wrote:
> Not sure where to post this, so I'll start here. It's about a strange
> thing I just noticed. I have a Logitech MXX Revolution Blue Tooth
> laser mouse. I normally use Sea Monkey as a browser. It's a Mozilla
> thing. In twenty years if computing, I have stayed away from Internet
> Explorer. I never liked it. That being said, I've noticed that when
> I'm browsing in Sea Monkey, when I use the scroll wheel on the mouse,
> it clicks with every turn of the wheel. Actually, it does so in all
> applications where I use the wheel. However, when I use the mouse on
> the few rare occasions I use Internet Explorer, there is no clicking
> when I turn the wheel. It turns smoothly and silently. How can a
> software program affect sounds coming from a mouse? I mean, it seems
> to me that the clicking as I call it, is a mechanical thing in the
> mouse. How would that be disabled? I see no settings for the mouse ti
> make it silent. Nothing that pops out anyway.
From the online manual
(
http://www.logitech.com/repository/1...5312.1.0.pdf):
MX Revolution's unique MicroGear Scroll Wheel gives you a choice of
two scrolling modes: hyper-fast and precision ratcheting.
For hyper-fast scrolling, the high-precision, frictionless wheel spins
freely - great for speeding through long documents and Web pages. For
precision, ratchets engage to give you crisp, click-to-click rotation
- perfect for navigating lists, slides, and image collections.
Click the scroll wheel to shift between modes or activate Logitech
SmartShift mode within SetPoint.
SetPoint is Logitech's latest all-encompassing mouse software. It
replaced MouseWare; however, I continue using Mouseware since SetPoint
is bloated and causes behavior that I don't like in my old Logitech
mice. I suspect you are used to middle-clicking (i.e., clicking the
scroll wheel) to close a tab or other common web browser operation. For
example, middle clicking on a tab in IE7/8 will close it. Maybe
SetPoint's middle click doesn't work in non-IE web browsers (so you get
the middle-click you expect rather than a masked or programmed function)
or the behavior is different. So you are middle-clicking away in the
other web browsers but when you get into IE then the SmartShift gets in
the way.
So look at SetPoint to see how SmartShift is configured. Since it has
two scroll wheels, you'll have to experiment which one you "click the
scroll wheel to shift" modes.