It is a simple, yet powerful tool that can let you use your phone as a remote control for your PC. You can use the built-in mouse and keyboard to interact with the applications and use your phone as a remote link to your PC. It works over WiFi and can be used in any location. You don't need to be afraid of being attacked by malicious programs because it is built with a strong security system. You don't have to worry about your privacy either because the app doesn't require any personal information.
LazyMouse is a preference pane that moves your cursor to the default button whenever a dialog box appears on your screen. In other words, it is a neat little application designed to save you time moving the mouse to dismiss dialogs. It is also a neat auto-clicker.
While these apps function by connecting to a server on a desktop and transmitting to it the mouse and keyboard events, the Synopsys Cybersecurity Research Center (CyRC) found as many as seven flaws related to weak or missing authentication, missing authorization, and insecure communication.
The Lazy Mouse server further suffers from a weak password policy and doesn't implement rate limiting, enabling remote unauthenticated attackers to trivially brute-force the PIN and execute rogue commands.
I have a p:dataTable of users containing avatars of the user. Whenever the user moves the mouse over the avatar a p:overlayPanel appears with more information (lazy loaded) on the user, and disappears when the user moves the cursor away - like this:
This works very well - as long as the user is "slowhanded". Whenever an user moves the cursor fast above many avatars many of the overlayPanels stay visible. For example when the user has the cursor over the position where user avatars are displayed and uses the scroll wheel of his mouse to scroll the usertable down or up.
I believe that the overlaypanel starts to load the information dynamically (dynamic="true") from the server when showEvent="mouseover" is dispatched and displays the overlaypanel after the response from the server arrives. This way it is not possible to detect whether the cursor is already away when the overlaypanel becomes visible - so the hideEvent="mouseout" is never dispatched.
Under Windows 10, I tried the regedit Xmouse changes mentioned in this link that were originally meant for Windows 8: -on-xmouse-active-window-tracking-focus-follows-mouse-pointer-feature-in-windows-8-1-windows-8-and-windows-7/
Windows actually has a flag to enable focus-follows-mouse ("active window tracking"), which can be enabled easily via the monstrous "SystemParametersInfo" Win32 API call. There are third-party programs to enable the flag, such as X-Mouse Controls, or you can perform the call directly using PowerShell.
Using the method to achieve the sloppy mouse behavior, that I'm so accustomed to, from previous versions of windows and linux from the post. I do not experience issue #2 that you are having. Issue #1 that you and all will have when using this registry modification is not an issue. It does exactly as expected because you have changed the way focus is handled in windows with this modification. Using the windows key brings the mouse into the start menu not the search menu so it gets focus, not the search menu. So, if you wish to use search either click in the search bar or magnification icon (depending on your settings for its appearance) or use the Win+S key combo and it will do the right thing.
Do NOT click the app icon in the taskbar before trying to select a window. If you do, as soon as you move the mouse pointer above the taskbar, the windows will disappear. Just hover above the app icon until the windows appear, then you can move the pointer into the one you need.
Note: the Windows 10 "Scroll inactive windows when I hover over them" setting is a useful addition (see Start -> Settings -> Devices -> Mouse & Touchpad). This seems independent from Xmouse functionality and ON seems to be the default.
If you want the focus to follow the mouse in a computer with multiple monitors, the proposed solutions (Activate a window by hovering over it with the mouse) are probably not enough or at least not the best option. I found quite frustrating the lost of focus while you are on the same screen. For example if the mouse cursor go slightly out of the window where you are typing, you suddenly loose the focus and another window is shown on top of the one you where working on.
To solve this problem the only solution that I found was to turn off the Activate a window by hovering over it with the mouse feature and use AutoHotKey (it's a free and open-source software) to activate the focus on the window under the mouse cursor but only when the mouse moves from one screen to another.
He went on to tell me that the company had a tool that stores settings for the various servers around the corporate campus. He logged in to this tool, and the screen presented me with a almost eternally-scrolling list of these servers. There were hundreds of them.
The computer took over my mouse, and the script started going through the servers, making every change I was supposed to be making. Meanwhile, I was kicking back and enjoying some quality time with Mr. Downey Jr.
Morty Mouse has a grey mouse head, with white teeth, black nose with black whiskers, huge ears and a bit of hair. His eyes are black with two white pupils. He has a blue torso with black arms and black legs.
Hi,I'm trying to convert/remap about 20k mouse gene names to human gene names using biomaRt and it isn't working. I get server errors when the lookup is performed. I've seen multiple posts on errors with biomaRt. None of the fixes mentioned in there (e.g. use mirrors, check the availability of the different marts -- which are available) seem to work. Something is going on with the server and mirrors.
I was using Kubuntu 19.10, then switched to Ubuntu 20.04, and everything was fine. Then a situation appeared, and I had to reinstall Ubuntu in UEFI mode instead of BIOS mode. Now both mouse pointer and keyboard lag, and it's not just graphical: moving and resizing windows also lags, some letters written on the keyboard are lost. The issue is not present in the Live CD, which is super weird.
I have tried multiple things: made sure that zoom and slow keys are disabled, checked and updated drivers, nothing of it works. The only thing is that mouse and keyboard lag when they are plugged into back panel (which is I guess directly to the motherboard), when I plug those into the front panel they work perfectly.
I was having the same problem on Ubuntu 20.04 with both mouse and keyboard connected to the same wireless USB dongle. During each session, the lag would appear after a little while, barely noticable at first, but could extend to several seconds over time.I would describe that experience as "soul crushing" :)
For me the problem were aggressive wifi-scans, about once every 1/10 sec, despite the computer being connected to a wired network. This caused the whole system to slow down, causing keyboard, mouse, audio and video lags. Deactivating wifi solved the problem.
I have had the same issue (internet search brought me here) - and I just noticed that when I closed the laptop lid, it automatically switched the refresh rate to 24 Hz.When I changed Settings -> Displays -> Refresh Rate to 60Hz, the mouse lag disappeared.
Notice in lazypath we use stdpath('data'), this will return the path to Neovim's data folder. So now we don't need to worry about changing our paths depending on the operating system, Neovim will do that for us. If you want to inspect the path, use this command inside Neovim.
At the moment the language server can't start automatically, restart Neovim so the language server can be configured properly. Once the server starts you'll notice warning signs in the global variable vim, that means everything is well and good.
Am I missing anything? Maybe a new feature or something I'm not familiar with already in Windows? File server is 2012R2 and all users are on Windows 10 Pro.
(I tagged Lucion Crashplan because I couldn't find Lucion Filecenter)
Our workflow is documents come into one of several "to do" folders based on client, then go out to a "Client\completed work MM/YYYY" folder on the same file server. Nothing is ever truly deleted until years later.
I am 100% virtualized, and I replicate all of my guests to another host every 2 hours with 20 restore points using Veeam. In your situation, I would of said, "yeah, i'll check the server's recycle bin. Give me 5 minutes and I'll have it back for you."
Diskeeper's Undelete program worked fairly well as a network recycle bin back when I used it last. Install on the file server and it took over for the recycle bin and tracked all file deletion requests.
I love having VSS enabled on the file servers with backups for if something goes majorly wrong. I probably should start looking into some form of document management system but :effort: and Vietnam flashbacks of being forced to try and fix a Sharepoint instance that was set up by someone who made Forrest Gump look like Albert Einstein.
I was also going to mention Undelete Server as a few others have. We used it on all our file servers in the past, but since we are all virtual now, we just rely on our Veeam snapshots to do quick file restores.
Turn that "this can't happen" into an approval for new storage. Run snapshots, on the LUN that your file server is on, every 5 minutes. I think most new arrays have very efficient snapshot technology. We recently looked at Nimble. Their snapshots are pretty awesome.
On our System Center DPM installation, we have it set to backup our file servers. Is it a lot of space taken up? You bet, but it does backup the content. Haven't ever had to restore anything yet, luckily.
Shadow Copy is the most useful feature we ever enabled. However, many times what happens when some says they "deleted a folder> is that they accidentally used a lazy mouse finger to drag it and drop it in another folder. WHen I suspect that happens, I use my admin account to to a full server search for the most appropriate search term using the free Agent Ransack program Opens a new window. This is a very quick and flexible search utility that makes it easy to find misplaced files and folders that wind up in the wrong place.
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