Unfortunately, there's nothing you can do to open a new window on a keypress (other than disabling the popup blocker).
The way that the popup blockers in IE, Firefox and Chrome work (from a high level) is by the browser (upon encountering a call to window.open) walking up the JavaScript call stack to determine if the current function is—or was called by a function that is—an event handler. In other words, it finds out if the current function is executing because the user did something that triggered a DOM event.
If so, then the popup is allowed; otherwise it is blocked. However, the question of which events qualify as "popup-allowing" vary by browser. By default in Mozilla, only change, click, dblclick, mouseup, reset, and submit qualify. (I assume IE is similar.)
Functions that are event handlers for any other type of event – such as keydown/keyup/keypress in your case – do not qualify for special popup-allowing treatment, which means your popup is blocked and is why your call to window.open returns null.
Chrome, however, does consider the keydown event eligible for allowing popups to be opened, which is why your script works in that browser.
Here's a reduced example to demonstrate how this works. This demo:
- Defines a function called
spawn() which calls window.open to open a popup.
- Calls
spawn() immediately as the page is loaded. This is blocked by all browsers since the call is made from the global scope; it is not called from an event handler.
- Attaches a function to
window.onkeydown which calls spawn(). If you press any key in Chrome, the popup will open because it allows popups from keydown handlers. In IE and Firefox, the popup will be blocked becuase those browsers do not allow popups from keyboard events.
- Attaches an event handler to the link which calls
spawn(). When you click the link, the popup will be allowed in all browsers because the call to window.open can be traced back to an event handler for a click event.
As you can now see, nothing goes on to manipulate event properties or "trick" the browser in to not knowing that there's a new window. The behavior of popups being allowed to open from link clicks is by design, the theory being that if you've clicked on something, it's likely that you want to see whatever is in the popup. However, when a call is made to window.open from a place where you've not done anything (such as the global scope), it's likely you do not have any interest in whatever [ad] is in the automatically-launching popup.
In this way, popup blockers prevent annoyances (automatically launching ads) while still allowing pages to open popups at the user's request.