I bought a Microsoft Optical tracjkball, and was surprised that the software couldn't be set up to make the cursor snap to the default button, as I had always set up my various Logitech trackballs to do in OS9.
So, Lazy Mouse works well for me - it seems to be the only application of its kind for OSX.
LazyMouse
Jumps cursor to the default button of dialogs & alerts.
Version: 2.2
Lazy Mouse
Feedback Type: Review
Contributed by: person s Monday, June 21 2004 @ 05:57 AM PDT
Product Platform: MacOSX
Used Product For: 1-6 months
Recommend Product: YES
Overall Rating:
Ease of Use:
Support:
Features:
Quality / Stability:
Price:
Comments
Lazy Mouse - Bronzit
Watch out! Don't upgrade to Panther OSX 10.3.9 w/o FIRST disabling Lazy Mouse! Apple means what it says about 3rd party add-ins causing problems with this. It did for me w/my Powerbook G4 15" (1 Gb RAM, 128 Mb video RAM, Apple optical mouse). It wouldn't boot up the 3rd time after the install. It would only get to the "Spinning Daisy Gray Apple logo" screen & hang. I had to re-build off of the CD-ROM's & re-update from 10.3 back to 10.3.9. Not fun. This also meant re-installing all software (McAfee, Stuffit Deluxe, etc., etc.).Tuesday, April 19 2005 @ 02:31 PM PDT
Lazy Mouse - spincom
A helper to fill in since the demise of the beloved (and free) CursorZoom. This convenience automatically whisks your cursor to you to the action window without using your mouse. There are times when the usual keyboard shortcut (apple-q, or whatever) isn't otherwise convenient.Of course, this only works with Safari.
Wednesday, July 25 2007 @ 07:30 PM PDT
Lazy Mouse - artie505
SideTrack's basic feature is keypad scrolling, but it also includes this very same feature.Reply to This
Monday, March 14 2005 @ 12:08 AM PST