limited to USB 2 speeds, and it can't draw more power from the port than can be delivered over USB 2. In other words, to get the best performance, make sure that the USB port on your Mac and the USB cable to your device meet or exceed the USB specification of the device itself.
If your Mac doesn't recognize a USB device after you plug it into your Mac:
Let me start off by saying that i have had problems with 4 keyboards; Apple Wireless Keyboard, Onn Wireless Keyboard, Logitech K120 and, Logitech K360. All of these keyboards have had some some of problem, at least in the long run. My first keyboard, obviously the Apple Wireless Keyboard that comes with in the box, was perfectly fine until the spacebar stopped working. I tried just about every solution to make it work, sadly, nothing resolved it. No big, i bought the Onn Keyboard as it was mac compatible. This keyboard was good but the only trouble i found was a delay in key presses, i've read on the internet it was the keyboard's problem. Basically the keyboard sucked so i threw it out. My 3rd Keyboard, the K120, is a wired keyboard. This keyboard lasted me for a long time. Eventually, some keys stopped working, Q, Z, X, are the few i can remember. Now my 4th keyboard, this one is sort of special. This keyboard had problems with the F, Q, U, keys. This keyboard came with problems right out of the box, me not realizing and throwing the receipt the 2nd day after purchase made me keep it and struggle with the problems. Whenever the left shift is pressed, there's a problem with typing a Shift F Q and U, for one f alone toggles the decimal key in the num pad, the q toggles backquote and u toggles f6. When holding shift, the shift key toggles the help key, and takes a lot for the keyboard to register shift F Q U, i literally have to bang it until it works. I've tried switching the usb port it comes from but that does no good. The keyboard works fine if unplugged and replugged, then after 30 seconds or so, starts bugging like described above. I've tried everything, keyremap4macbookpro to remap certain keys here and there to try and make the keyboard function properly. Turns out, the shift toggling the help key shouldn't interfere with shift F toggling. Now, the Logitech keyboards, aren't mac supported, i know this, i'd assume, because at how cheap they are, they'd be generic type keyboards. Sadly, the keyboards had been just a pain in the a**. I don't know if this is my computer hardware problems. As the usb ports work fine, with other things such as charging phones/ipods. Using a 3rd party usb hotspot and connecting other things. Also, some keys in the keyboard, that won't work, work using other keyboards. I'm scared to buy a expensive keyboard because I'm afraid of failure. My question is, is it the keyboards that are failing or my mac? If it's the keyboards, any inexpensive keyboards out there mac compatible?
TL;DR, on my previous 4 keyboards, certains keys stopped working. Blaming it on the keyboard's uncompatibility with Mac, what are some inexpensive keyboards for mac that are compatible?
iMac, Mac OS X (10.6.8)
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