Le 2012-02-12 à 20:54:00, James Mckernon a écrit :

However, I am not aware of a way to connect a second mouse without the operating system treating it the same as the first mouse - i.e., having it control the cursor.

I used to know a way to disable the capacitive trackpad of my older laptop, but since then, Ubuntu versions changed, Xorg versions changed, xorg.conf disappeared, and I don't know whether any of this stuff can still be done nor how.

But I bet that you will need the device type as given by the «lsusb» command (something like 046d:c51b. If not, then you will need something listed in «/var/log/Xorg.0.log».

Note that the «/dev/input/event*» filenames are variable and depend on the plugging order or detection order, so you can't use them for telling things apart. You need different identifiers. If you have twice the same device (e.g. two trackballs), you might also have to use bus number to distinguish them.

I don't know how to change those settings, but if you do learn how to do it, make sure to post the answer on pd-list !

P.S. Bonus question: At some point in the future, I'd also like to attempt something similar with a second keyboard. If anyone can answer the question identical to the one above except with the work 'keyboard' substituted in for the word 'mouse', I'd be grateful for that too.

I think that the answer would be similar to the above, which is why I mention twice the same device. But if your two keyboards are different models, they will be easier to identify in the config.

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| Mathieu BOUCHARD ----- téléphone : +1.514.383.3801 ----- Montréal, QC
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