![]() ![]() ![]() It's almost as if a passionate in-house hardware team (as evident in the keyboard itself, their routers etc which are really really solid) is paired with a project manager and a bunch of very disinterested software devs from some huge consultancy firm that shall not be named. I have a few ASUS products (Router/Mesh, Motherboard, an old laptop etc) and nothing better describes the brand than "Good Hardware, Shit Software". Just wondering if it's "forever broken" or if it's a work in progress and likely to get improved. Have previous ASUS keyboards used Armory Crate for key reassignment and such, or is the Azoth the first one to get that functionality? Modifiers on Key Combinations are NOT working!!! □ In oder to go the the first line of a long document, you usually press Ctrl+Home. So I was content with Home just being Fn+PgUp. And while I could make it just be the PgUp button, I would not be able to assign Page Up to Fn+PgUp. You can change the switches, maybe the key caps, but you can't change the layout. The Azoth seriously is very nice keyboard hardware, but it's completely ruined by the software. The software lists all "Key Combinations", but that's it. Worse: you can't change, delete or add any of the 2nd layer keys. The only workaround is to use the windows on-screen keyboard (or a second physical keyboard) to assign keys to keys. Because you can't press the End key anymore!! (I'm serious, it's that stupid). So if you want to assign the End key to another key, you can't. So if you reassign Home to the End key, there is no End key anymore. ![]() Once you reassign one, the original key doesn't exist anymore. Then go into a drop down and switch form "default" to "keyboard function" and then it asks you to press a key on your keyboard to assign the new key (the one you pressed) to the key you selected. Nope: in Armoury Crate you have to click on a key. And was expecting the same functionality for the $250 ASUS keyboard. I wanted to reassign keys (the keyboard has PageUp/PageDown and Home/End on a second layer (FN+PageUp/Down). ![]()
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