LogitechKeyboard Software is a powerful upgrade for the device. With right drivers installed, the performance of your keyboard will be on another level. Users can unlock the full functionality of the keyboard, control the performance, the feedback and get rid of any issues.
Such functions are important for gamers. Sometimes, they need to have a command on each button, and the keyboard driver allows them to do it (the same thing with the mouse). You can configure macros and multi-key bindings and become the king of the game. You make things easier with software, as you can now access more options and do things faster.
These are different types of drivers created for gaming and office keyboards. G Hub software allows you to unlock additional options for your gaming devices and increase your capabilities when fighting your enemies or facing challenging quests. Logi Options + optimizes all operations and allows you to boost your working capabilities. For example, you bind keys to perform specific commands without permission to use combinations of keys.
By utilizing these methods, you can stay informed about the latest Logitech keyboard driver updates, ensuring your keyboard performs optimally for a smooth typing experience. Remember, you have control over your communication preferences, allowing you to choose how you receive news about your Logitech keyboard drivers.
I have the same problem. I have been using my K380 with my Mac, iPad, and work win10 laptop for a couple of years. On Friday I had a problem with my win10 BT connection and removed the keyboard, headphones and mouse. They all re-paired successfully except the keyboard. I have restarted the laptop no to avail. The keyboard is fine with my Mac and iPad.
FYI, I enter the code on pairing. The win10 says it is paired, but the keyboard keeps flashing for about a minute before it goes off. The laptop does not register any input after pairing (although it must have registered the 6 digit code as it says it is paired). I have removed and repaired a few times but does not work. The laptop does see it when it is connected. Eemmm, because it says it is connected. I connect the keyboard to my Mac and the win10 then says driver error. Reconnect to win 10, and the driver error message disappears, so defo connected. Just no input from the keyboard is registered.
thanks for your quick reply IIIaass. I have downloaded all the windows support drivers from bootcamp assistant but nothing seems to be working, reinstalled, repaired the drivers etc. it says 'driver error' could you send a link to correct driver for wireless keyboard. Maybe, it is the driver!
I installed bootcamp the both to a mac mini, and everything works fine there (wireless keyboard too), but for the installation onto a macpro late 2013 everything works fine, WI-FI, GPU, wireless mouse, BT, etc. all of the drivers are OK, with the exception of the wireless keyboard where the bluetooth manager says: Driver Error.
You have to go to "Device Manager" (right click on Start: Device Manager option), at the HID leaf (that stands open 'cause of a driver error), simply uninstall and delete the wrong driver. Magically everything works fine, and the wireless keyboard will be reported on the Keyboards leaf of the Device Manager.
This didn't work for me. I have exactly the same problem. It says "driver error" for the keyboard, while the magic mouse works fine. If I delete the driver, it shows a "System Administrator's Keyboard" is connected with bluetooth, but the keyboard still doesn't work.
This is that whenever I turn on my laptop, the keyboard is completely disabled, as if I have the laptop flipped over like a tablet, even if it's not. For the first little while I would find that it would fix itself suddenly, but that slowly stopped happening and now it is stuck this way. It seems to be a software problem, not a hardware one.
If your keyboard is not working:
Turn off the computer and then restart it.
Press the Esc key repeatedly to see if a startup menu opens.
If a setup menu does not open, the integrated keyboard hardware is not working. The integrated keyboard in the notebook should be serviced or replaced. To continue using the notebook, connect a USB-wired keyboard to a USB port and restart the computer.
If a setup menu opens, use the arrow keys to navigate the menus. If these keys are working in the startup menu, but then fail when Windows loads, the problems might be related to the keyboard software.
Restart the computer.
In Device Manager, uninstall and reinstall the keyboard software:
In Windows, search for and open Device Manager.
Click View and select Show Hidden Devices.
Click the arrow next to Keyboards, right-click the keyboard device name, then select Uninstall to remove the device from Windows.
Continue removing device names in the Keyboards category until all device names have been uninstalled.
Restart the notebook. Right-click Start (), select Shut down or sign out, then select Restart.
Wait for the computer to restart and open Windows.
The keyboard should now work correctly. To test the keyboard for key or hardware failures, see Testing for Hardware Failures (Windows 10, 8).
I have not made any hardware changes since I have purchased my device. I have installed software, however none of them should have an impact on the keyboard, and they are all trusted applications.
I also ran the component hardware test for both the keyboard and tocuhpad, the one that appears when pressing f2 when booing up. They showed no errors, and the keyboard and touchpad were working fine.
I find it quite strange that the keyboard and touchpad work fine in the BIOS menus, but as soon as I boot up, they quit. It seems like nothing I have tried has had any impact. It almost certainly is either a hardware issue with the sensors that detect the angle of the hinges, or a software issue related to when the laptop should d shouldn't disable the keyboard.
i have the exact same problem ie it behaves as if the tablet mode is on even if its not, the keyboard and touchpad does not work. i am using hp pavilion 360 convertible. i have tried all these three things ie uninstaling keyboard driver many times, updating intel intregated driver and at last full system recovery. but at the end the problem reappeared. what to do next ??
I run a mid 2013 MBA plus cinema display plus apple wireless keyboard (model A1255). This constellation worked fine both under MacOS (currently 10.11.5) and bootcamp win 7-64. Recently, the system began to "forget" about the wireless keyboard, which could be re-connected, sometimes automatically (after deleting all the drivers and reinstalling them (which, incidentally, even resulted in a windows blue screen which was recoverable from by simple rebooting)) and sometimes manually by keying in the automatically generated code number.
Right after installation of win 10 via the official bootcamp routines, I got a notification about a faulty driver. Still, the system offered me even a keycode to connect to the wireless keyboard, but did not give me enough time to key that code actually in. Thereafter, I got stuck at the point where the keyboard is reported as coupled, but upon trying to actually connect it the window for keying in a code pops up (with no code generated automatically) and at that point all attempts fail (i.e. "0000" "000000" etc.).
I uninstalled the keyboard drivers and put in those from earlier bootcamp versions - no change. The bootcamp I used is 6.0.6136. I also uninstalled the bluetooth drivers - no blue screen with win 10, but otherwise unsuccessful as before.
I wonder whether the keyboard driver is relevant here at all - perhaps this is the driver for the on-board-keyboard of the MBA? In any case there this just ONE keyboard driver in the device manager listed, not two, as one would expect. It also could be that the bluetooth drivers are not compatible although they work fine with the wireless magic mouse and other bluetooth items. I also note that a driver shows up under bluetooth drivers for that mouse - but there never was something like "Apple Wireless Keyboard Driver".
The drivers are unlikely to be an issue, but pairing is where the issues usually are. BT uses link-keys in Windows Registry. Use a USB Keyboard, connect it to your Mac, unpair the Wireless keyboard from OSX, unpair it from Windows, pair it to Windows first, and then pair it to OSX, after it works properly in Windows and test.
thanks for your suggestion. I have tried that before and now once more precisely as you suggested - it did not work. But hopefully I can now provide you with more details which, imho, clearly point to a driver error.
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