From: J <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : Ron: : : I am looking at "Upgrading and Repairing PCs" fifth edition from QUE. : : BUS : A bus mouse is typically used in systems that do not have motherboard mouse port or any : available serialports. The name bus mouse is derived from the fact that the mouse : requires a special bus interface board that occupies a slot in your computer and : communicates with the device driver across the main motherboard bus. : So if you don't have a card plugged into your ISA slot then you don't have a bus mouse. : : Motherboard Mouse Port (PS/2) : Most newer PC come with a dedicated mouse port built into the motherboard. Referred as : the PS/2 mouse interface. This usually uses a mini-DIN connector like the one used on : most keyboards. : : The book says that the PS/2 uses IRQ12 which is usually free. This allow you to connect : other devices to com1 and com2. I believe that the "Microsoft" mouse uses the serial : port (i.e. com1 or com2).
Debian install prompts: : : > > ms - For Microsoft mice (2 or 3 buttons)..... .................... --- other various obviously wrong choices.... .............................................................. : > > ps2 - For most busmice connected to a ps/2 port (round with 6 metal pins). ..................................................................... : > > --- other various other obviously wrong choices So the prompt "ps2 - For most busmice connected to a ps/2 port...." is confusing. I did choose that and clearly I do not have a busmouse. But I chose the "Standard" profile, which does not incorporate X. Is there a non X application which will use the mouse? If you can suggest one I could test the mouse. I may need to reconfigure it which I believe I can do by rerunning mcg or something like that. Its somewhere in my notes (I hope). Or maybe there is a mouse test program??? Ron