Belkin Soho KVM Switch
Several years ago, I bought a Raritan SwitchMan KVM switch. It's used so multiple computers can share one keyboard (K), monitor (V-stands for Video), and mouse (M). Back then, there were only PS/2 style keyboards and mice. So that's what the KVM switch handled.
Well, over the years I got a new computer, new laptop, and more and more supported USB inputs instead of PS/2. So the KVM switch became less and less useful. I had a converter that converted the PS/2 signal to USB so I could use it on my laptop, but I was having problems with the keyboard - the computer would think a certain key was "stuck" and would type the same letter thousands of times.
I eventually bought a separate USB keyboard to use on my laptop. But then I was stuck with separate keyboards, separate mice, and I was using the laptop display (separate displays).
That's why I bought a Belkin Soho KVM switch. It supports both USB and PS/2 style inputs. So, I have my laptop (USB), home computer (USB), and a web server (PS/2) all hooked up. It works great. I'm back to 1 keyboard, 1 mouse, and 1 monitor. Yeah!!
Well, over the years I got a new computer, new laptop, and more and more supported USB inputs instead of PS/2. So the KVM switch became less and less useful. I had a converter that converted the PS/2 signal to USB so I could use it on my laptop, but I was having problems with the keyboard - the computer would think a certain key was "stuck" and would type the same letter thousands of times.
I eventually bought a separate USB keyboard to use on my laptop. But then I was stuck with separate keyboards, separate mice, and I was using the laptop display (separate displays).
That's why I bought a Belkin Soho KVM switch. It supports both USB and PS/2 style inputs. So, I have my laptop (USB), home computer (USB), and a web server (PS/2) all hooked up. It works great. I'm back to 1 keyboard, 1 mouse, and 1 monitor. Yeah!!
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