There was something wrong in my last message:
If you uncheck all key modifiers, this setting will switch to "Shortcut". You 
you have to define a shortcut e.g. Meta + M to toggle the tracker on/off.
Sorry for that. 

Regards
Sam

On Thursday 22 January 2015 22.42:58 Samuel Stachelski wrote:
> Hi all
> 
> As I already wrote I suffer the same thing with the gone cursor. But for 
> those of you using KDE there is very basic and ugly workaround: In the KDE 
> settings under Desktop Effects -> All Effects turn on the "Track Mouse" 
> effect. In the settings of this effect you uncheck all key modifiers and, 
> voilĂ , you get  kind of a "cursor". Of course the desktop effects have to be 
> enabled. With default settings the desktop effects can be activated with 
> shift+alt+F12.
> 
> Regards
> Sam
> 
> On Thursday 15 January 2015 13.06:00 John Watson wrote:
> > 
> > Just to confirm I also have the same cursor problem using Debian Unstable 
> > using fglrx drivers. Again same kind hardware with one of these dreaded 
> > Hybrid Intel/ATI graphic laptops.
> > 
> > Just a few points.
> > 
> > 1- Same issue when installing fglrx drivers from the AMD website.
> > 
> > 2- Enabling software cursor in xorg.conf I noticed is ignored by the fglrx 
> > drivers.
> > 
> > 3- As a work around tried manually inserting a new cursor using the xinput 
> > however this results in X crashing using debian fglrx drivers or freezes 
> > when using ATI manual drivers.
> > 
> > IS there any thing I can do to assist with fixing this bug? If the 
> > maintainer wants to remotely login this can be arranged. There is clearly a 
> > conflict with fglrx with another library.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > --
> > 
> > Thanks and regards.
> > 
> > John Watson
> 
>


--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org

Reply via email to