AMITIAE - Sunday 26 August 2012
System Preferences in OS X 10.8, Mountain Lion: Mouse |
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By Graham K. Rogers
The recently updated OS X which is now at version 10.8, Mountain Lion has many changes to System Preferences. The Mouse preferences has a panel identical to the one in OS X 10.7, Lion, and as before this displays different information depending on which device is in use. There have been a number of minor changes in the way information is displayed when these devices are used.
A caption indicates that the system is searching for a Bluetooth mouse, or asks for a USB mouse to be attached (See below). Added advice suggests that if the Bluetooth mouse does not appear, a user should check that it has batteries and is turned on.
When any mouse is connected to the computer, the panel changes. The new image and information display will depend on the type of mouse connected.
Single Button MouseThese are less common now but there are enough surviving to provide a panel specifically for this type. I still have one in my drawer that dates from the eMac I owned. When attached to the Mac, the mouse panel changed immediately, but there is no mouse image. There are two controls shown in the panel: sliders for Tracking Speed and Double-Click Speed. Below is a button for setting up a Bluetooth Mouse.
Two-Button Generic MouseIn the screen-shot below the panel changed from the "no mouse" display to the settings for a two-button mouse when I attached a Microsoft Basic Optical Mouse that was in my office. I have tried this in the past with other types of mouse that my students were using and all worked immediately.There are two sliders to the left of the panel for Tracking Speed and Scrolling Speed (Slow - Fast), while on the right of the panel is a single slider for Double-click speed.
The ability to zoom using the scroll wheel is no longer available on this panel as an option. As with a similar trackpad control, this is turned on in Accessibility preferences (Zoom).
Mighty MouseThe Apple, "Mighty Mouse" (USB) was an earlier attempt to provide more functions to a mouse and has several tunable options giving a similar output to a 4-button mouse. Instead of a scroll-wheel it has a small scroll ball which was its Achilles Heel. A very few may still be some available in certain stores, and some are still used.The Mouse preferences panel for this device is in two main sections. The top displays the three sliders: Tracking, Double-Click and Scrolling. Just above these is a checkbox with new wording, "Scroll direction: natural" (before this was marked, "Move content in the direction of finger movement when scrolling or navigating"). The main area of the panel shows a diagram of the mouse and the tunable functions for each type of input.
The scrolling button -- the ball -- can be used for scrolling in several ways and a checkbox beneath the mouse diagram (near the bottom of the panel) allows selection from Vertical & Horizontal, 360°, Vertical Only, and Off. This scrolling ball may also be used as a button: options are the same as for the right/left buttons with the addition of Button 3 and Off.
Like other panels, there is now no checkbox at the bottom for Zooming with the scroll- ball.
Magic Mouse
As each of the checkboxes is highlighted by the cursor, a video of the action is shown in the right hand side of the panel. As the action is changed (e.g. Right click to Left click) so the video shows the new option. Below the three checkboxes is a slider for tracking speed (Slow - Fast).
[On previous installations, a Change Batteries button appeared and pressing this would display battery icons and instructions. I am unable to test this as the Mighty Mouse I am using is fresh out of the box with fully charged batteries. There is a screenshot in an earlier version of my A - Z of System Preferences for 10.7.] A button at bottom left, like on other panels, is available to set up a Bluetooth mouse. This brings up a small panel in which any nearby units are identified and may be selected. If another mouse is connected by USB while the Magic Mouse is being used, the display does not change: the videos are still shown. The Mighty Mouse needs to be turned off, so that it will disconnect. A screen icon -- Connection Lost -- appears and the panel reverts to normal displays. Turning the Mighty Mouse back on displays the "Found . . ." text on the panel and pressing the Continue button completes the process.
NotesOS X System Preferences is able to handle input with most mouses (and I have checked the dictionary - the device plural is mouses). I have used a number of generic mouses with Macs as well as the Microsoft mouse (above). None needed additional drivers for my purposes.I would suggest that if users wish to use such a 3rd party input device they try connecting the mouse first before installing any additional software which itself may cause conflicts initially (or later when the operating system is updated).
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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