Microsoft Optical mouse - cursor moves
I have that mouse connected to my thinkpad via usb. It has worked for years. Recently when I have the mouse inactive over text, at times the cursor begins to move to the left in little short regular bursts.
As the computer is new I'm not sure if this is a mouse problem, usb connection problem or a computer ptoblem.
Any direction will be appreciated.
EDIT: I tried everything but the obvious. I had a dark surface for the mouse to be on. I changed the colour of the surface - problem solved.
Thanks everyone.
mouse
add a comment |
I have that mouse connected to my thinkpad via usb. It has worked for years. Recently when I have the mouse inactive over text, at times the cursor begins to move to the left in little short regular bursts.
As the computer is new I'm not sure if this is a mouse problem, usb connection problem or a computer ptoblem.
Any direction will be appreciated.
EDIT: I tried everything but the obvious. I had a dark surface for the mouse to be on. I changed the colour of the surface - problem solved.
Thanks everyone.
mouse
1
It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39
add a comment |
I have that mouse connected to my thinkpad via usb. It has worked for years. Recently when I have the mouse inactive over text, at times the cursor begins to move to the left in little short regular bursts.
As the computer is new I'm not sure if this is a mouse problem, usb connection problem or a computer ptoblem.
Any direction will be appreciated.
EDIT: I tried everything but the obvious. I had a dark surface for the mouse to be on. I changed the colour of the surface - problem solved.
Thanks everyone.
mouse
I have that mouse connected to my thinkpad via usb. It has worked for years. Recently when I have the mouse inactive over text, at times the cursor begins to move to the left in little short regular bursts.
As the computer is new I'm not sure if this is a mouse problem, usb connection problem or a computer ptoblem.
Any direction will be appreciated.
EDIT: I tried everything but the obvious. I had a dark surface for the mouse to be on. I changed the colour of the surface - problem solved.
Thanks everyone.
mouse
mouse
edited Oct 1 '09 at 2:42
Xavierjazz
asked Sep 29 '09 at 19:30
XavierjazzXavierjazz
6,288106189
6,288106189
1
It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39
add a comment |
1
It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39
1
1
It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39
It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
I think you should use a Plain coloured/ Single coloured mouse pad
Imagine a Black and White mouse pad. Your optical lens is on the white part.
When you move the mouse to the black part the sensor senses depth and thats why the cursor moves irregular.
Try it,it should work
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
add a comment |
I had the same issue. It turned out there was some hair, or dust inside the optical sensor plastic bit. By blowing off on it, the dust was gone and the mouse cursor did not move again.
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
add a comment |
Does the problem occur when you're typing? I often have a similar problem (but to the right) when I'm typing with my hands brushing the touchpad on the my Thinkpad (T60).
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
add a comment |
You might try to clean the mouse, if it has a ball tracker.
However, and since you say the mouse is a few years old, my experience with mouses is that when they develop a mind of their own, it's time to get a new and more obedient mouse.
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
add a comment |
Cleaning the mouse is a good idea. I doubt it's USB related. I also had cheapo, no-name optical mouse that would do that by itself. If it's annoying you, there are many good, inexpensive mice available.
add a comment |
I exactly had the same problem, what I did was wiped the touch pad with a wet paper towel, that is it. Everything fell as it was and the mouse stopped running all the way to the right corner of the screen.
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
add a comment |
Had this issue just before on Windows 7 64bit however my mouse moved to the right not the left, was concerning when it happened as it's a Razer Naga mmo expert mouse (with a 4G laser) not some cheap one.
First thing I did was clean out the bottom of the mouse and no luck then I grabbed my old mouse and tried that one and the pointer continued to do the exact same thing (move slowly to the right every now and then) so I then restarted the computer and well the mouse no longer moved on it's own however I found the sensitivity of the mouse was off like it had been cut in half so went into razer synapse and increased the DPI to the max at 8200 up from the normal DPI of 4600 and still felt a little slow (and weird normally at that DPI I can't control the movement of the cursor) so went into the mouse settings in control panel and the sensitivity was only at 50% which I swore I turned it up max with my last mouse, cranked it up to 100% then pushed the DPI back down to 4600 and everything felt normal again.
I believe this is a random bug with windows just randomly bugging out?
Cause I've used the Razer naga on an old razer goliathus control mouse pad which is mostly black with some green on it and my laser and optical mouse didn't have an issue with it and I've now had this razer goliathus speed extended edition mouse mat for about a month now which is mostly green with shades of black here and there that and in razer synapse my mouse is specifically calibrated for this mouse pad.
If it was a problem with the mouse mat then there would be a lot of people complaining that these mouse mats are bad but they aren't, specially since this mouse is designed to operate on almost any surface even a towel even my old cmstorm devastator optical mouse could do it.
Aside from that when the issue occurred I noticed my Logitech orion spark G910 keyboard started to act up too all the leds turned off then back on for a brief few seconds however the Logitech gaming software or Razer synapse programs (controls features of Logitech and Razer devices) didn't report any malfunctions or errors, and couldn't be that that software restarted as when Logitech gaming software isn't running the leds default to cyan blue colour rather then the colour I set.
As a technician this entire ordeal is bizarre been around pcs since I was 5 for 21 years and this is the first time I've seen this happen.
I've had dust and hair in the mouse before but they don't act like this and for that to cause the mouse sensitivity settings to reset to default in control panel is unheard of.
add a comment |
I just had this issue after scanning a document and noticed the mouse drifting off to the left. I fixed it by going to control panel and opening device manager and opening Mice and other pointing devices. I noticed two drivers installed both the same so I uninstalled one. The mouse stopped drifting. This fixed it for me.
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I think you should use a Plain coloured/ Single coloured mouse pad
Imagine a Black and White mouse pad. Your optical lens is on the white part.
When you move the mouse to the black part the sensor senses depth and thats why the cursor moves irregular.
Try it,it should work
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
add a comment |
I think you should use a Plain coloured/ Single coloured mouse pad
Imagine a Black and White mouse pad. Your optical lens is on the white part.
When you move the mouse to the black part the sensor senses depth and thats why the cursor moves irregular.
Try it,it should work
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
add a comment |
I think you should use a Plain coloured/ Single coloured mouse pad
Imagine a Black and White mouse pad. Your optical lens is on the white part.
When you move the mouse to the black part the sensor senses depth and thats why the cursor moves irregular.
Try it,it should work
I think you should use a Plain coloured/ Single coloured mouse pad
Imagine a Black and White mouse pad. Your optical lens is on the white part.
When you move the mouse to the black part the sensor senses depth and thats why the cursor moves irregular.
Try it,it should work
answered Sep 29 '09 at 19:40
dhasudhasu
3803923
3803923
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
add a comment |
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
I accepted this answer, with a comment, but somehow my comment got erased. This is the gist. It took me a bit of time to understand this, but this IS the solution in my case. Having the optical mouse on a dark surface causes it to "lose focus" and start to move. All fixed. Thank you.
– Xavierjazz
Oct 9 '09 at 3:06
add a comment |
I had the same issue. It turned out there was some hair, or dust inside the optical sensor plastic bit. By blowing off on it, the dust was gone and the mouse cursor did not move again.
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
add a comment |
I had the same issue. It turned out there was some hair, or dust inside the optical sensor plastic bit. By blowing off on it, the dust was gone and the mouse cursor did not move again.
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
add a comment |
I had the same issue. It turned out there was some hair, or dust inside the optical sensor plastic bit. By blowing off on it, the dust was gone and the mouse cursor did not move again.
I had the same issue. It turned out there was some hair, or dust inside the optical sensor plastic bit. By blowing off on it, the dust was gone and the mouse cursor did not move again.
answered Sep 29 '09 at 19:35
SnarkSnark
29k67689
29k67689
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
add a comment |
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
So far, this seems to have cured the problem. I'll give it another 12/16 hours and if its solved, I'll accept you answer. Thanks.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 1:46
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
Well, the problem is back. I may have identified the real cause though - I'll report back in 24 hours to let you know.
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 19:35
add a comment |
Does the problem occur when you're typing? I often have a similar problem (but to the right) when I'm typing with my hands brushing the touchpad on the my Thinkpad (T60).
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
add a comment |
Does the problem occur when you're typing? I often have a similar problem (but to the right) when I'm typing with my hands brushing the touchpad on the my Thinkpad (T60).
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
add a comment |
Does the problem occur when you're typing? I often have a similar problem (but to the right) when I'm typing with my hands brushing the touchpad on the my Thinkpad (T60).
Does the problem occur when you're typing? I often have a similar problem (but to the right) when I'm typing with my hands brushing the touchpad on the my Thinkpad (T60).
answered Sep 29 '09 at 20:18
C. RossC. Ross
2,469105377
2,469105377
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
add a comment |
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
It was worth a shot.
– C. Ross
Sep 30 '09 at 12:09
add a comment |
You might try to clean the mouse, if it has a ball tracker.
However, and since you say the mouse is a few years old, my experience with mouses is that when they develop a mind of their own, it's time to get a new and more obedient mouse.
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
add a comment |
You might try to clean the mouse, if it has a ball tracker.
However, and since you say the mouse is a few years old, my experience with mouses is that when they develop a mind of their own, it's time to get a new and more obedient mouse.
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
add a comment |
You might try to clean the mouse, if it has a ball tracker.
However, and since you say the mouse is a few years old, my experience with mouses is that when they develop a mind of their own, it's time to get a new and more obedient mouse.
You might try to clean the mouse, if it has a ball tracker.
However, and since you say the mouse is a few years old, my experience with mouses is that when they develop a mind of their own, it's time to get a new and more obedient mouse.
answered Sep 29 '09 at 21:17
harrymcharrymc
256k14268568
256k14268568
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
add a comment |
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
"a new and more obedient mouse". Are they called rats?
– Xavierjazz
Sep 30 '09 at 0:21
add a comment |
Cleaning the mouse is a good idea. I doubt it's USB related. I also had cheapo, no-name optical mouse that would do that by itself. If it's annoying you, there are many good, inexpensive mice available.
add a comment |
Cleaning the mouse is a good idea. I doubt it's USB related. I also had cheapo, no-name optical mouse that would do that by itself. If it's annoying you, there are many good, inexpensive mice available.
add a comment |
Cleaning the mouse is a good idea. I doubt it's USB related. I also had cheapo, no-name optical mouse that would do that by itself. If it's annoying you, there are many good, inexpensive mice available.
Cleaning the mouse is a good idea. I doubt it's USB related. I also had cheapo, no-name optical mouse that would do that by itself. If it's annoying you, there are many good, inexpensive mice available.
answered Sep 29 '09 at 21:25
emgeeemgee
4,1671626
4,1671626
add a comment |
add a comment |
I exactly had the same problem, what I did was wiped the touch pad with a wet paper towel, that is it. Everything fell as it was and the mouse stopped running all the way to the right corner of the screen.
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
add a comment |
I exactly had the same problem, what I did was wiped the touch pad with a wet paper towel, that is it. Everything fell as it was and the mouse stopped running all the way to the right corner of the screen.
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
add a comment |
I exactly had the same problem, what I did was wiped the touch pad with a wet paper towel, that is it. Everything fell as it was and the mouse stopped running all the way to the right corner of the screen.
I exactly had the same problem, what I did was wiped the touch pad with a wet paper towel, that is it. Everything fell as it was and the mouse stopped running all the way to the right corner of the screen.
edited Sep 2 '14 at 18:13
gronostaj
28.2k1369107
28.2k1369107
answered Sep 2 '14 at 15:51
user364201user364201
11
11
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
add a comment |
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This is not an answer to the original question (which asked about a USB mouse not a touchpad)
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 2 '14 at 17:02
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
This does answer the question. Touchpads and trackpoints aren't always disabled when a mouse is connected and they can cause pointer drift. I think we should keep this answer because it may actually help someone.
– gronostaj
Sep 2 '14 at 18:12
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
I don't think cleaning a touchpad when it is not being used will stop pointer drift ... in addition op has said I have my pad turned off in another comment.
– DavidPostill♦
Sep 3 '14 at 5:26
add a comment |
Had this issue just before on Windows 7 64bit however my mouse moved to the right not the left, was concerning when it happened as it's a Razer Naga mmo expert mouse (with a 4G laser) not some cheap one.
First thing I did was clean out the bottom of the mouse and no luck then I grabbed my old mouse and tried that one and the pointer continued to do the exact same thing (move slowly to the right every now and then) so I then restarted the computer and well the mouse no longer moved on it's own however I found the sensitivity of the mouse was off like it had been cut in half so went into razer synapse and increased the DPI to the max at 8200 up from the normal DPI of 4600 and still felt a little slow (and weird normally at that DPI I can't control the movement of the cursor) so went into the mouse settings in control panel and the sensitivity was only at 50% which I swore I turned it up max with my last mouse, cranked it up to 100% then pushed the DPI back down to 4600 and everything felt normal again.
I believe this is a random bug with windows just randomly bugging out?
Cause I've used the Razer naga on an old razer goliathus control mouse pad which is mostly black with some green on it and my laser and optical mouse didn't have an issue with it and I've now had this razer goliathus speed extended edition mouse mat for about a month now which is mostly green with shades of black here and there that and in razer synapse my mouse is specifically calibrated for this mouse pad.
If it was a problem with the mouse mat then there would be a lot of people complaining that these mouse mats are bad but they aren't, specially since this mouse is designed to operate on almost any surface even a towel even my old cmstorm devastator optical mouse could do it.
Aside from that when the issue occurred I noticed my Logitech orion spark G910 keyboard started to act up too all the leds turned off then back on for a brief few seconds however the Logitech gaming software or Razer synapse programs (controls features of Logitech and Razer devices) didn't report any malfunctions or errors, and couldn't be that that software restarted as when Logitech gaming software isn't running the leds default to cyan blue colour rather then the colour I set.
As a technician this entire ordeal is bizarre been around pcs since I was 5 for 21 years and this is the first time I've seen this happen.
I've had dust and hair in the mouse before but they don't act like this and for that to cause the mouse sensitivity settings to reset to default in control panel is unheard of.
add a comment |
Had this issue just before on Windows 7 64bit however my mouse moved to the right not the left, was concerning when it happened as it's a Razer Naga mmo expert mouse (with a 4G laser) not some cheap one.
First thing I did was clean out the bottom of the mouse and no luck then I grabbed my old mouse and tried that one and the pointer continued to do the exact same thing (move slowly to the right every now and then) so I then restarted the computer and well the mouse no longer moved on it's own however I found the sensitivity of the mouse was off like it had been cut in half so went into razer synapse and increased the DPI to the max at 8200 up from the normal DPI of 4600 and still felt a little slow (and weird normally at that DPI I can't control the movement of the cursor) so went into the mouse settings in control panel and the sensitivity was only at 50% which I swore I turned it up max with my last mouse, cranked it up to 100% then pushed the DPI back down to 4600 and everything felt normal again.
I believe this is a random bug with windows just randomly bugging out?
Cause I've used the Razer naga on an old razer goliathus control mouse pad which is mostly black with some green on it and my laser and optical mouse didn't have an issue with it and I've now had this razer goliathus speed extended edition mouse mat for about a month now which is mostly green with shades of black here and there that and in razer synapse my mouse is specifically calibrated for this mouse pad.
If it was a problem with the mouse mat then there would be a lot of people complaining that these mouse mats are bad but they aren't, specially since this mouse is designed to operate on almost any surface even a towel even my old cmstorm devastator optical mouse could do it.
Aside from that when the issue occurred I noticed my Logitech orion spark G910 keyboard started to act up too all the leds turned off then back on for a brief few seconds however the Logitech gaming software or Razer synapse programs (controls features of Logitech and Razer devices) didn't report any malfunctions or errors, and couldn't be that that software restarted as when Logitech gaming software isn't running the leds default to cyan blue colour rather then the colour I set.
As a technician this entire ordeal is bizarre been around pcs since I was 5 for 21 years and this is the first time I've seen this happen.
I've had dust and hair in the mouse before but they don't act like this and for that to cause the mouse sensitivity settings to reset to default in control panel is unheard of.
add a comment |
Had this issue just before on Windows 7 64bit however my mouse moved to the right not the left, was concerning when it happened as it's a Razer Naga mmo expert mouse (with a 4G laser) not some cheap one.
First thing I did was clean out the bottom of the mouse and no luck then I grabbed my old mouse and tried that one and the pointer continued to do the exact same thing (move slowly to the right every now and then) so I then restarted the computer and well the mouse no longer moved on it's own however I found the sensitivity of the mouse was off like it had been cut in half so went into razer synapse and increased the DPI to the max at 8200 up from the normal DPI of 4600 and still felt a little slow (and weird normally at that DPI I can't control the movement of the cursor) so went into the mouse settings in control panel and the sensitivity was only at 50% which I swore I turned it up max with my last mouse, cranked it up to 100% then pushed the DPI back down to 4600 and everything felt normal again.
I believe this is a random bug with windows just randomly bugging out?
Cause I've used the Razer naga on an old razer goliathus control mouse pad which is mostly black with some green on it and my laser and optical mouse didn't have an issue with it and I've now had this razer goliathus speed extended edition mouse mat for about a month now which is mostly green with shades of black here and there that and in razer synapse my mouse is specifically calibrated for this mouse pad.
If it was a problem with the mouse mat then there would be a lot of people complaining that these mouse mats are bad but they aren't, specially since this mouse is designed to operate on almost any surface even a towel even my old cmstorm devastator optical mouse could do it.
Aside from that when the issue occurred I noticed my Logitech orion spark G910 keyboard started to act up too all the leds turned off then back on for a brief few seconds however the Logitech gaming software or Razer synapse programs (controls features of Logitech and Razer devices) didn't report any malfunctions or errors, and couldn't be that that software restarted as when Logitech gaming software isn't running the leds default to cyan blue colour rather then the colour I set.
As a technician this entire ordeal is bizarre been around pcs since I was 5 for 21 years and this is the first time I've seen this happen.
I've had dust and hair in the mouse before but they don't act like this and for that to cause the mouse sensitivity settings to reset to default in control panel is unheard of.
Had this issue just before on Windows 7 64bit however my mouse moved to the right not the left, was concerning when it happened as it's a Razer Naga mmo expert mouse (with a 4G laser) not some cheap one.
First thing I did was clean out the bottom of the mouse and no luck then I grabbed my old mouse and tried that one and the pointer continued to do the exact same thing (move slowly to the right every now and then) so I then restarted the computer and well the mouse no longer moved on it's own however I found the sensitivity of the mouse was off like it had been cut in half so went into razer synapse and increased the DPI to the max at 8200 up from the normal DPI of 4600 and still felt a little slow (and weird normally at that DPI I can't control the movement of the cursor) so went into the mouse settings in control panel and the sensitivity was only at 50% which I swore I turned it up max with my last mouse, cranked it up to 100% then pushed the DPI back down to 4600 and everything felt normal again.
I believe this is a random bug with windows just randomly bugging out?
Cause I've used the Razer naga on an old razer goliathus control mouse pad which is mostly black with some green on it and my laser and optical mouse didn't have an issue with it and I've now had this razer goliathus speed extended edition mouse mat for about a month now which is mostly green with shades of black here and there that and in razer synapse my mouse is specifically calibrated for this mouse pad.
If it was a problem with the mouse mat then there would be a lot of people complaining that these mouse mats are bad but they aren't, specially since this mouse is designed to operate on almost any surface even a towel even my old cmstorm devastator optical mouse could do it.
Aside from that when the issue occurred I noticed my Logitech orion spark G910 keyboard started to act up too all the leds turned off then back on for a brief few seconds however the Logitech gaming software or Razer synapse programs (controls features of Logitech and Razer devices) didn't report any malfunctions or errors, and couldn't be that that software restarted as when Logitech gaming software isn't running the leds default to cyan blue colour rather then the colour I set.
As a technician this entire ordeal is bizarre been around pcs since I was 5 for 21 years and this is the first time I've seen this happen.
I've had dust and hair in the mouse before but they don't act like this and for that to cause the mouse sensitivity settings to reset to default in control panel is unheard of.
answered Mar 14 '15 at 13:30
HalorathHalorath
1
1
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I just had this issue after scanning a document and noticed the mouse drifting off to the left. I fixed it by going to control panel and opening device manager and opening Mice and other pointing devices. I noticed two drivers installed both the same so I uninstalled one. The mouse stopped drifting. This fixed it for me.
add a comment |
I just had this issue after scanning a document and noticed the mouse drifting off to the left. I fixed it by going to control panel and opening device manager and opening Mice and other pointing devices. I noticed two drivers installed both the same so I uninstalled one. The mouse stopped drifting. This fixed it for me.
add a comment |
I just had this issue after scanning a document and noticed the mouse drifting off to the left. I fixed it by going to control panel and opening device manager and opening Mice and other pointing devices. I noticed two drivers installed both the same so I uninstalled one. The mouse stopped drifting. This fixed it for me.
I just had this issue after scanning a document and noticed the mouse drifting off to the left. I fixed it by going to control panel and opening device manager and opening Mice and other pointing devices. I noticed two drivers installed both the same so I uninstalled one. The mouse stopped drifting. This fixed it for me.
answered May 4 '16 at 15:52
Gary SimonelliGary Simonelli
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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It happens quite often to me; I've had the same bahaviour both at home and at work, with completely different PCs and mice.
– alex
Sep 29 '09 at 19:39