Microspeed Workaround
Some time ago I sumbitted a workaround for usage of the Microspeed PC Track trackball in W2K. Now I see that the workaround has been posted at but it is cut off rendering it useless. Please remove the workaround or reply and I will resend the complete workaround.
Some time ago I sumbitted a workaround for usage of the Microspeed PC Track trackball in W2K. Now I see that the workaround has been posted at http://www.ntcompatible.com/compdet.php?id=6800, but it is cut off rendering it useless. Please remove the workaround or reply and I will resend the complete workaround.
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I did not post the complete workaround in my eariler post as I did not have to time type it up. After submitting my post I found a copy of it in one of my posts on on an about.com forum. Here it is.
Disconnect the trackball from the system. Run a serial mouse extender cable from one of your computer's serial ports to a place on your desk behind your keyboard. Connect a standard serial mouse (I used an old 2 button mouse with a sticky ball) to the extender cable that is detected by Windows 2000 as a Microsoft serial mouse (No serial mice we have are detected as a standard serial mouse.) If the mouse is not detected navigate to Control Panel | Administrative Tools | Computer Management, highlight device manager with the arrow keys, press tab once to highlight your computer's name, and use Shift+F10 to select Scan for hardware changes. Finally remove the serial mouse from the extender cable and replace it with the trackball using an adapter if needed.
If this works your mouse pointer will remain present and functional after the pointing device switch until you scan for hardware changes or reboot the system. To stop the plug play removal detection during each reboot swap your trackball for the serial mouse prior to starting a reboot and back after the post reboot logon prompt appears.
Disconnect the trackball from the system. Run a serial mouse extender cable from one of your computer's serial ports to a place on your desk behind your keyboard. Connect a standard serial mouse (I used an old 2 button mouse with a sticky ball) to the extender cable that is detected by Windows 2000 as a Microsoft serial mouse (No serial mice we have are detected as a standard serial mouse.) If the mouse is not detected navigate to Control Panel | Administrative Tools | Computer Management, highlight device manager with the arrow keys, press tab once to highlight your computer's name, and use Shift+F10 to select Scan for hardware changes. Finally remove the serial mouse from the extender cable and replace it with the trackball using an adapter if needed.
If this works your mouse pointer will remain present and functional after the pointing device switch until you scan for hardware changes or reboot the system. To stop the plug play removal detection during each reboot swap your trackball for the serial mouse prior to starting a reboot and back after the post reboot logon prompt appears.
Thanks. Updated