Difference between revisions of "Logitech MX Air"

From LinuxMCE
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Category: Hardware]]
 
[[Category: Hardware]]
 
[[Category: Input]]
 
[[Category: Input]]
 +
[[Category: Tutorials]]
  
 
The Logitech MX Air might be a nice looking alternative to the Gyration Go Cordless Air Optical mouse.
 
The Logitech MX Air might be a nice looking alternative to the Gyration Go Cordless Air Optical mouse.
 
Linux drivers for the MX Air can be found here: http://www.hidpoint.com/
 
Linux drivers for the MX Air can be found here: http://www.hidpoint.com/
 +
 +
Edit:
 +
 +
I have this mouse working with LinuxMCE 7.10 RC2. Standard only 5 buttons were recognised. I could not get the above hidpoint driver / software working. It kept crashing. After a bit research installed BTNX software.
 +
 +
http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/
 +
 +
On the [[http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=455656| Ubuntu forum]] there is a good installation manual for the Ubuntu versions. As suggested I used the compile from source version. For the case the forum post might disapear I copy the procedure onto this page:
 +
 +
==Install with compile from source==
 +
 +
1. Get all the necessary dependencies. btnx-config needs libgtk2.0 and libgtk2.0-dev (version 2.10.11 or newer), libglade and libglade-dev (version 2.6.0 or newer), pkg-config (0.21 or newer), and build-essential. btnx needs build-essential and libdaemon.
 +
Code:
 +
sudo apt-get install build-essential libgtk2.0-0 libgtk2.0-dev libglade2-0 libglade2-dev pkg-config libdaemon0 libdaemon-dev
 +
2. Install btnx
 +
Code:
 +
$ wget http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/btnx-0.4.11.tar.gz
 +
$ tar -xvvf btnx-0.4.11.tar.gz
 +
$ cd btnx-0.4.11
 +
$ ./configure
 +
$ make
 +
$ sudo make install
 +
3. Install btnx-config.
 +
Code:
 +
$ wget http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/btnx-config-0.4.9.tar.gz
 +
$ tar -xvvf btnx-config-0.4.9.tar.gz
 +
$ cd btnx-config-0.4.9
 +
$ ./configure
 +
$ make
 +
$ sudo make install
 +
If you encountered an error, there is probably a dependency problem.
 +
 +
4. You should have gotten a menu item. In GNOME, Applications->System tools->btnx. In KDE, System->btnx. Press it to launch btnx-config.
 +
 +
==Configuration of BTNX:==
 +
 +
You can find all the necessary information for configuring your mouse with btnx-config in the [[http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/man|btnx manual]].
 +
 +
During the configuration you can program the additional button to simulate the F6, F7 and F8 keys. Be sure that you enable the button at the top of the button configuration page.
 +
 +
==You can uninstall BTNX with the following procedure:==
 +
 +
To uninstall btnx and btnx-config, run
 +
Code:
 +
$ sudo make uninstall
 +
in the same directory as where you ran the "sudo make install" command for both programs.
 +
 +
== Manual:==
 +
 +
You can find the [[http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/man/| manual]] for BTNX on the website of the guy who made it.

Revision as of 12:20, 1 February 2009


The Logitech MX Air might be a nice looking alternative to the Gyration Go Cordless Air Optical mouse. Linux drivers for the MX Air can be found here: http://www.hidpoint.com/

Edit:

I have this mouse working with LinuxMCE 7.10 RC2. Standard only 5 buttons were recognised. I could not get the above hidpoint driver / software working. It kept crashing. After a bit research installed BTNX software.

http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/

On the [Ubuntu forum] there is a good installation manual for the Ubuntu versions. As suggested I used the compile from source version. For the case the forum post might disapear I copy the procedure onto this page:

Install with compile from source

1. Get all the necessary dependencies. btnx-config needs libgtk2.0 and libgtk2.0-dev (version 2.10.11 or newer), libglade and libglade-dev (version 2.6.0 or newer), pkg-config (0.21 or newer), and build-essential. btnx needs build-essential and libdaemon. Code: sudo apt-get install build-essential libgtk2.0-0 libgtk2.0-dev libglade2-0 libglade2-dev pkg-config libdaemon0 libdaemon-dev 2. Install btnx Code:

$ wget http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/btnx-0.4.11.tar.gz
$ tar -xvvf btnx-0.4.11.tar.gz
$ cd btnx-0.4.11
$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install

3. Install btnx-config. Code:

$ wget http://www.ollisalonen.com/btnx/btnx-config-0.4.9.tar.gz
$ tar -xvvf btnx-config-0.4.9.tar.gz
$ cd btnx-config-0.4.9
$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install

If you encountered an error, there is probably a dependency problem.

4. You should have gotten a menu item. In GNOME, Applications->System tools->btnx. In KDE, System->btnx. Press it to launch btnx-config.

Configuration of BTNX:

You can find all the necessary information for configuring your mouse with btnx-config in the [manual].

During the configuration you can program the additional button to simulate the F6, F7 and F8 keys. Be sure that you enable the button at the top of the button configuration page.

You can uninstall BTNX with the following procedure:

To uninstall btnx and btnx-config, run Code:

$ sudo make uninstall

in the same directory as where you ran the "sudo make install" command for both programs.

Manual:

You can find the [manual] for BTNX on the website of the guy who made it.