On Sat, Feb 16, 2002 at 03:07:01PM -0500, Bob Thibodeau wrote:
| I'm not using gpm.
| My XF86Config-4 has this
|
| Section "InputDevice"
| Identifier "Configured Mouse"
| Driver "mouse"
| Option "CorePointer"
| Option "Device"
I'm not using gpm.
My XF86Config-4 has this
Section "InputDevice"
Identifier "Configured Mouse"
Driver "mouse"
Option "CorePointer"
Option "Device""/dev/psaux"
Option "Protocol" "ImPS/2"
#
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 07:16:13PM -0800, David Frey wrote:
| On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 06:38:46PM -0800, ben wrote:
| > this has worked for some people. in gpm.conf, set the repeat type to raw,
and
| > use /dev/gpmdata as the pointer device in your x config, and run gpm. if it
| > doesn't work, l
On 16 Feb 2002, David Frey wrote:
> My mouse (a logitech optical wheel mouse) has one problem. Every once
> in a while, the cursor will "go crazy" and shoot into one of the corners
> of the screen. It returns to normal after a few seconds. This is
> *REALLY* annoying when I'm playing Unreal T
On Friday 15 February 2002 07:16 pm, David Frey wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 06:38:46PM -0800, ben wrote:
> > this has worked for some people. in gpm.conf, set the repeat type to raw,
> > and use /dev/gpmdata as the pointer device in your x config, and run gpm.
> > if it doesn't work, let me kn
On Friday 15 February 2002 07:16 pm, David Frey wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 06:38:46PM -0800, ben wrote:
> > this has worked for some people. in gpm.conf, set the repeat type to raw,
> > and use /dev/gpmdata as the pointer device in your x config, and run gpm.
> > if it doesn't work, let me kn
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 06:38:46PM -0800, ben wrote:
> this has worked for some people. in gpm.conf, set the repeat type to raw, and
> use /dev/gpmdata as the pointer device in your x config, and run gpm. if it
> doesn't work, let me know and i can scratch your particular setup off the
> list of
On Friday 15 February 2002 06:14 pm, David Frey wrote:
> ---UPDATE---
>
> I killed gpm, but it didn't help. DMA is on, but I doubt that has
> anything to do with the problem. It's a USB mouse with a ps/2 adaptor.
> I might try straight up USB...
>
this has worked for some people. in gpm.conf, se
---UPDATE---
I killed gpm, but it didn't help. DMA is on, but I doubt that has
anything to do with the problem. It's a USB mouse with a ps/2 adaptor.
I might try straight up USB...
-David Frey
hi ya
just seen this thread...
if you have an ide disk... and yur mouse is going bonkers..
makingit hard to click on stuff or select text...
check your DMA setting on your ide disks
hdparm -iv /dev/hda
- check that dma is turned on
if its off ( dma = 0 ), than run
hdp
* David Frey ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 15. 2002 19:48]:
> Yeah, I was running gpm. I'm going to kill it right now and fire up UT
> for some "testing" ;-)
Not trying to be a party pooper , but I'm not running gpm and I
still get it. I hope yours turns out better than mine.
--
Brian Clark | Debian
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 07:21:45PM -0500, David Roundy wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 03:29:15PM -0800, David Frey wrote:
> > My mouse (a logitech optical wheel mouse) has one problem. Every once
> > in a while, the cursor will "go crazy" and shoot into one of the corners
> > of the screen. It
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 03:29:15PM -0800, David Frey wrote:
> My mouse (a logitech optical wheel mouse) has one problem. Every once
> in a while, the cursor will "go crazy" and shoot into one of the corners
> of the screen. It returns to normal after a few seconds. This is
> *REALLY* annoying wh
* David Frey ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Feb 15. 2002 18:30]:
> My mouse (a logitech optical wheel mouse) has one problem. Every once
> in a while, the cursor will "go crazy" and shoot into one of the
> corners of the screen. It returns to normal after a few seconds. This
> is *REALLY* annoying when I'm
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