> So I think we've conclusively established that the source is the mouse
> itself.  Some further digging on the model number tells us that under
> certain resolution settings some Logitech G5 mice had some skipping
> issues. This occurred when set to the lower resolution modes.

That's new to me!

> The tests
> would be to find out firmware the mouse has installed, and what
> resolution it is running at.  You might try installing the
> "logitech-applet" package and running "logitech_applet --get-res" to see
> what the resolution is.

It returns nothing at all. Evidently the program is not
compatible with the G5.

> Then if it isn't already set to 800 use the
> "--set-res=800" option to put it there.  That might help.
>
>                       -Mike

There are buttons on the mouse to change the resolution.  There
are three to choose from.  All three show the same behaviour.
-- 
Allen Brown
http://brown.armoredpenguin.com/~abrown

>
> There is a computer disease that anybody who works with computers knows
> about. It's a very serious disease and it interferes completely with the
> work. The trouble with computers is that you 'play' with them! ---
> Richard P. Feynman
>
>
> On Wed, 2009-03-25 at 15:31 -0700, Allen Brown wrote:
>> Yes, the USB and the PS2 mice were and are both optical.
>> The mouse pad is fabric on neoprene. It isn't glossy at all.
>> So the fact that this is optical is almost certainly not the cause.
>
>




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