
The only option is the Add Devices button at the bottom of the screen.Ĭlicking it gave no apparent joy. The problem is there's no "Remove Device" button or option anywhere within Logitech Options. At the same time, the paranoid systems guy in me didn't like the idea that the Logitech Unifying Receiver (a small USB dongle) still listened for the K780, which meant that, if the keyboard got too close, a stray keypress intended for one machine might be interpreted by another.įirst, I thought I'd look at Bluetooth settings, but the only device listed was the K810 keyboard - the one actually in use with that computer. The perfectionist in me didn't like the idea that the product, which wasn't attached to my development machine, showed as attached. It's a cool hack.Īlthough the K780 is no longer in use on my coding box, Logitech Options insisted it was in use. The K780 has a slot designed to hold an iPad, but that slot works equally well holding a trackpad, which allows me to navigate the Final Cut Pro X timeline without taking my hands off the keyboard.

That keyboard has since migrated upstairs to my video editing machine.

One fix that was eluding me for a while was how to remove a keyboard entry from Logitech Options, the little utility program that helps customize buttons and controls on Logitech devices.Īt some point in the distant past, I had a Logitech K780 keyboard attached to my development machine. But even in a world completely disrupted by an invisible pathogen, we sometimes need to fix our systems. Almost all mundane system maintenance tasks seem unimportant in light of the overwhelming news of the pandemic.
