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Im looking how I can disable my laptop keyboard, I looked into the Device manager and there is no "Disable this device", Don't want to uninstall it, just turn it off.

I'm just troubleshooting some hardware issues.

any suggestions ?

Thanks

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    How were you planning to unlock it again if the keyboard isn't working? Or do you mean you want to use an external keyboard instead? – Col Sep 21 '09 at 14:34
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    @Col - I'm thinking he would use the mouse. – Rook Sep 21 '09 at 14:36
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    @idigas some kind of super secret mouse gesture presumably? – Col Sep 21 '09 at 14:46
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    Autohotkey could do it, and have a suitably obscure reactivation hotkey. (Like, say, doublepress q while holding winkey with caps lock on and the cd drive open) – Phoshi Sep 21 '09 at 15:01
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    i prefer using a hammer. think i still have a few keys from the last keyboard i disabled. yep, here they are, `K`, `I`, `U`, `C`, `T`, `F`. – quack quixote Oct 26 '09 at 19:00
  • @Col - Some sort of "enable keyboard" checkbox ... – Rook Nov 12 '11 at 11:10

6 Answers6

14

Revolter answer is actually not correct.

When trying the described manipulation, I got the following message:

ACPI\PNP0303\4&378F8A46&0                                   : Disable failed
No devices disabled

I think that the reality is too bad: there is no nice solution for disabling a laptop keyboard without physically removing it (if you uninstall the driver, Windows will re-install it automatically).

See this discussion forum for more precision: https://www.techsupportforum.com/hardware-support/laptop-support/250095-how-disable-laptop-keyboard.html

However, there is a way to uninstall a laptop keyboard with software: by installing an incompatible driver!!

The instructions are:

  1. Go to Device Manager and select the keyboard driver for your laptop. Right-click -> Properties.
  2. Click on the driver panel and select the "Update..." button.
  3. Here, you can choose an incompatible driver (you should unselect the option "Find compatible driver"). The one I have chosen (and the safer) is the "HID Keyboard Device".
  4. Restart and that's it!! You are done.

I hope it will help other folks here.

Pang
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fabien7474
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    Posting to confirm that installing an incompatible driver as advised by fabien4747 of course works. When guessing for an incompatible driver, I chose a different language – Japanese – when my keyboard is US. I also chose a different brand of driver software – Toshiba – when my laptop is a Dell. The system needs to be rebooted after the hopefully incompatible driver is installed. Thanks fabien4747! This advice saved a Vista laptop which had faulty keys which were registering when not pressed and interfering with an external USB keyboard. –  Nov 12 '11 at 09:58
  • This worked! First I downloaded Windows Driver Kit (WDK), installed on Windows 7, and couldn't find "DevCon.exe". This is a much quicker solution to disable the keyboard. In devices, look to see how your keyboard is connected (USB or keyboard port). Select a driver of the OTHER type and it won't be compatible. – Dale Dec 16 '16 at 21:19
5

You may use devcon from Microsoft

The DevCon utility is a command-line utility that acts as an alternative to Device Manager. Using DevCon, you can enable, disable, restart, update, remove, and query individual devices or groups of devices. DevCon also provides information that is relevant to the driver developer and is not available in Device Manager.

the link contain a detailed page about how to use it,

for your case, just put

devcon find *

To lists device instances of all devices that are present on the local computer.then,

devcon disable [ your-keyboard-HardwareID ]

to disable devices that match that specific hardware or instance ID

4

The only way is to physically disconnect the keyboard.

See this article : "Repairing the keyboards of Compaq laptops".

If what the guy describes in the above page solves the problem, you might save yourself the trouble.

If it doesn't, then repeat the operation, but just omit the described step 8 and do not reconnect the cable.

(I take no responsibility for any mistakes in the execution of this operation.)

harrymc
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3

Few suggestions:
LockKeyboard
KeyboardLock

or maybe the best yet: Kid-key-lock (don't ask, I didn't make the name)

Why do you wish to lock your keyboard ? Wouldn't just locking the user out do the job ?

Rook
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  • Thanks Idigas, Im using a second keyboard and I just want to lock the laptop-keyboard (the embedded one), these tools are locking all the keyboards. –  Sep 21 '09 at 15:00
  • Oh, I see. Ups, yeah. I understood it wrong then - I thought you wanted to lock your keyboard for, when, for example, you're working and putting stuff on your laptop. – Rook Sep 21 '09 at 15:33
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Check this out! http://www.100dof.com/products/kid-key-lock

I had the same problem. It seems to work pretty well.

ScreenShot

JoshP
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JMP
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    Explain the product a little bit more, make the answer more independent of the link. Welcome to Super User! – studiohack Oct 29 '12 at 02:03
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+1 for the answer provided by fabien7474! With one slight difference - my Asus UL56V with Windows 7 showed "Keyboard Device Filter" and "HID Keyboard Device". By disabling the second option, I ended up disabling the USB keyboard :) But disabling Keyboard Device Filter by changing to a Japanese keyboard did the trick for me!

P.S. No one on the whole Internet managed to come up with such an elegant fix for such a common (and serious) problem!

Cheers!