This problem is evidently still there in Lucid Lynx 10.04 LTS (i386
Desktop).  I'm using an Itac Systems, Inc. Mouse-Trak trackball on th
PS/2 mouse port, and as-shipped in the LiveCD, it takes multiple spins
of the trackball to move the pointer from the left edge of the screen to
the right edge.  This trackball has its own built-in acceleration
control that can be switched on and off with a button, and even with
acceleration active it takes multiple spins to traverse the screen.
When operating normally, a single spin of the ball is all it takes
without acceleration; with acceleration a quick 20-40 degree rotation of
the ball does it.  (The Itac Mouse-Trak is an industrial trackball with
a large, billiard-ball-sized phenolic ball mounted on precision plated
steel shafts and ball bearings.  When flicked with a fingertip, the ball
will continue to spin for a second or so, unlike some cheap trackballs
from Logitech, et al, using tiny, marble-sized plastic balls on simple
friction bearings.)

When I move the mouse sensitivity control to "Low", it starts to behave
more normally.  When I move the sensitivity control to "High", the
pointer becomes a slug.

Conclusion:  The mouse sensitivity control sense is most definitely
inverted.  If it is running over a 0-255 range, as many 8-bit controls
do, there may be an inadvertent subtraction or overflow occurring in the
settings algorithm.

The mouse acceleration control sense appears to work correctly.

-- 
label of the mouse motion preferences is misleading
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/357204
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