Phoenix100
Posts: 2826
Joined: 9/28/2010 Status: offline
|
I was just about to come here and say that I found a solution to the mouse problem when I see chiccoperrone has already posted the precise reverse. However, for what it's worth, for me, using a G9 laser mouse, with set point software, the settings that work are to ENABLE the native OS drivers BUT, to have acceleration set to full (3) and speed set to full (10). Paradoxically, this leads to a very slow mouse (whereas, if you DISABLE the native OS drivers it leads to a superfast mouse) which you can then speed up using the DPI sensitivity levels. With only 1 DPI level (which is what I usually play shooter type games with - only with NO acceleration at all, normally) set to 600 and a polling rate of 1000 (if you're familiar with the pointer options in the set point software this will make sense) then the mouse works perfectly for me. Problem solved. Weird. This is playing ANW (there is no mouse problem in CE) on a win7 64 bit system in windowed mode. For what it's worth, as I said... For me the problem with the jittery pointer was not solved at all, by the way, by moving into full screen mode, or by messing with the affinty etc (I'm on an i5, with a Gforce GTX 460 1gb) I had previously tried everything but hadn't thought to push up the acceleration, because that was counter-intuitive to solve erratic pointer behaviour. To push up the acceleration and enable the OS drivers, however, as I said, actually slows down the mouse (which, as I said, you then have to speed up by using the DPI sensitivity levels). I hope this maikes sense to some people. It would make no sense at all to me if I hadn't used and experimented with the set point settings.
|