Kinto
Remaps the standard linux or windows keyboard to have a Mac like layout, and will remap the Cmd position to Ctrl+Shift while the user is using any Terminal based application.
Release Notes
1.0.7-3
- Fixed kintox11 closing issue
- Updated installer for IBus for Fedora
- Fixed possible issue with kinto.desktop autostart file
1.0.7-2
- Accepted PR from fratajczak that closes the file opening caret checking. Resolves segfault issue.
- Control releases better during term remaps, particularly useful for KDE alt-tab.
- Improved Gnome shortcut modifications to ensure that they are permanent (survives reboots).
- Killing xbindkeys keymaps are more specific in user_config.js config.
1.0.7-1
- Full Uninstaller Added to setup.py. Hotkeys will be backed up during initial install and can be re-added or completely reset to defaults upon removal.
- Minor fixes to KDE install
1.0.7
- Kinto starts immediately after install (there was a 5 second delay)
- Multithreading added for caret status checking
- Firefox to GUI based apps no longer re-applies full xkb remap (removes lag)
- Added several new mac related keybinds & documentation from Dev into Master
- Cmd+Tab Application switching now enabled in master
- Resolved unexpected keymap crashes with KDE (only impacted dev branch)
- A lot more comments and documentation added to mac_gui and mac_term symbols files
- Windows Terminal and Hyper Terminal added for Windows users
Additional Notes
- C based program, kintox11, now replaces xprop.
- Added json parsing directly inside Kintox11 and setup.py.
- Users can now easily modify and extend Kinto to support additional keyboard configurations per app being used.
- No longer using Super under Terminals. The Cmd key location is now using Ctrl+Shift by default while using Terminals.
- Prior versions have no version number and were script based with xprop, this is no longer the case. Please reset all Terminal app keybinds accordingly.