Keyboard For Mac Book Pro Late 2015

Keyboard For Mac Book Pro Late 2015 9,7/10 5350 votes

I've been using the butterfly-style keyboard since the 12-inch MacBook came out in March of 2015. I've since used it, counting review units, on 7 different MacBooks and MacBooks Pro. I've kept using them, full-time, through all manner of dust, dirt, and debris, and I've yet to have a single problem with any of them. Replace the trackpad cable. This commonly goes bad on 2015 13' models, and causes intermittent problems with both the keyboard and trackpad (trackpad needs to be recognised in order for the keyboard to work on this model). Part is £10 and takes 5 minutes to replace - MacBook Pro 13' Retina Display Early 2015.

Visual studio for mac. Recently the keyboard and trackpad on my 2015 13' MacBook Pro have stopped working. This is the second laptop to do this, the same issue happened about 6 months ago and Apple gave me a new one when they could not figure it out. The issue usually starts with force touch not working then progresses to the keyboard and trackpad not being recognized at all.

Currently the power button works and force touch works but all other keys and the trackpad don't work. When this happens there are a lot of errors in the console regarding the AppleHSSPIController. 4/21/16 6:56:47.000 AM kernel[0] Error: AppleHSSPIDevice::start failed to get device descriptor 4/21/16 6:56:47.000 AM kernel[0] Error: AppleHSSPIController::_enumerateDevice Start failed 4/21/16 6:56:47.000 AM kernel[0] Error: AppleHSSPIController::_handleEnumerationFailureGated Giving up on device You can see the full log here. Since I ran into the same problem and this comes up on Google, I will provide an answer, even if there is no question. • When my keyboard and touchpad stopped working, the power button was still ok. • Resetting NVRAM did not help. • Using an external keyboard and mouse was fine.

Typing sudo dmesg tail on the command line was showing similar messages: AppleHSSPIController::_enqueueSPICommandGated SPICommand timed out. Interface 208, transactionType 64, frameNumber 0 Error: AppleHSSPIDevice::_DoDescriptorRequestGated Failed issue request error: 0xe00002ed Error: AppleHSSPIDevice::getDeviceDescriptor Failed to get descriptor with error 0xe00002ed Error: AppleHSSPIDevice::start failed to get device descriptor Error: AppleHSSPIController::_enumerateDevice Start failed Error: AppleHSSPIController::_handleEnumerationFailureGated Failed to enumerate the device. Resetting the device and trying to enumerate again.

Attempt:1 IO80211AWDLPeerManager::setAwdlOperatingMode Setting the AWDL operation mode from AUTO to SUSPENDED IO80211AWDLPeerManager::setAwdlSuspendedMode() Suspending AWDL, enterQuietMode(true) AppleIntelLpssGspi1::calcSpiClockParams: fSysClockPeriodPsec 10000, spiClockPeriodNsec 125 Error: AppleHSSPIController::doSPITransfer ERR received from device I brought it to the local Apple support partner. They first tried it by updating the touchpad controller software. Since that did not work either, they changed the HSSPI cable. Most likely, your internal keyboard and trackpad has failed. The 'Internal Keyboard/Trackpad' is a USB device, so there is no special controller or circuitry involved on your logic board. If you plug in an external USB keyboard/mouse and everything works, then it's definitely not your logic board as the symptoms would be present then as well.

As for the cause, it could simply be a manufacturing defect of the keyboard, trackpad, or some other related component. Without actually having the component to bench test, it would be impossible to guess what exactly is wrong with it. However, the trackpad and keyboard are technically separate components even though they are part of a master assembly called the 'top case.' If you have ability and resources, you can open your MacBook Pro and disconnect either the keyboard or the trackpad. If the symptoms go away, you will know that is the component has failed. If not, do the opposite and see if the results differ. You will need an external mouse and keyboard to do this test.