Wireless Yes Wireless is what requires a driver. Because the circuitry in a wireless keyboard is different as it must send data wirelessly, meaning the computer must know the receiver has a way to accept and convert the signal into usable data for the computer to display. That knowledge is called a driver.
Wireless - jazzmarazz13
For the Windows XP keyboard driver, download HP Multimedia Keyboard/Mouse Driver Update - sp26752 . try it. it work with windwos xp
only the standard keyboard drive is loaded in safe mode which works with almost any keyboard. The driver for the keyboard is either the wrong one or is damaged in someway. Go to your device manager find the keyboard and uninstall the driver. Then reinstall with the correct one (or let windows use the generic (default) driver. Answer: Actually both those wont work, believe it or not the problem with laptops doing this is the battery. Try it! Remove the battery and plug the charger in and start windows and all will be working again. Have your battery replaced.
A Robot Hooker...
If the MIDI keyboard is not class compliant as a USB device (ie. needs a driver installed for a Mac), it will not work with an iPad. In addition, if the iPad shows an error about the USB power when the keyboard is plugged in, then it is drawing too much power from the iPad USB port and will not work. The only way to get an over-current keyboard (and many require more power than the iPad can provide) is to use an AC adapter on the keyboard if it can use one, or use a powered USB hub that is compatible with the iPad. The Belkin ones seem to work fine, but some others do not.
yes the wireless keyboard works on battery bcz it needs supply to establish the wireless network
Any keyboard instrument which has a MIDI port should work. If the keyboard / controller doesn't come with drivers and software, then as long as it supports general MIDI standards it should work. I'm assuming you already have some sort of MIDI interface. If not and the keyboard is USB, your mileage may vary but most that are come with a driver and software to enable this.
This usually means the keyboard driver is messed up. Usually a simple reboot will do the trick but sometimes you need to reinstall the driver. I would also change the batteries if it's a wireless keyboard.
Keyboards typically do not need a specific driver; the operating system will provide a generic driver that works with all keyboards. The keyboard may have extra functionality, however, that requires a specific driver to operate.
Device Manager
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check if it needs batteries or that keyboard may be for another conputer