Tibetan Keyboards / བོད་ཡིག་མཐེབ་གཞོང་སྐོར༎ Tibetan Keyboards བོད་ཡིག་མཐེབ་གཞོང་སྐོར༎ Introduction གླེང་བརྗོད༎ This site provides a common place to obtain all free Unicode keyboards and input methods (aka IMs or IMEs) for enterring Tibetan text. Font-based legacy input methods are not included because I’m so tired of receiving documents from people who don’t know better and trying to convert them to something I can read. If you really need legacy input methods/keyboards you can obtain them from the website,, etc. དྲ་ངོས་འདི་ནི་རྒྱལ་སྤྱི་ཚད་ལྡན་ “Unicode” བོད་ཡིག་གི་མཐེབ་གཞོང་དང་ནང་བླུག་ཐབས་ཤེས་ ༼IM དང་ IME ཟེར་མཁན་༽ བབ་ལེན་ས་ཡོད། འདི་ན་རྣམ་གྲངས་རྙིང་པའི་ཡིག་གཟུགས་ཀྱི་མཐེབ་གཞོང་ མེད། དེ་དགོས་ན་ དང་ དེ་སོགས་ནས་ ལེན་ཐུབ་ས་རེད། For Windows 2000/XP/Vista • for Windows 2000/XP/etc., created with MSKLC by Rich Felker (me). Untested, might need minor fixes. This is not needed if you have Windows Vista; it’s included with the OS.
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Documentation on this layout can be found and at Tashi Tsering’s site. • created with MSKLC by Chris Fynn. •, which allows you to enter Tibetan text by typing the Wylie [EWTS] transliteration. • by Chris Walker.
This is NOT the Sambhota software but rather a keyboard which enables one to enter Unicode Tibetan using the layout familiar to Sambhota users. Before using this you must first install “Keyman”. The free version seems to have been discontinued and no longer available from, but has an old version. • by Chris Walker. Just like the above, this needs Keyman installed first.
Because of the wide popularity Monlam font has within the Tibetan diaspora, it is a highly likely target for Chinese hacker groups with the interest of spying on communications of Tibetan diaspora.
• Monlam Bod-yig v2 — is this really a Unicode keyboard or not? For X Window System (Linux/BSD/*nix) • for the X Window System, using XKB, by Rich Felker (me). Install it as bo (with no extension) in /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols (location may vary on old/strange systems) and activate with the setxkbmap command or your favorite graphical XKB configuration program. Newer versions of X.org will include this keyboard in the standard distribution, but under a different name: cn(tib).
• for X Window System/XKB. You do not need to download this file unless you’re curious to read it; it has been included in the standard X.org distribution for a long time.
Lobsang Monlam
• UIM, through m17n-lib, makes various Tibetan input methods available, but installation is OS- and distribution-specific. Use your system’s package manager if you want to install these input methods. Beware that (as of Summer 2007) m17n-lib’s notion of what is “Wylie” is rather incorrect and probably not what you expect. For Linux Console • for the Linux console, by Rich Felker (me). Load using loadkeys; the Caps_Lock key switches between whatever your original layout was (US or other Latin-based keyboard) and Tibetan. Note that this is probably not useful unless you have a console terminal capable of displaying Tibetan, such as. For Macintosh The following are for MacOS X (and later?).
![Macbook Macbook](https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*LRqy1jXnURDvoU4GIIkjlw.png)
If you’re using an older Mac there’s really no hope of communicating with Unicode Tibetan. •, by Chris Walker. Visit the for instructions in both English and Tibetan. Sadly there seem to be no other layouts (Standard, TCRC, Sambhota, etc.) available for Mac. Documentation Most Tibetan keyboards have incomplete or no documentation available on the web. Martin usb dmx interface ii drivers for mac. I will eventually fill in this section as I find documentation on the layouts I’m not yet familiar with. Links འབྲེལ་ལམ༎ These other sites may be useful to visitors attempting to obtain Tibetan input software: • •.add more.