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Keyboard going berserk, typing on its own

When my iMac has been 'resting' or 'sleeping' about every 3-4 days, it goes crazy typing by itself streams of letters. I know this has been a problem written about before, but I didn't find any answers there.

The only thing that solves the problem is unplugging, waiting, then re-starting the computer. I have checked all the standard "sticky keys+++" advice. No. And the problem appears 50% of the time when the screen has been asleep and I try to log in again with my password ... then I get an endless stream of those black circles that hide your password when logging in. I delete, but a few seconds later the stream of automatic 'letters' starts up again. This has happened when I'm set up to give a work presentation via ZOOM and then my colleagues have to wait while I re-start the computer; it's awful.... Help anyone?

iMac 27″, macOS 10.14

Posted on Jul 16, 2020 11:51 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jul 21, 2020 9:12 AM

Hi patricia88,


Thank you for using the Apple Support Communities! We understand you are experiencing an issue on your iMac, where letters are appearing without your input. We can certainly see how impacting this is, especially when you're trying to get set up for work-related tasks. Let's work together and help find a solution for you.


You've taken some good steps so far. Our next suggestion will be to try the steps in this article: If your Apple keyboard doesn't work - Apple Support. Please note, there is a section for a wireless keyboard, and a USB keyboard. Choose which section relates to your type of keyboard. The article steps relate to the keyboard not working in general. For your specific issue, after taking these steps, you should test for resolution by placing your iMac back into sleep, and then wake it to see if the keyboard continues entering letters on its own.


If the behavior continues, I'll have you try the following resets below. These resets do not affect your personal data. Be sure to test for resolution after resetting the SMC, before you reset the NVRAM:


-How to reset the SMC of your Mac - Apple Support.

-Reset NVRAM or PRAM on your Mac - Apple Support.



Keep us posted on the results. Regards.






Similar questions

3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 21, 2020 9:12 AM in response to patricia88

Hi patricia88,


Thank you for using the Apple Support Communities! We understand you are experiencing an issue on your iMac, where letters are appearing without your input. We can certainly see how impacting this is, especially when you're trying to get set up for work-related tasks. Let's work together and help find a solution for you.


You've taken some good steps so far. Our next suggestion will be to try the steps in this article: If your Apple keyboard doesn't work - Apple Support. Please note, there is a section for a wireless keyboard, and a USB keyboard. Choose which section relates to your type of keyboard. The article steps relate to the keyboard not working in general. For your specific issue, after taking these steps, you should test for resolution by placing your iMac back into sleep, and then wake it to see if the keyboard continues entering letters on its own.


If the behavior continues, I'll have you try the following resets below. These resets do not affect your personal data. Be sure to test for resolution after resetting the SMC, before you reset the NVRAM:


-How to reset the SMC of your Mac - Apple Support.

-Reset NVRAM or PRAM on your Mac - Apple Support.



Keep us posted on the results. Regards.






Jul 23, 2020 5:16 AM in response to patricia88

patricia88,


Thank you for taking the time to perform those steps. We are going to perform further steps to help isolate the issue.


-Are you using a USB keyboard, or a wireless keyboard with your iMac? Do you happen to have another keyboard you can test with your iMac? This will be important to help us rule out the issue being related to the communication between your iMac and keyboard.


Then, let's have you boot up into safe mode. It’s a way to start up your Mac so it performs certain checks, repairs, emptying of system cache, and prevents some software from automatically loading: How to use safe mode on your Mac - Apple Support. Once in safe mode, allow your iMac to go into sleep, and then try waking it as you normally do, to see if the keyboard behavior continues. Sometimes safe mode can successfully resolve some issues. With this being said, after testing in safe mode, restart and log in as normal to see if that helps resolve the issue.


If the issue remains, we will have you test a new user account next, to isolate if this is a user-specific issue, or a system-wide issue. Here’s how: How to test an issue in another user account on your Mac - Apple Support. Once in a new user account, do the same thing to test; allow your iMac to go into sleep, and then wake it as normal to test the keyboard behavior.



We look forward to hearing back from you with these results. Thank you.

Jul 22, 2020 7:09 PM in response to jeremy_v

Helpful, as the last two steps (resetting the SMC and the PRAM) helped re-set my computer ... until the next time it happened. This means 'always' if the computer has been on sleep mode overnight, and/or if in sleep mode for more than ~20 minutes during the workday. Routine is: in morning: wake up computer (touch keyboard), login window appears, type first letter of log-in, a black dot appears then more black dots just keep appearing like running rabbit tracks. Touch the keyboard again, and another long strings of 'random letters' appears. (Using the steps above re-sets the computer and I can then begin work.) BUT during the day this can happen if I leave the computer still for anywhere from 20-60 minutes (so I have to keep remembering to touch a key every so often). I have an iMac, OS Mojave 10.14.6 (don't want to upgrade as a software programme I use routinely and is essential in my work isn't compatible with any system above 10.14.6). Any other ideas?

Keyboard going berserk, typing on its own

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