geekhack
geekhack Community => Input Devices => Topic started by: microsoft windows on Wed, 22 September 2010, 20:12:01
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I was using my M5-2 with a computer that had a higher-resolution monitor and I noticed the mouse was still a little slow at maximum sensitivity. But then I unchecked "Enhance Pointer Precision" and now the trackball works great! Nice and sensitive.
Just thought I'd throw that out to you all because I've heard people talking about their mice being too slow.
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"Enhance Pointer Precision" = mouse acceleration, which incorporates mouse deceleration! And it can stay on even when you disable it. Damn you Microsoft! (No, not you.)
The whole issue is stupidly complex. This (http://donewmouseaccel.blogspot.com/2010/04/markc-mouse-acceleration-fix-builder.html) looks interesting.
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Or you can buy teflon sliders somewhere, stick a double layer under the mouse, get a sufficiently coarse pad and still use the max precision thingy, hehe. As a bonus, it helps RSI. The disadvantage is that the typical user of the PC won't be able to do much with that mouse ("what the heck is this?!").
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removing pointer precision causes the cursor to jump often more than one pixel (like a mac): so it makes it very difficult if you need pixel accuracy. This especially would hurt me since I love doing pixel art.
But if you just need it for everyday tasks and not drawing, it's fine.
Even when you have pointer precision on and set the speed to the maximum, it still causes it to jump a bit... so... I don't know what microsoft was thinking. I like my cursor fast, but not when it jumps a few pixels.
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removing pointer precision causes the cursor to jump often more than one pixel (like a mac): so it makes it very difficult if you need pixel accuracy. This especially would hurt me since I love doing pixel art.
But if you just need it for everyday tasks and not drawing, it's fine.
Even when you have pointer precision on and set the speed to the maximum, it still causes it to jump a bit... so... I don't know what microsoft was thinking. I like my cursor fast, but not when it jumps a few pixels.
The 'jumping' you refer to is a result of your mouse sensitivity and DPI settings plus acceleration. If you want pixel perfect precision without acceleration lower the sensitivity and increase the DPI with acceleration off. Turning off 'enhanced pointer precision' does _not_ turn off acceleration, it is still there.
To turn accel off use third party drivers or associated winxp hacks. Google 'winxp disable mouse accel' and see how many results there are. It really is a sad state of affairs, been that way for years now. Why? "It's windows.."
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The 'jumping' you refer to is a result of your mouse sensitivity and DPI settings plus acceleration. If you want pixel perfect precision without acceleration lower the sensitivity and increase the DPI with acceleration off. Turning off 'enhanced pointer precision' does _not_ turn off acceleration, it is still there.
To turn accel off use third party drivers or associated winxp hacks. Google 'winxp disable mouse accel' and see how many results there are. It really is a sad state of affairs, been that way for years now. Why? "It's windows.."
I don't use windows XP, only 98 or 7.