my mouse pointer is dancing without touching the mouse when i am starting my computer it is not working why?
maybe the mouse is just happy and wants to have fun... you know they have made progress in AI, you know?
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Is it okay to use a graphics tablet as a mousepad? Will the mouse scratch it?
Absolutely. Scratching is not an issue. And even so, most tablet models have a clear plastic protection sheet over the digitizer area. It's often called a 'tracing' overlay, but if you spend any serious time with a tablet, you soon realize how silly that notion is. Also, in most of Wacom's upper line of digitizers, they include a wireless mouse as well as a stylus. A mouse that matches to the same driver and circuitry as the stylus does.The real question is why do you need the mouse? In a proper setup, it's almost always easier and more practical to just stick with a stylus and keyboard. Like right now, I'm typing while holding the stylus between my left thumb and forefinger - tablet on the left. I've been doing graphic design this way for so long that I don't even think of it any more.And besides, that's why I bought a tablet in the first place - those 25 years or so ago. I was having real strain problems with my mouse-hand wrist. Switched to a stylus only setup and have not had even the slightest re-occurrence of that condition ever since.Is it okay to use a graphics tablet as a mousepad? Will the mouse scratch it?
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The Red Mouse
The Red Mouse (German: Die rote Maus) is a 1926 German silent film directed by Rudolf Meinert and starring Aud Egede Nissen, Paul Richter and Charles Willy Kayser
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Dead Mouse In Pool! HELP!?
If your chlorine is at the right level, it should kill any bacteria left behind by the mouse. But, there's nothing you can do about keeping it from decomposing. Just put it in a plastic garbage bag and put it in the trash can. Keep the lid closed, because it will stink
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Petter's soft-furred mouse
Petter's soft-furred mouse, or Petter's praomys (Praomys petteri) is a species of rodent in the family Muridae. It is found in Cameroon, Central African Republic, and Republic of the Congo. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.
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Mouse Systems
Mouse Systems Corporation (MSC), formerly Rodent Associates, was founded in 1982 by Steve Kirsch, inventor of the optical mouse. The company was responsible for bringing the mouse to the IBM PC for the first time. Mouse Systems' optical mouse, wired to a Sun workstation and an Atari 400 running Missile Command, attracted many observers at the October, 1982 Mini/Micro '82 conference in Anaheim, attended by over 10000 people-and won a "best new product" award. Like all early optical mice, their debut product relied on a special metallic and reflective mousepad printed with a square grid of grey and blue tracking lines: as the device moved over the pad, LED feedback was processed by an on-board microchip, which in turn supplied the host computer with machine-readable tracking data via an RS-232 serial port. An external power supply was required. Some mice would derive their power supply from the keyboard connector on the motherboard and came with a pass-through connector to be inserted before the keyboard cable. Early Sun workstations used MSC optical mice exclusively. Initial models came with large mousepads with well-spaced lines, while later models were smaller and used a much tighter grid. In 1982 MSC acquired rights to PCPaint from Microtex Industries, the first mouse-driven image manipulation program for the IBM PC, written in assembly language by Doug Wolfgram. Mouse Systems wanted the software re-developed to look more like Apple's MacPaint so Wolfgram brought in co-developer John Bridges and together they re-wrote the program in C with an updated user interface. Millions of copies were shipped, primarily bundled with all their mice until the early 1990s. KYE Systems [de], producer of the Genius brand of mice, acquired Mouse Systems in 1990.
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Fecund vesper mouse
The fecund vesper mouse (Calomys fecundus) is a species of rodent in the family Cricetidae. It is known only from Bolivia, where it is found in the yungas and Tucumano boliviano forest ecoregions at elevations from 600 to 2700 m. It is regarded by some authorities as conspecific with C. boliviae, and by some as conspecific with C. venustus, despite having a karyotype with 2n = 54 while C. venustus generally has a karyotype with 2n = 56. .