On Wednesday, September 20, 2006, 20:46:24, Carol Spears wrote:
is this such a common mouse and are the users of such a mouse unable to
set the default themselves?
Unless you're used to IBM workstations (or old Macs), then yes, wheel mice
are common - I bought my first one about 10 years ago,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schreef:
On Wednesday, September 20, 2006, 20:46:24, Carol Spears wrote:
is this such a common mouse and are the users of such a mouse unable to
set the default themselves?
Unless you're used to IBM workstations (or old Macs), then yes, wheel mice
are common - I bought my
On Thursday, September 21, 2006, 19:37:23, Roel Schroeven wrote:
OTOH, touchpads and pointing sticks on laptops don't have scroll wheels.
All laptops with touchpads I've seen offer one or more of the following:
- scrollwheel emulation by dragging at the edge of touchpad (some touchpads
even
On 9/21/06, Roel Schroeven wrote:
OTOH, touchpads and pointing sticks on laptops don't have scroll wheels.
Sorry to disappoint you, but here on my ASUS M6N there are two ways to
emulate scrolling:
1. Middle touchpad up/down button.
2. Right and bottom borders of the touchpad surface.
Carol,
On Thu, Sep 21, 2006 at 10:46:00PM +0400, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
Carol, actually, I don't understand your reasoning behind this
question. If we disable this controller by default, the very next
thing that will happen is gazillion of users asking why mousewheel
scrolling doesn't work. No
Hi,
On Thu, 2006-09-21 at 19:37 +0200, Roel Schroeven wrote:
It seems that more and more applications start to rely more or less
heavily on middle mouse buttons and/or scrollwheels (Gimp and Google
Earth come to mind), which is a bit annoying as my laptop is my main
machine.
GIMP doesn't
Hi,
On Sun, 2006-09-17 at 15:51 +0200, Sven Neumann wrote:
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=351287
In the meantime, while Carol is trying to steal your time with pointless
mails, the Python i18n effort is basically done. It would be nice if
someone could review the strings that have