How does my laptop finger pad mouse thingy work?

I don’t even know what it’s called, so I don’t know how to search for an answer.

I notice that I can’t use a pen or any other kind of stylus to move the on-screen cursor. (At least, not without pressing it way too hard for my comfort level.) It has to be my finger. How does it work?

You stroke it. And then someplace there’ll be buttons that equal right click and left click. Their location varies per laptop.

Do you mean a touchpad? That is the little grey or black square just below the keyboard.

How touchpads work, with animation.

(Hijack) Is there any kind of stylus that could be used instead of your finger? I would really like that for drawing and painting without having to buy a tablet.

My bedside light works on similar principles - you touch the base to switch it on or off. Once, I thought it was faulty, since it refused to come on when I tapped it with my right index finger as normal. That’s the finger I’d earlier cut accidentally in a bizarre gardening accident and bandaged up. Took a few seconds to realise. D’oh.

I guess anything soft and somewhat conductive would do - such as a sausage or carrot. Some types of rubber are conductive, so that might be more practical.

But your overall goal of using the trackpad as a tablet will disappoint you. Tablets provide absolute positioning of the cursor - when you put the pen in the exact middle of the tablet, the cursor will always move to the exact middle of the screen.
Trackpads, OTOH, provide relative positioning of the cursor - the cursor moves not because of where your finger is on the pad, but rather, how it’s moving - furthermore, they are often set up to respond in a very non-linear fashion - fast movements on the trackpad move the cursor further than slow movements over the same trackpad distance.

Tablets aren’t that expensive anyway - even the really cheapie ones on eBay are pretty good.

Information on how a cursor moves… move your mouse in the circle or click in same. :stuck_out_tongue:
http://www.1-click.jp/

Disabling laptop mouse pad , go to Control Panel > Hardware and Sound , then under Devices and Printer click MOUSE.

A window will appear about MOUSE PROPERTIES then click the “Finger Sensing Pad” tab … Then click " Configure"

On “Configure Item” on the left corner click the “Enable/Disable Pad” and under this you go to “USB MOUSE DETECTION” and check the box “Disable pad while external USB is plugged in”

This setting is for Windows 7

Thanks to the postings explaining how it works, I searched for “capacitive stylus.”
Got this, as an example:
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Acapacitive%20stylus&page=1

(Sorry to prolong the hijack.)

I wouldn’t worry about it; it’s been almost 4 years, what’s another day?

:smack:

let’s see if Baffle can recognize his old thread. Baffle do you still have that computer?

And did you ever try using a sausage on your touchpad?

I don’t know about a sausage, but I just tried an orange, and it worked. Mr Potato Head does not work.

FWIW, my finger works on my sausage.

I just tried several different coins, and was very surprised to find that they did not work. Nor did a USB plug, which is certainly conductive. I guess that it knows how much capacitance to expect, and metallic objects are TOO conductive?

I recall reading somewhere that there’s a certain brand of cocktail suasages that saw an upsurge in sales in cold climates because smart-phone users discovered that they work particularly well on their touch screens, and thus they don’t have to remove their gloves to use the phones.
No cite except my fuzzy memory, but I found that kind of interesting.

Yuck! I don’t want to think about how greasy those screens got!!!

as luck would have it, as I read this I was eating a piece of cooked italian sausage.

Yes, it works.