> From: Nicola Soranzo <nsora...@tiscali.it> > Il giorno mar, 18/09/2012 alle 08.35 -0400, john.flor...@dart.biz ha > scritto: > > > From: Adam Williamson <awill...@redhat.com> > > > > > > Oh, I should also note that, IIRC, the intent is that the driver > > should > > > detect if there are no physical buttons and enable tap-to-click in > > this > > > case. So touchpads which have no buttons and are only supposed to > > work > > > with tap-to-click should be OK. > > > > Where does my notebook's touchpad fall in this continuum? At the > > bottom corners of the touch-sensitive area are two "buttons" which > > click with tactile feedback, but yet are still part of the > > touch-sensitive surface. In other words, the bottom corners can > > actually be deformed/depressed. FWIW, I enabled tap-to-click -- did I > > just answer my own question? -- simply because my wife and I both > > found the mouse to be moving off target too often when tried using > > these "buttons". > > It's called a ClickPad, it's supported in X.org released with F17. > > Nicola
Oh! Thanks for that info. Indeed we're running F17 on it (Samsung 5 series IIRC) without any issues at all. Fedora may work great on it, but this old dog isn't adapting so well to the new tricks of these touchy-clicky things. Oh well, praise be the new days where it all just works vs. the old days where you prayed the most critical bits worked. =) -- John Florian
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