Originally posted by: MadEye2
There should be another option in your BIOS to enable USB keyboard support as well as the Legacy USB support.
I know you can get USB-PS/2 adaptors, but I don't know if you can get adaptors for the AT kind. I don't see why not though. How old is the machine you're using anyway?
The system is a Cyrix/NatSemi MediaGX/Geode system, Cx5510 chipset, I think. Onboard video, sound, USB, a couple PCI slots, 3 ISA slots, etc. The BIOS has options for USB enable/disable, and then under that, if USB is enabled, there is a "legacy support" option, which I assumes makes USB keyboards work like standard PS/2 ones, at least from the POV of the software. That appears to be how it functions. That's a little different than my current main machine, that has an MSI KT4V-L (KT400/8235), and offers a BIOS option for "port 60/64 emulation" underneath both the USB enable and legacy support options. I've tested that, and it actually is a chipset/hardware-level emulation of the port 60/64 keyboard controller, not just a BIOS API-level emulation. It interferes with W2K/XP's usage of USB devices though, and seems to conflict if I have a real PS/2 keyboard or mouse plugged in at the same time. (Not surprising.)
I'm using an IBM Trackpoint II keyboard, via a QVC PS/2 keyboard/mouse to USB1.1 adaptor that I got at MicroCenter to connect them. I also have a Belkin 5-button USB optical mouse, and some Memorex "multimedia" keyboard with a PS/2 plug.
I suppose I could do a PITA workaround - install those USB peripherals onto my main system, in my Win98se OS installation, and then manually export the registry settings, edit, and then import them into the registry at the command prompt under safe mode, along with manually copying the driver binaries. I didn't want to have to resort to that though.
I can boot that system in Safe Mode, and control Win98se with the keyboard, but of course you can't install hardware devices in Safe Mode.
