We've been very happy with the IOGEAR MiniView III, at least with
Windoze. Haven't had an opportunity to try it with Linux:
http://iogear.com/main.php?loc=product&product_id=284
-Pete
Fritz Whittington wrote:
On or about 2004-05-18 05:37, Vernon A. Fort whipped out a trusty #2
pencil and scribbled:
Chadley Wilson wrote:
On Mon, 2004-05-17 at 17:45, Vernon A. Fort wrote:
Quick question, has anyone found either a hardware setup or a
configuration tweek which will allow you to use the wheel mouse
with a KVM device (Curently I use the Belkin SOHO 4port + audio)
under the 2.6* kernels.
Hi Vernon Strange that you should experience such a Problem. but I
have to ask a
few Q's.
Does the scroll work if the mouse is plugged directly into the PC, (no
kvm)?
What model KVM is it?
Did you only experience the problem after migrating to the 2.6 kernel?
Which kernel is it?
The reason I must ask is I have over 40 Kvms on the production Line here
and apart from dropping the mouse between switching we have never had
any troubles with the scroll
cheers
Chadley,
It's one of the newer Belkins SOHO 4 port with audio - I got it early
last year. The scroll mouse works under both kernels but with the 2.6
kernel, when you switch back (using KDE) the mouse goes nuts, opening
windows. It completly looses control. The normal CTRL-ALT-F1 -> F7
re-syncs the mouse under the 2.4 kernels but does not fix it under the
2.6. Rebooting is the only way I have found to get mouse control back.
The resolution so far is not to use the belkins but before I switch
brands, I want to make sure this problem is not an issue with other
KVM's.
Vernon
Perhaps this solution isn't for you, but might work for some people on
the list. I've been using an ATEN KVM for a few years now and was quite
happy with it. Good video, even at 1600x1200. But when I got a new MS
optical mouse with the two extra buttons, the KVM box was not passing
those through. Wanting to use the extra buttons under Windows, I just
plugged the new mouse directly into the Windows machine, and my old
wheel-mouse into the Linux box. Mice, after all, aren't nearly as big
as keyboards and CRTs! As long as you only have 2, maybe 3 machines to
work with, this beats the $150-200 solution of a new KVM, and works just
fine, for me.