This program is a highly visible locator that instantly reveals where your mouse is on your screen. With a controllable trigger time period, from 1 second to 30 minutes, you can adjust the mouse locator precisely to your needs.

What you are seeing is normal. When Macro Express Pro is running with standard user permissions Windows does not allow mouse events (clicks and moves) from programs running with elevated permissions (admin). The Mouse Locator also stops working inside Task Manager. To resolve this close the Mouse Locator and Macro Express, run Macro Express Pro as Administrator and click to run Mouse Locator again.


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Further, programs can be written to prevent mouse events from other programs (such as Macro Express Pro) regardless of there permissions levels. The information I received said that to determine if a program prevents these mouse events launch the Mouse Locator and see if it updates over that program. My testing with such a program confirmed this.

Windows calls these events messages. So, program XX does not let Macro Express Pro see messages generated from inside program XX. And it ignores messages Macro Express Pro sends messages to program XX. This starts to occur when the mouse is over program XX or when program XX is active/focused.

I'm jumping in here without reading fully. But what I have observed with SnagIt, a similar snipping tool, is that when it prompts the user what you are seeing is not your programs and such. It's not an overlay. I believe it makes a graphic of the entire screen and then allows one to select within. This is evidenced by the fact that the mouse cursor doesn't move and we get a new mouse cursor.

I am visually impaired, and find it really difficult to locate the mouse pointer on screen. (I am running Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS) Other OS's have built-in methods to make the mouse pointer more easily visible. In Windows you can turn on "pointer trails" where moving the pointer will leave a trail of pointer images making it easier to visually track/follow the pointer. (I nicknamed them "mouse droppings" ;-) ) And in MacOS Sierra, Apple added a feature whereby if you jiggle the mouse pointer (move it back and forth rapidly) it will temporarily enlarge the mouse pointer, again to make it easier to see on screen. Is there a similar feature (either built-in or provided by a third-party app) for Ubuntu?

You can do this by enabling Show mouse plugin from CompizConfig Settings manager. If you don't have them already installed, you can install them from terminal using the following command:

I have the "Show location of pointer when I press CTRL key" option on in Mouse Properties to help me find my mouse pointer. This however is not enough as I have a 4 monitor setup and if the mouse is somewhere in the periphery, the mouse locator circle barely registers. Is there something I can do to make the pointer locator more visible? I am thinking big huge thick pulsating reticles that show where my mouse could be hiding. Googling for software brings back rather sketchy results.

Best solution I've found so far is multi-monitor mouse which has a hotkey for jumping the mouse to specific monitors. I about to set it up for just one hotkey: jump the mouse to my primary monitor; forget looking for it, make it be here!

The Translucent style is the default for the Mouse Locator. However, depending on what is displayed underneath the Mouse Locator it may be difficult to read the values for the mouse position and colors. Turn off the Translucent style if you experience difficulties reading the text.

You can use the Mouse Locator to get the value of a color on your computer monitor. Make sure the Mouse Locator is the active window, then move your mouse over the color you want and press Ctrl + c. The color will be copied to the clipboard so you can paste it into another program.

I am trying to find a wireless mouse with a built in locator/finder. We use a wireless mouse for our media center setup in the living room, and the mouse is often lost. I cannot imagine that a mouse with a little piezo beeper has not ever been made, but I cannot seem to find one through search results. All the search results relate to locating the cursor on the screen, not finding the mouse in meat-space (including this forum, yes I did search first). This is not the problem I am trying to solve. I am not sure if this feature has a different name that might turn up better results.

An Ideal product would have a locator button on the USB dongle/charging station, with a beep or buzz on the mouse itself. Considering all the applications where a wireless mouse is ideal, but where it could be easily lost, this product has to exist somewhere, I am just unable to find it.

Possible lower tech solutions. Not all mice are black or dark gray, Logitech make some in rather brighter colours. Another possibility is to apply some vivid coloured tape to it to make it stand out from any likely background, this is the solution my sister-in-law adopted for her Sky TV remote which she is always misplacing. A wired mouse ?

You're looking in the wronn direction. The "Shake to Find" feature is used when you cannot find your mouse pointer. It is not intended to be used when you can locate the mouse pointer, but want to make others aware of its location.

In the comments you wrote that you specifically want this feature for making others aware of your mouse pointer location when screen sharing and similar. There's no way of making that feature do what you want.

Another alternative is the app "Mousepos" from Boinx Software, which adds a spot light to your mouse pointer. It can also do other stuff such as adding an animation when you click the mouse. I haven't had any issues with stability with this program in its latest version.

I've always used a larger mouse icon in Windows (made it easier to find when zipping around multiple screens :p). Recently switched to using OSX and discovered that the option to enlarge the mouse icon does just that, literally.

It just zooms the mouse up... Normally this wouldnt be an issue, except when I use photoshop, the icons are all larger than their effect area (ie, brush size is inaccurate) due to the mouse literally being scaled up.

Occassionally I use Mouse Locator when giving demos to help the audience track my mouse movements. Mouse Locator doesn't increase the size of the mouse pointer per say, instead it "paints a target" around the pointer when you start moving the mouse. The target makes it easier to locate the pointer location. Omnidazzle also does this, but the effects are flashier.

If local storage capacity is not a limitation, all unique GA mouse strains should be part of the cryopreservation programme, including strains carrying the same genome modification but on a different genetic background. Tissues and DNA from unique strains should also be archived, as these can be used for quality control and comparison with material from future rounds of recovery of the strain. In addition, they can be useful for addressing specific questions before, or instead of recovery.

There are two main approaches to archiving mouse strains: archiving in-house or archiving through a centralised facility such as the European Mouse Mutant Archive (EMMA), the Centre for Animal Resources and Development (CARD) or the Mutant Mouse Resource and Research Centre (MMRRC). In-house facilities will require well-funded resources and a robust quality control programme to ensure that cryopreserved embryos and gametes are of high enough quality to enable the consistent recovery of live born offspring. All these requirements are integral to a centralised repository, which are often available at no cost to depositors. Centralised repositories also remove the burden associated with setting up frequent shipments when sharing GA mouse strains that are in high demand. In the UK these services are provided by the MRC Harwell Archive which acts as the UK node for EMMA.

Centralised facilities provide free embryo and sperm cryopreservation services, plus long-term storage, on the condition that archived strains can be made available to the scientific community. The intellectual property (IP) remains with the originator and, where necessary, a grace period (e.g. a two-year grace period for EMMA) can be applied which allows investigators to prevent sharing of their mouse strains before their data has been published. An example of a centralised facility is EMMA comprised of 16 archiving centres across Europe.

To avoid confusion, mouse strains should be named according to standardised nomenclature that is recognised globally. The International Committee on Standardised Genetic Nomenclature for Mice regularly reviews and updates the naming systems in light of new developments in the field, for example the advent of CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing. Further information and advice on the use of standardised nomenclature is available from the Mouse Genome Informatics Database, which also keeps a comprehensive list of all registered allele, gene and strain names.

When sharing mouse strains, to facilitate reproducible research, it is important that the information contained in the mouse passport is fully updated (see Record keeping and Appendix 1). This also highlights the benefits of acquiring strains directly from a centralised repository where genetic drift is more likely to be controlled and the background characterised.

The Mouse Locator Network (MLN) is a mechanism by which unique locally held or archived mouse strains can be identified and shared, reducing welfare concerns and costs associated with shipping mice long distances [2]. The success of this email network relies on participation from all UK institutions with in-house archives of GA strains, as well as a comprehensive local searchable strain database at each institution, in order that strains can easily be located and that requesters have confidence in the technical details of the strain (e.g. the correct mutation, time since the last backcross). There are similar networks in other countries such as Compartir in Spain [3]. 2351a5e196

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