Apple had originally dismissed this as a hardware issue, offering to replace keyboards and notebooks. But while the majority of complaints did come from users of “straight out of the box” Intel-based Macs, one user reported having the same problem after installing Leopard on a G4 PowerMac.
Users who had been running the earlier Tiger edition of Mac OS X for months with no problems, claimed the keyboard failure too after upgrading to Leopard, or in some cases during the act of installing the Leopard upgrade. The MacBook Pro Software Update 1.1, available in the support section of Apple.com , should be the answer to this widespread bug. Leopard requires the 10.5.1 update before administering the software patch.
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