/me Looks at all the settings again
I have the same problem as Jonathan, and can confirm that the mouse is
set correctly.
It does operate properly if the touchscreen of my computer is disabled,
but if the touchscreen is active, then the disable-to-type function of
the touchpad does not work prope
I run a logitech wireless mouse, although my receiver comes up as
"Logitech M315/M235". I'm not sure why this device would show on your
system as devices 14 and 18. I assume device 15 must be a wireless
keyboard?
Just for kicks, you could try selectively disabling one or the other of
the dev
But hopefully, a piece of the problem so the developers can write a
solution!
What is the output of "xinput" on your computer?
On 12/04/2017 08:17 AM, Jonathan Kamens wrote:
> Alas, not a solution I can use. :-(
>
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Deskto
In my case, xinput shows a device "ELAN Touchscreen"
I have issued the command " xinput disable 'ELAN Touchscreen' ", which
disables that device entirely, and my touchpad then works correctly. I
will update my comment in the bug report.
On 12/04/2017 05:33 AM, Jonathan Kamens wrote:
>> In my c
Expanding upon comment #3
xinput shows
⎡ Virtual core pointer id=2[master pointer (3)]
⎜ ↳ Virtual core XTEST pointerid=4[slave pointer (2)]
⎜ ↳ SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPadid=14 [slave pointer (2)]
⎜ ↳ ELAN Touchscreen
Im my case, I have found that disabling a second touch device (a
touchscreen) fixes the issue.
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Desktop Bugs, which is subscribed to gnome-shell in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1733032
Title:
touchpad disable wh
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1672297 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1672297
I'd be willing to do memory profiling - I don't know how, and would need
some assistance in getting it done. I have noticed that if gnome-shell
is running for a couple of days, I run up towards 400 MB of me
Public bug reported:
After opening Gnome-Software, entering a program name will result in
multiple repetitions of each keystroke. For example, trying to search
for 'thunderbird' will result in "tthhunnddeerrbbiirrdd"
Point-and-click does work, as does apt-get from the terminal.
Description: