Philipp Überbacher wrote:
Excerpts from Joel Roth's message of 2011-09-04
08:59:31 +0200:
On Sat, Sep 03, 2011 at 05:49:19PM -0700, Ken
Restivo wrote:
I have owned a few ThinkPads in my day, and they
do run
well with linux, but the ergonomics of the keyboards on
them irritate me so much, I'll never use another one.
I'm happy with my
T410; I ameliorate the ergonomics
by using a wireless USB mouse, and a compact
USB keyboard.
I disabled the touch pad, otherwise I
get spurious mouse clicks.
I use a really cheap Acer Extensa 5220, keyboard is ok for me, it has a
rather conventional layout compared to some laptops I've seen where
ESC/Shift/Enter/... where all over the place. The touchpad works ok for
me, although I started to use a mouse again when at home. Touchpad is ok
for the occasional pointing, but if you do point-heavy stuff it can go
so far that your fingertips heat up and you almost start to rub them
off.
I think that's where the fingertip-rolling technique comes in.
The touchpad can be disabled using Fn+F7 but this
happens pretty
much in hardware as far as I know and can lead to xruns (same goes for
backlight).
Toshibas have a function key combo that disables touchpad. I've never
noticed if it has any impact on xruns, cuz I usually use external
keyboard and trackball except on mobile recording trips (like recording
my church band this morning) - then I need the touchpad.
Can't imagine why backlighting would have any impact on xruns. I'd
figure that would be subsumed in the general impact of laptops' power
management hardware on things like processor or bus speeds.
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community