Sunday, December 25, 2011

Apple's Magic Trackpad on a Windows 7 desktop

I use a Mac at work but I'm still a PC at home. One of the things I like about the MacBook Pro is its amazing trackpad. It's not the multitouch capabilities - any PC laptop today has a multitouch trackpad - but the incredible responsiveness. The trackpads on most PCs are tiny and require too much concentration to use, while the MBP trackpad is nice and big, and practically effortless to use.

Apple released the Magic Trackpad a while back, which is basically an external, bluetooth version of the MBP's built-in trackpad. I immediately wanted it for my home machine... but I've got a PC. No matter, some googling revealed that it apparently installs fine on Windows 7, so I added it to my Amazon wishlist, and thanks to a super awesome sister, I had it in my hands today.

Connecting it to my Win7 64-bit desktop was a breeze (drivers installed automatically), however, I discovered a major caveat. Although I was able to move the pointer around and click/double-click by pressing down on the trackpad, tapping or double-tapping did nothing, and multitouch wasn't supported either. Ten more minutes of googling found the answer.

The following steps got me tapping and two finger scrolling:
  1. I uninstalled the trackpad before proceeding (not sure if that's necessary, but I wanted to start with a clean slate).
  2. I installed the "Trackpad-Driver-Installer-12.exe" file from the following web page:
    http://www.trackpadcontrol.com/download.html

    What this amazing file does is download and install BootCamp on your computer (even if it's a standalone PC, didn't know you could do that), just so that it can extract the trackpad driver to your system, which it does automatically.
  3. Once you've installed the driver, connect the trackpad to your system. For novices:
    - Click Start and type "add".
    - Select "Add a Bluetooth device" from the search results.
    - When the "Add" dialog appears, turn on your trackpad.
    - When the dialog finds the trackpad, follow the prompts.
At this point, tapping and scrolling just worked. The instructions on the download page will have you install the "Magic Trackpad Control Panel", but that doesn't seem to be necessary for tap and scroll, which is all I want. The Control Panel is time-limited payware (but it's only eight bucks if you want it), however, the Trackpad Driver-Installer in the instructions above is free.

So to sum up, with a single executable that does all the installation for you, you get:
  • Single finger tap to click
  • Single-finger double-tap to double-click
  • Two-finger tap to right-click
  • Two-finger swipe to scroll.
An interesting caveat to scrolling I just discovered:
  • If you have (only) a vertical scroll bar, swiping up and down with two fingers scrolls vertically.
  • If you have both vertical and horizontal scroll bars, swiping vertically and horizontally works as expected.
  • If you have (only) a horizontal scroll bar, swiping left and right does... nothing. However, swiping up and down does scroll horizontally. So there you go.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Android Market app updated, looks Metro-ish

I did a search on the Android Market yesterday and discovered that they'd changed the UI again. This time it's a lot busier, and after using it for a minute I realized it's yet another example of a Metro inspired UI. Metro is, of course, the tile-based UI developed by Microsoft for Windows Phone 7, and soon to be featured in Windows 8, but the concept has been making the rounds in not only mobile app interfaces but web site designs as well. And now, the Android Market.

10 things you should know about HTML5 | TechRepublic

Friday, July 29, 2011

HTML5 Drag and Drop Now Available in Microsoft Windows IE10 Platform Preview 2
http://bit.ly/mZcHri/

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

mozlabs: We're hitting ASSEMBLY next week with x3 HTML5 sessions led by @mrdoob @quitenice @robhawkes http://t.co/5gwQurY html5 demoparty

Original Tweet: http://ping.fm/SNSUZ

Sent via TweetDeck (www.tweetdeck.com)

Friday, July 22, 2011

annoying that the sd card is inaccessible on my Android phone when connected to a computer, wasn't a problem with winmo

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

TypeDNA

TypeDNA is a great font-manager for Adobe Suite - uses Adobe Air, so it's cross-platform.

http://www.typedna.com/