I’ve never found tapping useful, the settings are either too sensitive, and not sensitive enough. And it makes hovering difficult.
For me, if I accidentally click one time, that’s one time too many. I keep my thumb on the buttons, and it works fine.
It that is unavailable, you should be able to shut it off in the BIOS. And, if you have a separate mouse, you should have an option in Control Panel or System Preferences that will shut off the trackpad while it is plugged in.
I love the trackpad. I’m a tap-to-click and a swipe-to-scroll type of guy. Although I find myself using the left button to double-click. I find it’s easier than trying to tap quickly twice in a row.
What kind of laptop do you have? You can turn the touchpad on a Dell off like this, so I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a way to shut it off on other laptop brands too.
I find this so weird. I mean…this technology has been around for about 10 years, and you just now noticed it? I mean…maybe you don’t use a lot of laptops, but I found out about tap to click within the first five minutes of using a laptop that had it. I am ALWAYS accidentally tapping on things and opening windows and programs I didn’t want to…how you somehow managed to avoid even one accidental ‘tap to click’ baffles me…
I guess you just have a much lighter touch than me…
But in case you can’t tell, I always turn it off. I hate it. I don’t like trackapds in general, but I do prefer them over the nub/nipple mouse/clit mouse. Those always seem to break for me, resulting in the mouse pointer drifting to one side or the other when I’m not even touching it. I always try to being an external mouse with me if I can.
And whatever happened to laptops that had little mini-trackballs in them?! Thse were the best!
Both. Mainly tapping for navigating links, double-tap to open file, double-tap and hold to grab a scrollbar or a title bar for dragging a window, but I still use clicks when I want to carefully select a group of things, or part of an image for cropping, and right-clicks when I want to drag and move, rather than accept the default of copying.
I do have a light touch, that’s true. And I’ve used laptops for years and years, I just never noticed this feature.
When I realized this is a possibility last night, I checked the settings on my Dell- everything was turned to Cave Man Pound sensitivity and suuuper slow scrolling and clicks. So, I imagine that’s why I’ve never noticed it before on this laptop at least.
According to Wikipedia, the Apple Powerbook 500, introduced in 1994, was the first laptop with a touch pad. Apollo desktop computers had touchpads to the right of the keyboard (probably before the Powerbook). I’m not familiar with these, but AFAIK every laptop I’ve ever seen with a touchpad has had “tap to click”. This goes back to at least the late 1990s in my personal experience (sorry, I’m not great with remembering what dates trivial stuff like this occurred).