Hi there, The first thing I did, was to upgrade the kernel to Woody's latest 2.4.x release, and thus get the latest USB support. <q'n'd hack alert>I then went through a simple process of adding the following lines to /etc/init.d/gpm:
insmod input insmod usbcore insmod usb-uhci insmod hid </q'n'd hack alert> Then I made the input folder in /dev just like you would a normal folder, and then cd'ed into it. Next I typed: mknod -c 13 63 mice Finally I edited the device line in gpm and also the setting in XF86Config-4 for the new device location. Best, Tim -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Timothy R. Butler [EMAIL PROTECTED] Universal Networks http://www.uninet.info Christian Portal and Search Tool: http://www.faithtree.com Open Source Migration Guide: http://www.ofb.biz ============= "Christian Web Services Since 1996" ==============