Menu
Thanks, That is great news. You might want to let the vendor know that it is there responsibility. Pass this on / run it up the flag pole.
So basically I bought a 6 button mouse for nothing. I know that some vendors e.g Logitech make 6 button mice & provide drivers for it. Could MS make a generic driver to run on their operating systems that would allow vendors to create devices that would work with MS's generic driver?
E Source Mouse Manual
Thanks,
The game of life pc download by hasbro. No, you bought a SPECIFIC 6-button mouse from a manufacturer that doesn't support what they sell. You seem to want Microsoft to support everything.. Sure - you can say you are just asking for a mouse driver - but that would turn into a printer driver, a scanner driver, a .. well - you get the picture.
- You can search for your product by name, model number or part number. Or, locate your product using the categories below.
- ME WEBSITE: More Drivers and Software for Mad Catz on me website or here: All Driver and Software: http:/.
E source wireless mouse driver; Genius WebScroll+ Series Mouse Driver. Choose the version. Genius WebScroll+ Series Mouse Driver Download. Jun 15, 2014 I'm having trouble finding drivers for the eSource HM8124RED 2.4GHZ Wireless Mouse. Any help would be greatly appreciated. I don't recall having to install drivers for it before but have had to have Windows reinstalled this past weekend and it simply isn't working. Driver details.
Could Microsoft make a generic mouse driver? Yes - they did even. Your mouse functions, right? It moves the cursor around and mouse button 1 & 2 probably work (left-click and right-click)? That's the generic. 6-button - where does it stop? Should they have a generic driver for the 8-button mice too?
If there was a standard that every device (even mice) followed in construction and use - then maybe a generic driver would be available/work and do what you need. The problem is that there are hundreds (thousands, millions?) of hardware manufacturers all creating whatever they want. How they access the buttons, the chips they utilize, etc. - that's all up to the individual manufacturer.
Hardware support always has (likely always will) come from the hardware manufacturer that made the product you are attempting to use. Whether or not they provide the necessary software (drivers) for their device to be seen and used fully (if at all) with a given operating system is (always has been) a decision *they* get to make. The operating system manufacturer (unless they happen to also be the hardware manufacturer) doesn't make that choice.
In other words - you bought a cheap mouse and got what you paid for - a cheap mouse. Microsoft may have a basic driver (the two-button mouse is a standard, it's what really made the GUI work for most people) but one that will program the extra buttons beyond that - no standards exist - would be quite the task. You may think people pay a lot for the operating system - but they don't pay *THAT* much. Jazmine sullivan albums. *grin*
Mice are old school anyway:
http://leapmotion.com/
http://leapmotion.com/
E Source Mouse Driver Download For Kindle
![Driver Driver](/uploads/1/2/6/3/126385766/260444201.png)
E Source Mouse Driver
![Driver Driver](/uploads/1/2/6/3/126385766/710145050.jpg)
E Source
*grin*