You could use the MS Keyboard Layout Creator to edit the built-in Greek Polytonic to add the few characters you need. It's not as full featured as Keyman, but it integrates with Windows and is therefore easier to use. I've used it to produce a Russian homophonic keyboard with stress, an extended US International that allows for macrons and dots below, and a Hebrew keyboard that makes it easier to input vowels with a certain amount of success. You can get a version of it from here, but I'm unsure if it's the most recent version. <http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=FB7B3DCD- D4C1-4943-9C74-D8DF57EF19D7&displaylang=en> I hope this helps. Foreign Language Technology http://go.carleton.edu/f Carly J. Born Academic Computing Coordinator for Foreign Languages & Literature Carleton College | 507-646-7010 | [log in to unmask] *********************************************** LLTI is a service of IALLT, the International Association for Language Learning (http://iallt.org/), and The Consortium for Language Teaching and Learning (http://www.languageconsortium.org/). Join IALLT at http://iallt.org. Otmar Foelsche, LLTI-Editor ([log in to unmask]) ***********************************************