IT tutorials
 
Windows
 

Windows 8 : Touch and Gestures - Touch Mice

- Free product key for windows 10
- Free Product Key for Microsoft office 365
- Malwarebytes Premium 3.7.1 Serial Keys (LifeTime) 2019
2/6/2013 11:41:04 AM

To really appreciate the Windows 8 touch interface, you need input devices that allow you to perform gestures. For a phone or a tablet, the input device is the screen. Touch monitors already exist, and Windows 8 will undoubtedly make them more popular. It is also highly likely that we will see a new generation of touchpads in the form of graphics tablets, which have been popular with engineers and digital artists for years now.

To lead the way, Microsoft is releasing a new generation of touch mice and touch keyboards. The company has three different models of touch mice that have built-in drivers in Windows 8:

• Microsoft Touch Mouse

• Microsoft Explorer Mouse, which is similar in function to the Touch Mouse

• Microsoft Wedge Mouse, which is small and looks a lot like a doorstop

A new set of gestures has been developed that emphasizes the tile-based interface’s qualities and removes some of the touch gestures that were aimed at controlling Desktop features in Windows 7.

An application called Device Center allows you to customize a touch mouse . In Device Center, you can control the rate of movement, turn the thumb gesture on or off, and assign app-specific actions.

Image

Touch gestures with basic settings

To shift content with one-finger gestures

• Slide your finger in any direction to scroll your screen in that direction.

• Flick your finger to scroll quickly in the direction of the flick.

• Move your thumb right or left to move forward or backward, respectively, through open applications (this is the same as pressing Alt+Image and Alt+Shift+Image).

To manage applications with two-finger gestures

• Swipe two fingers to the right to toggle between open applications, as you would do by pressing Image+Tab.

• Swipe two fingers to the left to open the Charms bar, which is the equivalent of pressing Image+C.

• Swipe two fingers upward to perform an application-specific action, such as opening a browser to show the address bar or toggling a window state from full to restore.

To perform a zoom with three-finger gestures on a touch mouse

• To zoom in, slide three fingers forward on the top of the mouse.

• To zoom out, slide three fingers backward on the top of the mouse.

Since Windows users will expect third-party mice to perform the same gestures, you should expect to see these touch semantics widely used in the industry.

To modify a touch mouse’s gestures

1. Press Image+Q to open Search.

2. Enter Device Center in the Search field, then tap or click the Microsoft Device Center icon.

3. In the Device Center screen, tap or click the Touch Gestures link.

4. Modify the basic settings as desired, altering or disabling any one-, two-, or three-finger gestures .

5. Tap or click the app-specific settings link to assign a mouse button or gesture to a program .

Image

You can assign buttons and gestures to specific applications.


Tip

Device Center provides access to the Healthy Computing Guide, which contains tips on how to work more comfortably with your computer.


 
Others
 
- Windows 8 : Touch and Gestures - Touch Keyboards
- Using Windows 7 Hardware Troubleshooting Tools : Troubleshooting RAM with Windows Memory Diagnostic
- Using Windows 7 Hardware Troubleshooting Tools : Troubleshooting with Event Viewer, Troubleshooting Startup Failures with Startup Repair
- Windows 8 : Touch and Gestures - Edge Gestures
- Windows 8 : Touch and Gestures - Corner Hotspots
- Windows Home Server 2011 : Connecting via the Internet (part 3) - Working with Windows Home Server Shares in the Web Browser
- Windows Home Server 2011 : Connecting via the Internet (part 2) - Connecting with a Domain Name Maintained by Windows Home Server
- Windows Home Server 2011 : Connecting via the Internet (part 1) - Connecting with Your Router’s IP Address
- Windows Home Server 2011 : Connecting via Windows Home Server Remote Web Access
- Windows 8 : Touch and Gestures - Touch Navigation
 
 
Top 10
 
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Structure to Your Diagrams - Finding containers and lists in Visio (part 2) - Wireframes,Legends
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Structure to Your Diagrams - Finding containers and lists in Visio (part 1) - Swimlanes
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Structure to Your Diagrams - Formatting and sizing lists
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Structure to Your Diagrams - Adding shapes to lists
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Structure to Your Diagrams - Sizing containers
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Control Properties and Why to Use Them (part 3) - The Other Properties of a Control
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Control Properties and Why to Use Them (part 2) - The Data Properties of a Control
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Control Properties and Why to Use Them (part 1) - The Format Properties of a Control
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Form Properties and Why Should You Use Them - Working with the Properties Window
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Using the Organization Chart Wizard with new data
Technology FAQ
- Is possible to just to use a wireless router to extend wireless access to wireless access points?
- Ruby - Insert Struct to MySql
- how to find my Symantec pcAnywhere serial number
- About direct X / Open GL issue
- How to determine eclipse version?
- What SAN cert Exchange 2010 for UM, OA?
- How do I populate a SQL Express table from Excel file?
- code for express check out with Paypal.
- Problem with Templated User Control
- ShellExecute SW_HIDE
programming4us programming4us