It is near impossible with that combo box. Vo does not play nice nice with it 
at all. You will try and hit vo space to except yoru change and get an A. 
always! at least that' what I've found.

Good luck.

S
On May 17, 2010, at 7:04 PM, Robert Carter wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> I have looked at the Take Control of fusion book and looked at the key 
> mapping in fusion 3 preferences. It is not yet clear to me how to map an 
> insert key to the right option key on my MacBook Pro keyboard. Has anybody on 
> this list done key mapping with fusion and VoiceOver? If so, I would love to 
> communicate with you.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Robert Carter
> 
> 
> On May 16, 2010, at 5:18 PM, Esther wrote:
> 
>> Hi Robert,
>> 
>> I don't run Windows on my Mac, but I always understood that there were two 
>> popular ways to handle key mapping under Fusion: one way was by using Sharp 
>> Keys, which is a Windows registry hack that lets you associate two different 
>> list views of keys.  The second way was to use VMware Fusion's own 
>> Preferences > Keyboard & Mouse menu to remap keys and do this with a 
>> one-time connection of a Windows USB keyboard.  This method, outlined 
>> originally for version 2.0 of Fusion, worked for any virtual operating 
>> system (e.g., if you were running linux on your Mac, there's no way that a 
>> Windows registry hack would help you remap keys, since there's no Windows 
>> operating system or registry).  You needed to connect a keyboard at least 
>> once, because the remapped settings were defined by key presses on the 
>> keyboard, rather than a list view of keys.
>> 
>> There may be other ways to define the key codes for remapping in the current 
>> version of Fusion. You can look this up in the "Take Control of VMware 
>> Fusion 3" guide, which is, after all, free, under sponsorship from VMware:
>> http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/vmware-fusion-3
>> 
>> Incidentally, I've heard anecdotally that Fusion 3 is slow with 32-bit 
>> operating systems but very fast with 64-bit systems, so it seems worth 
>> sorting out the key mapping issues.
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> 
>> Esther
>> 
>> Robert Carter wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> I am disappointed that SharpKeys does not work with the 64 bit version of 
>>> Windows 7. Does anybody know of a key mapping program that does work with 
>>> 64 bit Windows?
>>> 
>>> Robert Carter
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On May 16, 2010, Esther wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hi Kawal,
>>>> 
>>>> Users who are interested in Sharp Keys for remapping keys in Windows under 
>>>> Fusion can download it free from randyrants.com:
>>>> http://www.randyrants.com/sharpkeys/
>>>> 
>> <snip>
>> 
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