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#31
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Now a problem with mouse driver
Even if disabling the built in mouse does not fix the basic problem, it
should fix the problem of the mouse pointer wandering after a period of use. I have used three machines with this type of mouse and all of them had problems with unwanted movement created by the mini-joystick type of mouse control. -- Jeff Richards MS MVP (Windows - Shell/User) "glee" wrote in message ... I have nothing new to suggest other than what I already suggested: try disabling the built-in mouse in Device Manager. Usually the built-in mouse on a laptop is shown as either a mousepad or trackball or whatever that laptop has, or it shows as a serial mouse. I can't tell you what may be happening with those "auto" and "simultaneous" settings, and how they may be interacting with your PS/2 mouse. It still sounds to me like damage to the PS/2 port. Flashing the BIOS has no bearing on this. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm |
#32
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Now a problem with mouse driver
I have looked in device manager and there does not seem to be any way i can
disable the onboard mouse controls. The only reference to mouse is the ps/2 port and it's drivers. Again i have to say that this is an eleven year old unit and may not have some of the items that you have described. I also tried un-installing the toshiba mouse in add/remove programs and that didn't work either. So i guess this is one of those problems that may not have a fix to it. If you don't have any other suggestions i would like to thank you for your time trying to help me with this problem. Richard "glee" wrote: I have nothing new to suggest other than what I already suggested: try disabling the built-in mouse in Device Manager. Usually the built-in mouse on a laptop is shown as either a mousepad or trackball or whatever that laptop has, or it shows as a serial mouse. I can't tell you what may be happening with those "auto" and "simultaneous" settings, and how they may be interacting with your PS/2 mouse. It still sounds to me like damage to the PS/2 port. Flashing the BIOS has no bearing on this. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've heard about "flashing the bios" so i thought that could be a problem. The only "switch" i can find is in the mouse properties. There is a selection of "auto" or "simultaneous". If you select auto and don't plug an external mouse in the onboard controls work. There lies the problem. I selected auto and re-booted (as requested) and both of them tried to work but he external one was eratic. Once i selected auto and re-booted and it returned to simultaneous. Then i selected auto and did not plug in an external mouse and the on board mouse didn't respond properly. So i'm thinking that the problem lies in this switch. Using the external mouse that works isn't an option. That is the one i use with my main computer and i am going to send the computer i'm repairing back to my brother. Any suggestions? "glee" wrote: The only setting in the BIOS that would possibly have any effect is if you have PS/2 disabled there. Some older BIOS' had a setting to toggle PS/2. I can't think of anything else relevant. An electrical surge could have changed the settings. If there is any sort of electrical damage to the BIOS, I doubt you would *only* be seeing a picky mouse port, and I doubt the mouse port would even be affected. There'd be far worse symptoms, like not being able to boot. A damaged BIOS chip could only be replaced....not something you would do yourself and likely this older system would not have a ready replacement available. Have you tried using the one mouse that works OK, for a while? Does it continue to behave? If so, you may have to use that one, as the one that gets along with the onboard controller. Have you tried disabling the onboard mouse, in Device Manager? "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... Is it possible that there is a problem with the bios that is causing a problem with the mouse? Maybe the lightning strike had an effect on that as well. I know i'm grasping at straws but i'd like to see if i can correct this problem as well. Thanks "glee" wrote: Replies inline.... "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... As you might remember i only have one usb port. This is the toshiba laptop with the usb driver problems. Yeah, I know, but I didn't know it only had one USB port....bummer. Let me ask you this. Why is it a problem connecting a ps/2 mouse after startup but not a problem connecting anything else in a usb port? USB ports are designed specifically for hot-swapping....inserting and removing while the computer is powered on. PS/2 ports are not designed for hot-swapping, and in fact can burn out the circuit when this is done. It may not happen the first times you do it, but it is a high risk each time. Usually mouse and keyboard connectors have a soldered-on fuse on the motherboard, to prevent damage to the motherboard from hot-swapping. On every system I have worked on in the last 13 years or so, connecting a PS/2 mouse after Windows is loaded will not work at all....the system must be started with the mouse already connected. You say it shouldn't work but it does work plugging it in after startup. And, if, like you say, there is something wrong with the ps/2 port, than why would one of the three mice i tried work ok being plugged in prior to startup but, the other two not work properly? I'm not trying to be difficult it just seems that this is not following any logic. I have no idea. I will tell you a story about a very old laptop we had here years ago....an old 486 with a built-in trackball, and Win95 installed. Every PS/2 mouse I tried on it would stop working a few minutes after use, and usually freeze the computer. Only one mouse, a black IBM PS/2 mouse, would work on this system along with the built-in trackball and its serial drivers. So that is the mouse we always used with it, and never had a problem. I recently started that old 486 (yes it still boots), and plugged in a mouse that was at hand....and it still did it. I dug out that old black IBM mouse and it worked fine with it still. Go figure....no logic. Do you agree? Any help? Thanks That's all I've got for you. End of reply. "glee" wrote: Do you have an available USB port? If so, use a simple USB scrolling mouse instead of PS/2. "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've been told that you should not plug in a mouse after the computer has booted up. This is the first time i was told why. But, what are my options if i want to use an external mouse instead of the button on the laptop? On this older toshiba the button is located in the center of the keyboard and is difficult to control. Sometimes after using it for long periods the mouse begins to wonder. So i would like to use an external mouse control. Again what do you think my options are? Thanks "glee" wrote: Sounds like a port problem. You should NOT be able to plug in a PS/2 mouse while the computer is already on and Windows is running, and have it work. The lightning strike may have damaged the PS/2 connector circuitry on the motherboard. Inserting a PS/2 mouse (or a keyboard) into the port while the computer is on can damage the port or burn it out totally. (Top-posting with sig at end of quoted message, to make J.P. happier. eg) "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... It's a ps/2 scrolling mouse. I use to use the mouse with this computer before the hard drive crashed and i replaced it. Since then i cannot plug it in prior to startup. This computer is my brother's and he told me that it crashed during a lightning storm and never ran again. When i got it back the hard drive was broken (noisy and did not boot up) so i replaced the hard drive and since then i cannot have the mouse plugged into it prior to start up. But it works fine if i plug it in after start up. So for some reason it has a problem loading it during start up. Again the twist is, if i tried several different mice and this was the only one that made the computer squirly (during start up) than i would determine that it is the mouse. But, because two out of the three mice that i tried, two of them made it squirly I am thinking that something with the drive or the port is the problem. What do you think? Thanks "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Rich newtech writes: Now that i have the usb drivers corrected i think i will now take on the mouse driver. When i look in the device manager the mouse port indicates that it is working properly. However, when i plug an external mouse (one that i've previously used with it) into the laptop prior to starting the pointer goes wild and begins opening programs. Prior to me changing out the hard drive this mouse worked perfectly fine with the computer. The twist is that if i plug the mouse in after startup it works fine. Another thing to make this strange is that i've tried two other mouses and one works ok when plugged into the computer prior to startup. So two out of the three are squirly. Can i remove the original drivers, plug the mouse in and reboot then install the drivers that came with the mouse? Or should i just plug the mouse in after startup? Thanks in advance Richard Unless it has unusual functions, you shouldn't need a driver - assuming it's a PS/2 mouse, anyway (those must be plugged in before windows starts). I'm not sure about USB mice. (If it's one that can be USB or PS/2, and you have a suitable adapter, try it with the adapter. [Not all will work with such an adapter.]) If it's a serial mouse - really old - it can be plugged in after Windows has started, at least at the point where Windows says it can't find a mouse. (Again, no driver should be needed.) |
#33
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Now a problem with mouse driver
I have looked in device manager and there does not seem to be any way i can
disable the onboard mouse controls. The only reference to mouse is the ps/2 port and it's drivers. Again i have to say that this is an eleven year old unit and may not have some of the items that you have described. I also tried un-installing the toshiba mouse in add/remove programs and that didn't work either. So i guess this is one of those problems that may not have a fix to it. If you don't have any other suggestions i would like to thank you for your time trying to help me with this problem. Richard "glee" wrote: I have nothing new to suggest other than what I already suggested: try disabling the built-in mouse in Device Manager. Usually the built-in mouse on a laptop is shown as either a mousepad or trackball or whatever that laptop has, or it shows as a serial mouse. I can't tell you what may be happening with those "auto" and "simultaneous" settings, and how they may be interacting with your PS/2 mouse. It still sounds to me like damage to the PS/2 port. Flashing the BIOS has no bearing on this. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've heard about "flashing the bios" so i thought that could be a problem. The only "switch" i can find is in the mouse properties. There is a selection of "auto" or "simultaneous". If you select auto and don't plug an external mouse in the onboard controls work. There lies the problem. I selected auto and re-booted (as requested) and both of them tried to work but he external one was eratic. Once i selected auto and re-booted and it returned to simultaneous. Then i selected auto and did not plug in an external mouse and the on board mouse didn't respond properly. So i'm thinking that the problem lies in this switch. Using the external mouse that works isn't an option. That is the one i use with my main computer and i am going to send the computer i'm repairing back to my brother. Any suggestions? "glee" wrote: The only setting in the BIOS that would possibly have any effect is if you have PS/2 disabled there. Some older BIOS' had a setting to toggle PS/2. I can't think of anything else relevant. An electrical surge could have changed the settings. If there is any sort of electrical damage to the BIOS, I doubt you would *only* be seeing a picky mouse port, and I doubt the mouse port would even be affected. There'd be far worse symptoms, like not being able to boot. A damaged BIOS chip could only be replaced....not something you would do yourself and likely this older system would not have a ready replacement available. Have you tried using the one mouse that works OK, for a while? Does it continue to behave? If so, you may have to use that one, as the one that gets along with the onboard controller. Have you tried disabling the onboard mouse, in Device Manager? "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... Is it possible that there is a problem with the bios that is causing a problem with the mouse? Maybe the lightning strike had an effect on that as well. I know i'm grasping at straws but i'd like to see if i can correct this problem as well. Thanks "glee" wrote: Replies inline.... "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... As you might remember i only have one usb port. This is the toshiba laptop with the usb driver problems. Yeah, I know, but I didn't know it only had one USB port....bummer. Let me ask you this. Why is it a problem connecting a ps/2 mouse after startup but not a problem connecting anything else in a usb port? USB ports are designed specifically for hot-swapping....inserting and removing while the computer is powered on. PS/2 ports are not designed for hot-swapping, and in fact can burn out the circuit when this is done. It may not happen the first times you do it, but it is a high risk each time. Usually mouse and keyboard connectors have a soldered-on fuse on the motherboard, to prevent damage to the motherboard from hot-swapping. On every system I have worked on in the last 13 years or so, connecting a PS/2 mouse after Windows is loaded will not work at all....the system must be started with the mouse already connected. You say it shouldn't work but it does work plugging it in after startup. And, if, like you say, there is something wrong with the ps/2 port, than why would one of the three mice i tried work ok being plugged in prior to startup but, the other two not work properly? I'm not trying to be difficult it just seems that this is not following any logic. I have no idea. I will tell you a story about a very old laptop we had here years ago....an old 486 with a built-in trackball, and Win95 installed. Every PS/2 mouse I tried on it would stop working a few minutes after use, and usually freeze the computer. Only one mouse, a black IBM PS/2 mouse, would work on this system along with the built-in trackball and its serial drivers. So that is the mouse we always used with it, and never had a problem. I recently started that old 486 (yes it still boots), and plugged in a mouse that was at hand....and it still did it. I dug out that old black IBM mouse and it worked fine with it still. Go figure....no logic. Do you agree? Any help? Thanks That's all I've got for you. End of reply. "glee" wrote: Do you have an available USB port? If so, use a simple USB scrolling mouse instead of PS/2. "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've been told that you should not plug in a mouse after the computer has booted up. This is the first time i was told why. But, what are my options if i want to use an external mouse instead of the button on the laptop? On this older toshiba the button is located in the center of the keyboard and is difficult to control. Sometimes after using it for long periods the mouse begins to wonder. So i would like to use an external mouse control. Again what do you think my options are? Thanks "glee" wrote: Sounds like a port problem. You should NOT be able to plug in a PS/2 mouse while the computer is already on and Windows is running, and have it work. The lightning strike may have damaged the PS/2 connector circuitry on the motherboard. Inserting a PS/2 mouse (or a keyboard) into the port while the computer is on can damage the port or burn it out totally. (Top-posting with sig at end of quoted message, to make J.P. happier. eg) "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... It's a ps/2 scrolling mouse. I use to use the mouse with this computer before the hard drive crashed and i replaced it. Since then i cannot plug it in prior to startup. This computer is my brother's and he told me that it crashed during a lightning storm and never ran again. When i got it back the hard drive was broken (noisy and did not boot up) so i replaced the hard drive and since then i cannot have the mouse plugged into it prior to start up. But it works fine if i plug it in after start up. So for some reason it has a problem loading it during start up. Again the twist is, if i tried several different mice and this was the only one that made the computer squirly (during start up) than i would determine that it is the mouse. But, because two out of the three mice that i tried, two of them made it squirly I am thinking that something with the drive or the port is the problem. What do you think? Thanks "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Rich newtech writes: Now that i have the usb drivers corrected i think i will now take on the mouse driver. When i look in the device manager the mouse port indicates that it is working properly. However, when i plug an external mouse (one that i've previously used with it) into the laptop prior to starting the pointer goes wild and begins opening programs. Prior to me changing out the hard drive this mouse worked perfectly fine with the computer. The twist is that if i plug the mouse in after startup it works fine. Another thing to make this strange is that i've tried two other mouses and one works ok when plugged into the computer prior to startup. So two out of the three are squirly. Can i remove the original drivers, plug the mouse in and reboot then install the drivers that came with the mouse? Or should i just plug the mouse in after startup? Thanks in advance Richard Unless it has unusual functions, you shouldn't need a driver - assuming it's a PS/2 mouse, anyway (those must be plugged in before windows starts). I'm not sure about USB mice. (If it's one that can be USB or PS/2, and you have a suitable adapter, try it with the adapter. [Not all will work with such an adapter.]) If it's a serial mouse - really old - it can be plugged in after Windows has started, at least at the point where Windows says it can't find a mouse. (Again, no driver should be needed.) |
#34
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Now a problem with mouse driver
I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard
pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I have looked in device manager and there does not seem to be any way i can disable the onboard mouse controls. The only reference to mouse is the ps/2 port and it's drivers. Again i have to say that this is an eleven year old unit and may not have some of the items that you have described. I also tried un-installing the toshiba mouse in add/remove programs and that didn't work either. So i guess this is one of those problems that may not have a fix to it. If you don't have any other suggestions i would like to thank you for your time trying to help me with this problem. Richard "glee" wrote: I have nothing new to suggest other than what I already suggested: try disabling the built-in mouse in Device Manager. Usually the built-in mouse on a laptop is shown as either a mousepad or trackball or whatever that laptop has, or it shows as a serial mouse. I can't tell you what may be happening with those "auto" and "simultaneous" settings, and how they may be interacting with your PS/2 mouse. It still sounds to me like damage to the PS/2 port. Flashing the BIOS has no bearing on this. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've heard about "flashing the bios" so i thought that could be a problem. The only "switch" i can find is in the mouse properties. There is a selection of "auto" or "simultaneous". If you select auto and don't plug an external mouse in the onboard controls work. There lies the problem. I selected auto and re-booted (as requested) and both of them tried to work but he external one was eratic. Once i selected auto and re-booted and it returned to simultaneous. Then i selected auto and did not plug in an external mouse and the on board mouse didn't respond properly. So i'm thinking that the problem lies in this switch. Using the external mouse that works isn't an option. That is the one i use with my main computer and i am going to send the computer i'm repairing back to my brother. Any suggestions? "glee" wrote: The only setting in the BIOS that would possibly have any effect is if you have PS/2 disabled there. Some older BIOS' had a setting to toggle PS/2. I can't think of anything else relevant. An electrical surge could have changed the settings. If there is any sort of electrical damage to the BIOS, I doubt you would *only* be seeing a picky mouse port, and I doubt the mouse port would even be affected. There'd be far worse symptoms, like not being able to boot. A damaged BIOS chip could only be replaced....not something you would do yourself and likely this older system would not have a ready replacement available. Have you tried using the one mouse that works OK, for a while? Does it continue to behave? If so, you may have to use that one, as the one that gets along with the onboard controller. Have you tried disabling the onboard mouse, in Device Manager? "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... Is it possible that there is a problem with the bios that is causing a problem with the mouse? Maybe the lightning strike had an effect on that as well. I know i'm grasping at straws but i'd like to see if i can correct this problem as well. Thanks "glee" wrote: Replies inline.... "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... As you might remember i only have one usb port. This is the toshiba laptop with the usb driver problems. Yeah, I know, but I didn't know it only had one USB port....bummer. Let me ask you this. Why is it a problem connecting a ps/2 mouse after startup but not a problem connecting anything else in a usb port? USB ports are designed specifically for hot-swapping....inserting and removing while the computer is powered on. PS/2 ports are not designed for hot-swapping, and in fact can burn out the circuit when this is done. It may not happen the first times you do it, but it is a high risk each time. Usually mouse and keyboard connectors have a soldered-on fuse on the motherboard, to prevent damage to the motherboard from hot-swapping. On every system I have worked on in the last 13 years or so, connecting a PS/2 mouse after Windows is loaded will not work at all....the system must be started with the mouse already connected. You say it shouldn't work but it does work plugging it in after startup. And, if, like you say, there is something wrong with the ps/2 port, than why would one of the three mice i tried work ok being plugged in prior to startup but, the other two not work properly? I'm not trying to be difficult it just seems that this is not following any logic. I have no idea. I will tell you a story about a very old laptop we had here years ago....an old 486 with a built-in trackball, and Win95 installed. Every PS/2 mouse I tried on it would stop working a few minutes after use, and usually freeze the computer. Only one mouse, a black IBM PS/2 mouse, would work on this system along with the built-in trackball and its serial drivers. So that is the mouse we always used with it, and never had a problem. I recently started that old 486 (yes it still boots), and plugged in a mouse that was at hand....and it still did it. I dug out that old black IBM mouse and it worked fine with it still. Go figure....no logic. Do you agree? Any help? Thanks That's all I've got for you. End of reply. "glee" wrote: Do you have an available USB port? If so, use a simple USB scrolling mouse instead of PS/2. "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've been told that you should not plug in a mouse after the computer has booted up. This is the first time i was told why. But, what are my options if i want to use an external mouse instead of the button on the laptop? On this older toshiba the button is located in the center of the keyboard and is difficult to control. Sometimes after using it for long periods the mouse begins to wonder. So i would like to use an external mouse control. Again what do you think my options are? Thanks "glee" wrote: Sounds like a port problem. You should NOT be able to plug in a PS/2 mouse while the computer is already on and Windows is running, and have it work. The lightning strike may have damaged the PS/2 connector circuitry on the motherboard. Inserting a PS/2 mouse (or a keyboard) into the port while the computer is on can damage the port or burn it out totally. (Top-posting with sig at end of quoted message, to make J.P. happier. eg) "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... It's a ps/2 scrolling mouse. I use to use the mouse with this computer before the hard drive crashed and i replaced it. Since then i cannot plug it in prior to startup. This computer is my brother's and he told me that it crashed during a lightning storm and never ran again. When i got it back the hard drive was broken (noisy and did not boot up) so i replaced the hard drive and since then i cannot have the mouse plugged into it prior to start up. But it works fine if i plug it in after start up. So for some reason it has a problem loading it during start up. Again the twist is, if i tried several different mice and this was the only one that made the computer squirly (during start up) than i would determine that it is the mouse. But, because two out of the three mice that i tried, two of them made it squirly I am thinking that something with the drive or the port is the problem. What do you think? Thanks "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Rich newtech writes: Now that i have the usb drivers corrected i think i will now take on the mouse driver. When i look in the device manager the mouse port indicates that it is working properly. However, when i plug an external mouse (one that i've previously used with it) into the laptop prior to starting the pointer goes wild and begins opening programs. Prior to me changing out the hard drive this mouse worked perfectly fine with the computer. The twist is that if i plug the mouse in after startup it works fine. Another thing to make this strange is that i've tried two other mouses and one works ok when plugged into the computer prior to startup. So two out of the three are squirly. Can i remove the original drivers, plug the mouse in and reboot then install the drivers that came with the mouse? Or should i just plug the mouse in after startup? Thanks in advance Richard Unless it has unusual functions, you shouldn't need a driver - assuming it's a PS/2 mouse, anyway (those must be plugged in before windows starts). I'm not sure about USB mice. (If it's one that can be USB or PS/2, and you have a suitable adapter, try it with the adapter. [Not all will work with such an adapter.]) If it's a serial mouse - really old - it can be plugged in after Windows has started, at least at the point where Windows says it can't find a mouse. (Again, no driver should be needed.) |
#35
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Now a problem with mouse driver
I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard
pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I have looked in device manager and there does not seem to be any way i can disable the onboard mouse controls. The only reference to mouse is the ps/2 port and it's drivers. Again i have to say that this is an eleven year old unit and may not have some of the items that you have described. I also tried un-installing the toshiba mouse in add/remove programs and that didn't work either. So i guess this is one of those problems that may not have a fix to it. If you don't have any other suggestions i would like to thank you for your time trying to help me with this problem. Richard "glee" wrote: I have nothing new to suggest other than what I already suggested: try disabling the built-in mouse in Device Manager. Usually the built-in mouse on a laptop is shown as either a mousepad or trackball or whatever that laptop has, or it shows as a serial mouse. I can't tell you what may be happening with those "auto" and "simultaneous" settings, and how they may be interacting with your PS/2 mouse. It still sounds to me like damage to the PS/2 port. Flashing the BIOS has no bearing on this. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Windows, A+ http://dts-l.net/ http://dts-l.net/goodpost.htm "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've heard about "flashing the bios" so i thought that could be a problem. The only "switch" i can find is in the mouse properties. There is a selection of "auto" or "simultaneous". If you select auto and don't plug an external mouse in the onboard controls work. There lies the problem. I selected auto and re-booted (as requested) and both of them tried to work but he external one was eratic. Once i selected auto and re-booted and it returned to simultaneous. Then i selected auto and did not plug in an external mouse and the on board mouse didn't respond properly. So i'm thinking that the problem lies in this switch. Using the external mouse that works isn't an option. That is the one i use with my main computer and i am going to send the computer i'm repairing back to my brother. Any suggestions? "glee" wrote: The only setting in the BIOS that would possibly have any effect is if you have PS/2 disabled there. Some older BIOS' had a setting to toggle PS/2. I can't think of anything else relevant. An electrical surge could have changed the settings. If there is any sort of electrical damage to the BIOS, I doubt you would *only* be seeing a picky mouse port, and I doubt the mouse port would even be affected. There'd be far worse symptoms, like not being able to boot. A damaged BIOS chip could only be replaced....not something you would do yourself and likely this older system would not have a ready replacement available. Have you tried using the one mouse that works OK, for a while? Does it continue to behave? If so, you may have to use that one, as the one that gets along with the onboard controller. Have you tried disabling the onboard mouse, in Device Manager? "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... Is it possible that there is a problem with the bios that is causing a problem with the mouse? Maybe the lightning strike had an effect on that as well. I know i'm grasping at straws but i'd like to see if i can correct this problem as well. Thanks "glee" wrote: Replies inline.... "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... As you might remember i only have one usb port. This is the toshiba laptop with the usb driver problems. Yeah, I know, but I didn't know it only had one USB port....bummer. Let me ask you this. Why is it a problem connecting a ps/2 mouse after startup but not a problem connecting anything else in a usb port? USB ports are designed specifically for hot-swapping....inserting and removing while the computer is powered on. PS/2 ports are not designed for hot-swapping, and in fact can burn out the circuit when this is done. It may not happen the first times you do it, but it is a high risk each time. Usually mouse and keyboard connectors have a soldered-on fuse on the motherboard, to prevent damage to the motherboard from hot-swapping. On every system I have worked on in the last 13 years or so, connecting a PS/2 mouse after Windows is loaded will not work at all....the system must be started with the mouse already connected. You say it shouldn't work but it does work plugging it in after startup. And, if, like you say, there is something wrong with the ps/2 port, than why would one of the three mice i tried work ok being plugged in prior to startup but, the other two not work properly? I'm not trying to be difficult it just seems that this is not following any logic. I have no idea. I will tell you a story about a very old laptop we had here years ago....an old 486 with a built-in trackball, and Win95 installed. Every PS/2 mouse I tried on it would stop working a few minutes after use, and usually freeze the computer. Only one mouse, a black IBM PS/2 mouse, would work on this system along with the built-in trackball and its serial drivers. So that is the mouse we always used with it, and never had a problem. I recently started that old 486 (yes it still boots), and plugged in a mouse that was at hand....and it still did it. I dug out that old black IBM mouse and it worked fine with it still. Go figure....no logic. Do you agree? Any help? Thanks That's all I've got for you. End of reply. "glee" wrote: Do you have an available USB port? If so, use a simple USB scrolling mouse instead of PS/2. "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... I've been told that you should not plug in a mouse after the computer has booted up. This is the first time i was told why. But, what are my options if i want to use an external mouse instead of the button on the laptop? On this older toshiba the button is located in the center of the keyboard and is difficult to control. Sometimes after using it for long periods the mouse begins to wonder. So i would like to use an external mouse control. Again what do you think my options are? Thanks "glee" wrote: Sounds like a port problem. You should NOT be able to plug in a PS/2 mouse while the computer is already on and Windows is running, and have it work. The lightning strike may have damaged the PS/2 connector circuitry on the motherboard. Inserting a PS/2 mouse (or a keyboard) into the port while the computer is on can damage the port or burn it out totally. (Top-posting with sig at end of quoted message, to make J.P. happier. eg) "Rich newtech" wrote in message ... It's a ps/2 scrolling mouse. I use to use the mouse with this computer before the hard drive crashed and i replaced it. Since then i cannot plug it in prior to startup. This computer is my brother's and he told me that it crashed during a lightning storm and never ran again. When i got it back the hard drive was broken (noisy and did not boot up) so i replaced the hard drive and since then i cannot have the mouse plugged into it prior to start up. But it works fine if i plug it in after start up. So for some reason it has a problem loading it during start up. Again the twist is, if i tried several different mice and this was the only one that made the computer squirly (during start up) than i would determine that it is the mouse. But, because two out of the three mice that i tried, two of them made it squirly I am thinking that something with the drive or the port is the problem. What do you think? Thanks "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Rich newtech writes: Now that i have the usb drivers corrected i think i will now take on the mouse driver. When i look in the device manager the mouse port indicates that it is working properly. However, when i plug an external mouse (one that i've previously used with it) into the laptop prior to starting the pointer goes wild and begins opening programs. Prior to me changing out the hard drive this mouse worked perfectly fine with the computer. The twist is that if i plug the mouse in after startup it works fine. Another thing to make this strange is that i've tried two other mouses and one works ok when plugged into the computer prior to startup. So two out of the three are squirly. Can i remove the original drivers, plug the mouse in and reboot then install the drivers that came with the mouse? Or should i just plug the mouse in after startup? Thanks in advance Richard Unless it has unusual functions, you shouldn't need a driver - assuming it's a PS/2 mouse, anyway (those must be plugged in before windows starts). I'm not sure about USB mice. (If it's one that can be USB or PS/2, and you have a suitable adapter, try it with the adapter. [Not all will work with such an adapter.]) If it's a serial mouse - really old - it can be plugged in after Windows has started, at least at the point where Windows says it can't find a mouse. (Again, no driver should be needed.) |
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Now a problem with mouse driver
In message , glee
writes: I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. I can only echo what glee says. FWIW, on this (98SE lite, Compaq) machine, the internal appears in DM under Mouse, as "Synaptics PS/2 TouchPad". (It also shows "Standard Serial Mouse" with an exclamation mark; I presume that means I've plugged in a serial mouse at some point in the past. I haven't got one plugged in at the moment.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL(+++)IS-P--Ch+(p)Ar+T[?]H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** Veni Vidi Visa [I came, I saw, I did a little shopping] - Mik from S+AS Limited ), 1998 |
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Now a problem with mouse driver
In message , glee
writes: I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. I can only echo what glee says. FWIW, on this (98SE lite, Compaq) machine, the internal appears in DM under Mouse, as "Synaptics PS/2 TouchPad". (It also shows "Standard Serial Mouse" with an exclamation mark; I presume that means I've plugged in a serial mouse at some point in the past. I haven't got one plugged in at the moment.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL(+++)IS-P--Ch+(p)Ar+T[?]H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** Veni Vidi Visa [I came, I saw, I did a little shopping] - Mik from S+AS Limited ), 1998 |
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Now a problem with mouse driver
There is nothing like that in my dm. When i expand the mouse it only shows
ps/2 mouse port. That's all. Thanks for trying to help and i'll end this post. Richard "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , glee writes: I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. I can only echo what glee says. FWIW, on this (98SE lite, Compaq) machine, the internal appears in DM under Mouse, as "Synaptics PS/2 TouchPad". (It also shows "Standard Serial Mouse" with an exclamation mark; I presume that means I've plugged in a serial mouse at some point in the past. I haven't got one plugged in at the moment.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL(+++)IS-P--Ch+(p)Ar+T[?]H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** Veni Vidi Visa [I came, I saw, I did a little shopping] - Mik from S+AS Limited ), 1998 |
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Now a problem with mouse driver
There is nothing like that in my dm. When i expand the mouse it only shows
ps/2 mouse port. That's all. Thanks for trying to help and i'll end this post. Richard "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , glee writes: I wish I had more to offer. I have read that some laptops do not show the onboard pointing device at all in Device Manager, though all I have seen do.....*usually* under the Mouse entry there. If it does not appear anywhere in Device Manager for you to disable it, trying via the Mouse control panel seems the only other alternative. Jeff may have something further to add.....I'm short of ideas. I can only echo what glee says. FWIW, on this (98SE lite, Compaq) machine, the internal appears in DM under Mouse, as "Synaptics PS/2 TouchPad". (It also shows "Standard Serial Mouse" with an exclamation mark; I presume that means I've plugged in a serial mouse at some point in the past. I haven't got one plugged in at the moment.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL(+++)IS-P--Ch+(p)Ar+T[?]H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** Veni Vidi Visa [I came, I saw, I did a little shopping] - Mik from S+AS Limited ), 1998 |
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Now a problem with mouse driver
On Feb 5, 4:22*pm, Rich newtech
wrote: There is nothing like that in my dm. When i expand the mouse it only shows ps/2 mouse port. That's all. I can think of a few problems that could cause your failure. An example. If the power line for that mouse is disconnected (ie fuse or automatic resetting circuit breaker open), then the mouse is powered via signal lines. That would cause corrupted serial data - would explain the symptoms I read. An LED and a 200 ohm resistor temporarily touching the two pins would even test for that. Your problem is why more responsible computer manufacturers provide comprehensive hardware diagnostics for free. Many who buy computers on price do not get those (what you need to solve the problem) diagnostics. Numerious other useful facts might be provided if you could provide then necessary measurements or access. Some facts may have already been provided. But too much information is scattered among other posts that recommend nonsense - such as a defective BIOS. If s BIOS is corrupted, then BIOS completely crashes the computer. Anyone with basic programming knowledge would have known that. If I was doing this (without diagnostics), I might write a short program to read data direct from the mouse - to actually see what the mouse is outtputing. Or measure voltage on the appropriate wire with a meter. But that assumes I had to fix it. Apparently the loss is acceptable. |
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