Please do! :-)
 
They sit in an area that is somewhat densely clustered with cubes. However, the 
first two of the affected users sat in cubes next to each other with a direct 
line of sight to the problem source roughly 15ft away, and have a near direct 
line of sight to a third affected user that was about 25ft and two walls away 
from the source of the problem. The fourth affected user was also about 25-30ft 
and three walls away from the source, in the opposite direction of the third 
user. The row of VP offices directly across from the fourth user's office were 
not affected (whew!).
 
And of course once we told the problem user what was going on, he had a little 
bit of fun with it first.

-- 
Brian Cline 

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Laura A. Robinson
Sent: Friday 01 December 2006 17:30
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Possessed PCs


When I go near wireless mice/keyboards, they stop working. (I can provide 
witnesses to this.) Want me to visit your office? ;-)
 
Laura
 
P.S. How densely clustered are these users? Does one user's interference stop 
if you turn off the other user's mouse? Seems like it'd be a quick way to 
verify that it's not somebody between them before you start cubicle crawling.


________________________________

        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brian 
Cline
        Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 3:36 PM
        To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Possessed PCs
        
        
        Since this morning, we've ruled out the possibility of the USB mice 
being affected as well. Apparently those folks with USB mice who complained 
were not having the same kind of cursor movement -- it was just the seldom 
jumpy cursor (where it spasms between 2-3 pixels while idle) usually seen only 
with optical mice. Fortunately I've been able to see it in action today, and it 
definitely seems to be coming from someone else's mouse as it appears to be 
normal mouse movements. The affected users are roughly 30-40 feet away, so 
we're checking to see if there is someone between of all of them who has a 
wireless mouse.
         
        I like the idea of prohibiting the devices altogether. Would definitely 
save a lot of time -- I've not been able to get much serious work done today.
         
        -- 
        Brian Cline 
         

________________________________

        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott 
Klassen
        Sent: Friday 01 December 2006 12:57
        To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Possessed PCs
        
        

        Usually I see this from interference using wireless mice.  Usually it’s 
caused by people with other wireless devices close by and they are both 
operating on the same channel.  RF can operate through walls, so interference 
doesn’t have to be line of sight and can come through walls, from above or 
below if transmitting omnidirectionally.  Just had this recently where a bunch 
of staffers with laptops got wireless external keypads, all the same make and 
model, and found the range of these things was 20 feet.  Cell Phones, 
Microwaves, and other common items may also cause this for the same reasons.  I 
no longer allow wireless devices in my environments just to save the hassle.

         

        You say this also happens with some wired usb mice?  Have you tried 
moving these to a different USB port on the system, preferably connected to a 
different USB controller?

         

        Scott Klassen

         

        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brian 
Cline
        Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 10:07 AM
        To: Active Directory Mailing List
        Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Possessed PCs

         

        Yesterday we had several people complain that their cursor was moving 
around on its own, but not erratically or quickly as one would suspect might be 
the case of a mouse issue. I used SMS remote tools to watch one person's 
screen, and she noted that the way the cursor moved while I was in there 
checking things was exactly the same way it was moving before -- it was just as 
though someone was actually in there.

        Now I can't begin to describe how odd this is -- but I can't seem to 
find any common denominator for the folks who experienced this problem (so far, 
three or four). Some have wireless mice with a short range and good batteries 
with no problems otherwise, whereas the others have standard, working USB mice. 
I have seen this before where the language bar was detecting office and 
keyboard noise through the microphone as dictated commands to do thing, but the 
problem persisted on the first PC after I disabled it, and I don't think that 
particular model has a built-in mic. I checked the event logs and the only 
person who used the SMS remote control was me, so I can't imagine that anyone 
else would have been remoting it either. So far today I have not heard any more 
complaints, but nevertheless I'm still curious yet baffled.

        All PCs have updated virus and spyware definitions. Does anyone have 
ideas on where to start looking if this problem surfaces again? If it continues 
we'll have the corporate chaplain bring in his exorcist buddy.

        Brian Cline, Applications Developer 
        Department of Information Technology 
        G&P Trucking Company, Inc. 
        803.936.8595 Direct Line 
        800.922.1147 Toll-Free (x8595) 
        803.739.1176 Fax 


        --
        No virus found in this incoming message.
        Checked by AVG Free Edition.
        Version: 7.5.430 / Virus Database: 268.15.3/561 - Release Date: 
12/1/2006 6:36 AM
        


--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.430 / Virus Database: 268.15.3/561 - Release Date: 12/1/2006 6:36 
AM


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