KDE Plans to Make Copilot Key Useful on Linux Laptops

Summary

  • KDE is working to make the Copilot key useful on Linux laptops.
  • KDE has posted updates on bug fixes and new features for Plasma 6.5.
  • KDE Frameworks 6.18 now allows the use of the Copilot key for launching apps on modern laptops.

If you ever feel useless, rest assured that you’re currently not as useless as the Copilot key on a Linux user’s laptop. Well, I say “currently,” because the Linux community are finding ways to tweak the Copilot key so it’s actually useful to them, instead of just being a dead key.

If you use KDE’s apps, you may see these changes happen sooner rather than later. KDE recently confirmed that it’s planning to make the Copilot key do work for Linux users, but not before it claimed that the existence of the key itself is “dumb.”

KDE plans to do something about the “dumb Copilot key”

As spotted by Neowin, KDE published its latest “This Week in Plasma” post. As you can tell by the name, the goal of the post is to highlight everyone’s hard work as they add features, make adjustments, and squash bugs with KDE’s apps, including Plasma and Frameworks.

The post contains both bug fixes for later versions of KDE Plasma 6.4, plus some sneak peeks into what version 6.5 will hold. However, tucked away as part of the Frameworks 6.18 patch notes is this nugget:

You can now use the dumb Copilot key on the keyboards of many modern laptops as the trigger for launching apps or any other action in places where you can set up keyboard shortcuts. We don’t yet have a way for you to re-bind it to emulate another key (like the Ctrl key you probably wanted all along), but hopefully that will eventually happen as well. (Kai Uwe Broulik, link)

Well, that’s good news for anyone who purchased a laptop recently. If you’ve never heard of KDE Plasma, one of our writers crowned it the best Linux desktop environment they’ve used. And if you want the full patch notes, here they are:

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