• Looking for info on IBM/Unicomp Trackball Buttons

    From Jim Beard@2:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 17 20:26:38 2019
    I bought a Unicomp 104 Trackball keyboard, that has a trackball plus two
    sets of four "mouse-equivalent" buttons built into the top right of the keyboard.

    https://clickykeyboards.com/product/1993-ibm-model-m5-2-\ trackball-52g9757-05-07-93/

    The above is a different model but shows the trackball buttons as they
    appear on my keyboard.

    The two large buttons in each set appear to serve as left and right mouse buttons. The two small buttons may be intended to page up and page down
    in (some? all?) browsers but may be configurable.

    Does configuring mouse buttons (and therefore trackball buttons) require
    that rpm gpm be installed?

    I found a thing on the Logitech Marble Mouse that I think pertains to trackball as well, but I do not have the evdev.conf file that seems to be required.

    Any ideas on what I should search for or try next?

    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/\ Logitech_Marble_Mouse#Sample_configuration

    FWIW, the trackball provides enough things I like that I do not expect to
    go back to the mouse. Having both on the system with the mouse tucked
    out of the way except when needed for something that mouses better is a possibility, but I would prefer to do everything with the trackball. I
    am still gaining skill with the trackball, and looking for ways to make
    work better...

    Cheers!

    jim b.

    --
    UNIX is not user-unfriendly, it merely expects users to be computer-
    friendly.

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.12A (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Aragorn@2:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 17 21:00:45 2019
    On 17.11.2019 at 20:26, Jim Beard scribbled:

    Does configuring mouse buttons (and therefore trackball buttons)
    require that rpm gpm be installed? =20

    No, gpm is only needed if you want mouse support in character-mode
    virtual consoles, and for some character-mode applications in terminal
    windows =E2=80=94 not for all of them, though, because in some cases your desktop environment and X22 can forward the mouse movement to the character-mode application.


    --=20
    With respect,
    =3D Aragorn =3D


    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.12A (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Strider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Jim Beard@2:250/1 to All on Wed Nov 27 15:08:31 2019
    On Sun, 17 Nov 2019 20:26:38 +0000, Jim Beard wrote:

    I bought a Unicomp 104 Trackball keyboard, that has a trackball plus two
    sets of four "mouse-equivalent" buttons built into the top right of the keyboard.

    https://clickykeyboards.com/product/1993-ibm-model-m5-2-\ trackball-52g9757-05-07-93/

    The above is a different model but shows the trackball buttons as they
    appear on my keyboard.

    The two large buttons in each set appear to serve as left and right
    mouse buttons. The two small buttons may be intended to page up and
    page down in (some? all?) browsers but may be configurable.

    Does configuring mouse buttons (and therefore trackball buttons) require
    that rpm gpm be installed?

    I found a thing on the Logitech Marble Mouse that I think pertains to trackball as well, but I do not have the evdev.conf file that seems to
    be required.

    Any ideas on what I should search for or try next?

    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/\ Logitech_Marble_Mouse#Sample_configuration

    FWIW, the trackball provides enough things I like that I do not expect
    to go back to the mouse. Having both on the system with the mouse
    tucked out of the way except when needed for something that mouses
    better is a possibility, but I would prefer to do everything with the trackball. I am still gaining skill with the trackball, and looking for
    ways to make work better...

    Unicomp customer support tells me the small buttons "do nothing" and
    should be ignored. There is an explanation of how they came about, but
    one that retrospectively makes no good sense, or so I am told.

    Actually, at least one of the small buttons "does something." When
    looking at a terminal window login prompt, clicking on it will move the
    cursor one position to the right. I still do not know how to determine
    what character(s) the small button sends that will do this.

    Cheers!

    jim b.

    --
    UNIX is not user-unfriendly, it merely expects users to be computer-
    friendly.

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.13 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)