"ABSOLUTE WORST - DO NOT USE - THEY ARE TERRIBLE WITH AWFUL CUSTOMER SERVICE!!! I'd give zero stars if I could. I had booked a 10am appointment. At 10:30am, I called, left my name and number. No response. Called again. Called and talked to 2 reps, asked to get ETA. No call back. Called 3 more times - they never showed up. They are rude and non responsive."
KeyMe Locksmiths
150 W Sycamore St, Columbus
CLOSE · 06:00 - 23:00 · +1 614-907-4987
Snap & Crack Locksmith
4.5
6
1343 N High St, Columbus
CLOSE · 07:00 - 22:00 · +1 614-591-4849
"Called them when a different locksmith came out and insisted I purchase a key that he made (the key could not even start the vehicle, but could unlock it). I called Snap and Crack, and they sent technician Derek. He came very quickly, and he explained everything clearly and was very patient with me. He spent 2 hours attempting to fix/reprogram the key that was sold to me by the previous locksmith. Once he determined that the keys were not compatible with my vehicle, he sold me a key and the programming of it for $295 (plus tax). He didn't give up on the dysfunctional key and made a genuine effort to try to fix it, yet even though he couldn't reprogram it, he resolved my problem efficiently and with great customer service."
As for the fn (Function) key, I haven’t found a way to reassign or customize it, but so far, I haven’t needed it. If you don’t use features like Dictation or emoji shortcuts, you probably won’t miss it either.
If you lost your Recovery Key As long as you remember your Apple ID password and still have access to one of your trusted devices, you can sign in and create a new Recovery Key. Go to your Apple ID account page. Sign in with your password and trusted device. In the Security section, click Edit > Replace Lost Key.
A recovery key is designed as an alternative to Account Recovery ( How to use account recovery when you can’t reset your Apple Account password - Apple Support ) which is where Apple helps you regain access to your account.
An account recovery key is 28 characters long, and completely replaces other Apple ID password-reset mechanisms. The whole point of using a recovery key is to block all other password-reset paths. If you enabled an account recovery key, and have subsequently lost it, then your only option is to request a new recovery key using your Apple ID and password and a trusted device, or to user your ...
You press the key. Nothing happens. The automated call system continues; it may ask you to press a key again. By default the iPhone does not send the keypress. To fix it do this: Open Settings. Scroll down to Apps. Scroll down to Phone. Select Incoming Calls. Change the option from Banner to Full Screen. Done.
In the pop-up window, enter your Recovery Key. Go to the Security section and click Edit. Remove the device you no longer wish to use to verify your identity. If you have additional devices with Find My iPhone enabled, you can verify them as trusted devices. You can also add additional trusted phone numbers. If you lost your Recovery Key
A recovery key is designed as an alternative to Account Recovery ( How to use account recovery when you can’t reset your Apple ID password - Apple Support ) which is where Apple helps you regain access to your account.
Key Repeat No Longer Functioning At some point during the recent past, key repeat has stopped working. When I hold down any key, instead of the key repeating, a bubble appears over the cursor which appears to contain the unicode character options for that letter, if any are available. Letters that do not have optional unicode characters show ...
A recovery key is designed as an alternative to Account Recovery ( How to use account recovery when you can’t reset your Apple ID password - Apple Support ) which is where Apple helps you regain access to your account. However, "when you generate a recovery key, you can't use account recovery."
The Delete key opn Mac does and doesn't act the same way as the Backspace and Delete keys on a PC. Normally hitting Delete on a Mac will work as a Backspace key. To Forward Delete, normal action of the Delete key on a PC, you have to hold down the fn key and then hit the Delete key.