Backlog of the Khmer keyboards after the Cambodian Civil War The layout for the more than 120 elements of Cambodian script and punctuation marks was a very difficult task because of the limitation to 46 keys and 96 positions of the standard typewriter. Industrial production of this typewriter began in 1955 in the Adler factories of West Germany while another similar machine was produced at the same time by Remington in the United States of America. Soon after, Keng Vannsak was the inventor of a commercial Khmer-script keyboard for typewriters and later computers in 1952. While it has been interpreted as symbolic of postcolonial nationalisms consigned to "derivate status at the level of both language and print", adapting the typewriter was also a powerful way to a affirm Khmer culture as a weapon for independence rather than the machine guns which were being used by the Issarak. Khmer nationalist Ieu Koeus designed a prototype typewriter keyboard for the Khmer script and published the two volume Pheasa Khmer book on the Cambodian language in 1947. History First Khmer keyboards in the wake of Independence Keyboard layout of the Cambodian-Keyboard Typewriter produced by Adler around 1955. The Khmer keyboard ( Khmer: ក្តារចុចជាភាសាខ្មែរ) includes several keyboard layouts for Khmer script.
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