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Re: support for ancient peripherals



You can also buy not too expensively PCIe cards for serial and parallel port.

The printer I connected through a parallel to usb adapter cable 

Peter

Sent from my phone. Please forgive misspellings and weird “corrections”

> On 7 Nov 2022, at 23:09, David <bouncingcats@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> On Mon, 7 Nov 2022 at 05:01, Kleene, Steven (kleenesj)
> <kleenesj@ucmail.uc.edu> wrote:
> 
>> For me a scroll wheel has always been a deal-breaker, and I recently
>> couldn't find any mice without that.  (A few years ago I found just one,
>> from HP, and I didn't like using it.)  I click with the center button
>> a lot, and (maybe at my skill level) a scroll button often causes jitter
>> in the display.  I wonder if it's possible to turn off the scrolling
>> function of the scroll wheel while still allowing clicks to be detected.
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Regarding the above, and to relieve the previously-mentioned dependence on
> the ancient mouse from 2006, I offer the following thoughts that might
> expand the set of potential solutions ...
> 
> If any mouse can be opened and resealed, then it is quite possible that the
> scroll sensor can be disabled by some simple method that would require
> little time and effort.
> 
> Depending on how it is constructed, disabling either its mechanical,
> optical, or electrical operation either temporarily or permanently are all
> possibilities.
> 
> Mechanical:
> - prevent rotation.
> - render rotation ineffective.
> (eg wedge it, or decouple it)
> Optical:
> - physically block the optical path.
> Electrical:
> - disable either input or output of sensor
> (eg wire cutters or desolder or cut pcb tracks)
> 
> There appears to be numerous videos posted to youtube that explain how
> various mice scroll sensors work.
> 
> Anyone inclined to tinker with hardware, even with only curiosity and no
> expertise, has a good chance of achieving this, if you can find such
> a person.
> 
> If attempted on one or several low-value simple mice, this could be
> a non-scary learning exercise for yourself or anyone else you know who
> wants to try it.
> 
> For anyone with electronics knowledge, this will be a simple request, and
> the hardest part will be opening the mouse. So another approach would be to
> find a mouse that you can open, and open it up yourself, and then take it
> anywhere that does electronics hardware work, and explain what you want and
> that you have opened it to make it easy for them to inspect, and ask if they
> would take a quick look and consider doing this job for a fee that is
> acceptable.
> 


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