I bough a cheap phone screen protector for 1 euro, and i dont know if it is resistive or capacitive. Can i use a phone screen protector on the laptop? some place sell laptop touchpad stickers for 20 dollars, crazy?!

I just put a plastic screen protector left over from my phone, on my Asus laptop's touchpad and it is sooo much better. My touchpad has some kind of faux glass surface (bit I think it's actually just metal), similar to the one on the Zenbooks but not that good and I always had trouble with it, pointer not so precise and my fingers would sometimes not glide on it properly. Now it is soo much better. I recommed trying it for anyone who has trouble with the touchpad, and if it doesn't work out, you can easily remove it and dump it in the trash can :)


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From direct experiment i can say that a touch phone protector works fine on a PC touchpad. compared to a genuine PC touchpad, the phone protector is slightly too smooth and you may want to try abrading it with a 800/1000 grit sandpaper first to have an rougher touchpad surface. So far it's much better than the sticker the Thinkpad arrived with.

requires white spirit and rubbing alcohol and a touchscreen phone protector in that order and a razor blade, trace the outline of the toucharea with paper and then cut through the paper and phone protector and apply it.

I have a Samsung Note 20 Ultra and I am trying to use my phone as a touchpad to my Windows 11 through Samsung DeX. I have managed to connect the Samsung DeX Windows app to my phone but can't seem to turn on the touchpad. Of course, my laptop already has a touchpad but I would like to use my phone as a touchpad because then I could draw and take notes with my s pen, which is way easier then with a finger. I imagine it would work like a small drawing pad. Is this possible? If so, how do I do it?

I'd love to see samsung add a keyboard function to the "use your phone as a touchpad" function. If it could recognize when you needed to input textual information it pulled up keyboard and/or had a little icon on the screen to pull up a keyboard.

Forgive me as I may be a bit too excited about this feature, but I really think HP gets where tablets need to go as a result of this next item. When paired with a webOS phone via Bluetooth, you can use the TouchPad to place and receive phone calls.

The pairing process is pretty straight forward although there are hiccups thanks to the current state of webOS bugginess. Once paired you can lock your phone and put it aside as your TouchPad is now your conduit to telephony.

Thankfully while in a phone call you can still multitask. With the calling card pushed off to the side you can still use your TouchPad like you would normally. You can conduct an IM conversation, browse the web, or respond to emails while the call is going on. I can see this being particularly useful if your TouchPad is your primary computing device and you need to be on a conference call. You can take calls without ever moving your eyes off of the TouchPad and without interrupting what you were doing prior.

There are of course problems with the calling app. The TouchPad would occasionally drop audio when initiating or leaving a call. Sometimes when I lost audio here I wouldn't hear any audio throughout the TouchPad until I reset the device. I also wasn't able to access voicemail or view any of the call history on the TouchPad itself. Since the calls are actually routed through the paired phone, in my case a Veer, the call log appears on the paired phone - not the TouchPad. While I can understand why it works this way, I think I'd prefer a copy on the TouchPad at least in addition to what's stored on the phone.

The reason I feel like the TouchPad's phone integration proves that HP understands the future of the tablet is because it helps integrate functionality. HP has a tablet that can, at least on paper, do more than competing tablets can do. In a perfect world you'd be able to quickly switch between apps, carry a phone conversation, SMS and IM people without having to distinguish which protocol you're using, all at the same time and all on the TouchPad. Today the TouchPad's performance issues and bugs are what remain in the way of that goal, but the vision is there. Just like your Mac or PC today is capable of doing a lot, very well, I believe tablets are headed in that direction too. Multitasking is key and making it so you don't need to reach for another device to do what you need to do is an important part of making tablets a permanent resident in anyone's computing life.

Smartphones use big touchscreens on the front as a useful tactile interface. However, our hands naturally wrap around the back of the phone, too. This area is underutilized as an interface, but the designers of BackTrack found a way to change that.

The idea is simple. The project video notes that conductive tape can be placed on a multitouch touchscreen, allowing touches to be read at a remote location. Taking this concept further, BackTrack works by creating a 2D matrix on the back of the phone, and connecting this matrix to a series of pads in a row on the front touchscreen. Then, touches on the back touchpad can be read by the existing touchscreen on the front screen.

Doing this in practice requires the use of fancy transparent electrodes and flexible connections. However, the team behind Backtrack were able to create their passive rear touchpad in a formfactor that fits into a simple phone case. It can then be used to play games or use interface with the phone in other ways.

We fully expect phone manufacturers to start creating interfaces that use the back surface of the phone. Apple have already explored this with the rarely-discussed back-tapping feature. Implementing a full 2D touchpad on the rear could quickly become a great point of difference for the first handset manufacturer to get it right. Video after the break.

Oh yees! And also extend it to the edges as well!! Everything you touch is a interfarce! Great idea! Briliant! We absolutely need more buttons on our phones. Who holds their phones anyways? Maibe just waving your hand could also be used. Pure magic!

Assuming modestly high resolution(which might not be possibly just by hijacking the front screen; but could certainly be implemented as a peripheral connected to the phone in the worst case) this seems like it would be absolute catnip to the people who can adapt to weird input devices.

1. Remove that line from the config, reboot and see if the behavior changes, or

2. Run something like `sudo dmesg -w` or `sudo journalctl -f`, then connect your phone and observe the output. Does it show anything about a mouse or some HID (human interface devices)?

Maybe there are phones that provide this feature out of the box. When connected via USB slide down from the top to get to the notifications. Normally you can change the USB mode there. If that does not help, I'm out of ideas and would suggest to just remove that config line so your touchpad stays functional.

Sorry. I thought that it must be a bug since I never experienced this behavior on any of my custom roms before. (Maybe it has to do with the custom kernel I flashed on my phone recently.)

Anyway, thanks for your help, i really appreciate it

Display-Austausch in Rekordzeit Unser robustes Display-Modul ist ausgestattet mit einem 5-Inch Full HD Display fr ein helles und klares Bild. Gorilla Glass 3 sorgt fr eine hohe Strapazierfhigkeit, sollte dein Smartphone mal zu Fall...

So I opened up everything and put it all back together and the phone switches on again, but the screen doesnt work whether its the new screen or the old one so the issue is obviously something else. The support team arent responding to my messages though. Ideally I would like to send the phone back for repair but obviously I need someone at Fairphone to respond. How long do they normally take to respond? Is there an alternative method to contact Fairphone, by phone presumably?

If your computer and phone are not connected to the same network, they cannot communicate with each other. If the IP addresses of your computer and phone look very different from each other, changing your network settings to receive IP automatically will solve your problem.

Check the apps running in the background on your phone and computer and turn off unnecessary ones. Since the network you are connected to is used extensively, data transfer may be slow. Usually, restarting your modem, computer or mobile phone will fix the problem.

In addition to these adapters, Samsung has also introduced a Smart Keyboard especially for DeX. The Bluetooth keyboard has a dedicated key to instantly launch DeX, as well as function keys for easily switching connectivity between your Galaxy smartphone, tablet and PC.

To use wireless DeX, first go into screen mirroring mode on your TV or monitor. Then, on your phone or tablet, pull down the Quick Settings and tap DeX. Now select the TV or monitor you want to cast to.

Customizing your DeX home screen: Customizing your DeX home screen works just like it does on your mobile device. Select and drag apps from your Apps tray onto your home screen and position them in any order you like. To change your wallpaper in DeX, tap once with two fingers on your touchpad (or right click on your mouse) to access the customizer menu, then select any image from your Gallery.

For individuals, DeX is a great way to work more flexibly. Instead of booting up your laptop to catch up on work at home, just connect your phone or tablet to a monitor and get straight to work. You can run up to five apps at once and easily complete most tasks without hassle.

A global leader in enterprise mobility and information technology, Samsung offers a diverse portfolio of business technologies from smartphones, wearables, tablets and PCs, to digital displays and storage solutions. We are committed to putting the business customer at the core of everything we do, serving diverse industries including education, finance, government, healthcare, hospitality, public safety, retail and transportation. Follow Samsung for Business on Twitter: @SamsungBizUSA 2351a5e196

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