On 08/05/2019 10:10 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
On Mon, 5 Aug 2019 08:36:12 -0400
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
So far, 8 months into ownership, I have not needed to clean the
trackball, but it is easy to take out.
I've used these for years simply because I like them better,
but after a long time (a f
On Mon, 5 Aug 2019 23:23:46 +0800
Ed Greshko wrote:
> I can't see how any rubber could wear from the scroll ring.
I can't figure out how it happens either, but it comes from
someplace and sure looks like the stuff the ring is made of.
Possibly I just have ground rubber pixies that show up at
nig
On 8/5/19 10:10 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Mon, 5 Aug 2019 08:36:12 -0400
> Robert Moskowitz wrote:
>
>> So far, 8 months into ownership, I have not needed to clean the
>> trackball, but it is easy to take out.
> I've used these for years simply because I like them better,
> but after a long time
On Mon, 5 Aug 2019 08:36:12 -0400
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> So far, 8 months into ownership, I have not needed to clean the
> trackball, but it is easy to take out.
I've used these for years simply because I like them better,
but after a long time (a few years at least) I see little
crumbs of th
On 8/5/19 12:18 AM, Frédéric wrote:
I have been using a Kensington trackball for years
Interesting, first time I hear about that. How do you replace the
middle button and the wheel? I am used to zoom in/out with control
wheel for example.
I was in an auto accident end of last Oct. 8 weeks i
> I have been using a Kensington trackball for years
Interesting, first time I hear about that. How do you replace the
middle button and the wheel? I am used to zoom in/out with control
wheel for example.
F
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedorapr
> Mice do wear out. The cable, the connections, are subject to metal
> fatigue. Fluff getting into optical sensors can make them erratic.
> Buttons wear out, the soldering around the buttons goes bad.
Yes and this one is the cheapest Logitech so less than 10 €. It is
probably as old as the PC (6
On 08/04/2019 07:27 PM, Tim via users wrote:
On Sun, 2019-08-04 at 19:28 +0200, Frédéric wrote:
it seems simpler than that. We tested another mouse and it worked
much better. So it's probably the wire that has false contact.
Mice do wear out. The cable, the connections, are subject to metal
On Sun, 2019-08-04 at 19:28 +0200, Frédéric wrote:
> it seems simpler than that. We tested another mouse and it worked
> much better. So it's probably the wire that has false contact.
Mice do wear out. The cable, the connections, are subject to metal
fatigue. Fluff getting into optical sensors c
> After what I went through on my upgrade to F30, I suggest you look at
> memory available.
Thanks but it seems simpler than that. We tested another mouse and it
worked much better. So it's probably the wire that has false contact.
Cheers,
F
___
users ma
After what I went through on my upgrade to F30, I suggest you look at
memory available.
All that video needs buffers. If you are short, the mouse could suffer
from whatever it needs.
Free is easy to run.
On 8/3/19 2:10 PM, Frédéric wrote:
Hi,
I'm using F30 with KDE Plasma. I also use the
Hi,
I'm using F30 with KDE Plasma. I also use the nvidia proprietary
drivers from rpmfusion so that my children can play minecraft with
high enough fps.
One thing they complain about is a strange behavior of the mouse when
they play minecraft. I mean that the mouse sometimes (very often)
moves su
12 matches
Mail list logo