![]() So to solve the issue i had to use a tool named SteerMouse. And playing sc2 with mouse acceleration is practically impossible (i am master league.maybe in bronze it's ok.) The real problem with a mouse in MacOS is that you CANNOT DISABLE THE MOUSE ACCELERATION!!! Or at least i did not find any way of doing it. but for sc2 Abyssus or basically any mouse is great. Maybe for a MMO like WoW you'd need more buttons. Not the mouse itself - that does not really matter. This was something i struggled with for like 1 year. It's shareware and has a reminder at startup and a countdown when you open the user interface until you pay for it. I'd be interested in hearing what others are using to keep the mouse set to the old scrolling mode while the trackpad uses natural scrolling.Įdit: Mac OS X Hints says that USB Overdrive will allow you to reverse the scrolling of the mouse so that it uses the old mode while your trackpad uses natural scrolling. There may be other utilities that do what Steermouse does. You have to set the scroll actions to be the reverse of what you actually want them to be if you are using natural scrolling, so scroll up is "down" and scroll down is "up" ( screenshot). I've owned this software for years and just now realized that it will give me what I want. I want to use the trackpad in natural mode because it actually feels right to me, but I cannot work with the mouse also using the same mode (it also just doesn't feel right for the mouse to use natural scrolling). I really need to be able to set the mouse scrolling to the old mode and the trackpad scrolling to the "natural" mode. Going from one mouse to the other throughout the day was causing issues for me. I use a Windows PC for work and I work from home, so the two machines are sitting next to each other on my desk. I would just set yours to your models maximum and fiddle with the acceleration until you like it. That is why I am able to set my sensitivity to 1700 DPI. I use SteerMouse, a Japanese aftermarket universal mouse management software that allows granular adjustment of your input device settings, such as utilizing the optical sensor's full design spec of ~2000 DPI. Which is 100 DPI higher than the Elecom's proprietary mouse management software will let you go, which is 1600 DPI. like 1.2 is jerky fast) and the sensitivity set to 1700 DPI. To speak to your sensitivity issue, I have the acceleration set to. Still it took 2-3 days to completely break-in. ![]() I immediately applied a dry film PTFE lubricant to the bearings and guides as I discuss on reddit. That being said, my movement was pretty rough when I first got it. It has synthetic ruby bearings and just like you and oh, sooo many others, I swapped my stock ball for my old Logitech M570 ball. I have the Elecom M-XT3DRBK Thumb actuated trackball mouse.
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