Increase the Battery Life of your Wireless Mouse
Here are some tips and tweaks that will help extend the battery life of your wireless mouse and keyboard.
The computer mice made its debut in 1964 and you will be surprised to note that first mouse was actually made of wood. It is still the most popular pointing device for interacting with GUIs though laptop users prefer the touchpad.
Here are some tips and tweaks that will help extend the battery life of your wireless mouse and keyboard.
Learn how you can control multiple computers with one keyboard and mouse. The software is a better alternative to Input Director and Synergy.
Learn how you can easily share the same set of your keyboard and mouse with two or more computers without requiring any extra hardware.
The Microsoft Arc Touch wireless mouse is almost the size of a cell phone and since it flat, you can easily slide it in your pocket. You bend the mouse to turn it on and when you are done working, simply flatten the mouse to turn it off.
What should you do when your wireless mouse suddenly freezes and stops working. Here are simple solutions that will bring your cursor back to live.
This tip describes how you can use a regular mouse (or touchpad of your laptop) as a laser pointer during PowerPoint presentations.
A free program captures your mouse cursor movements and then turns them into a modern art painting.
Disable the keyboard and mouse so that you can clean the computer without making any accidental clicks. The utility will temporarily lock the all the keyboard keys.
Windows can easily detect external mice and install the appropriate drivers but the problem is that the position of the mouse pointer that you see on the screen is not accurate.
MouseEmu, short for Mouse Emulator, is a free Windows utility that lets you control the mouse pointer using the keyboard. It emulates both mouse movements as well as clicks.
If you prefer using keyboard shortcuts over mouse to interact with software programs, you’ll absolutely love mouse-less browsing for Firefox.
When you right-click on the Windows desktop, there’s an option to change the default size of desktop icons – you could either choose medium, large or the default Classic size.