T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2170.1 | Ctrl-F3 toggles mouse-less mode | RAB::REILLY | Come see the violence inherent in the system! | Tue Jan 30 1990 16:20 | 6 |
| This is an indication that you're in mouse-less mode.
If you type Ctrl-F3 , this mode toggles on and off.
The Wait light is supposed to be the indicator of when you're in
mouseless mode.
Paul
|
2170.2 | CONTROL-F3 | STAR::MCLEMAN | Hey!!! This Stall is Taken!! | Tue Jan 30 1990 16:20 | 16 |
| Sigh....
I know this has been answered in this conference quite a number of times,
CONTROL-F3 will toggel the pseudo mouse mode. When you see the wait light
on, then hit control-F3 to put it back to normal.
Why does it come on? Some folks accidently hit it when toggling the
operator window. (CONTROL-F2)
I have marked this note with a KEYWORD so that it can be looked up in
future reference. The keyword in PSEUDO-MOUSE.
Jeff
(Beating the dead horse again)
|
2170.3 | | STAR::MCLEMAN | Hey!!! This Stall is Taken!! | Tue Jan 30 1990 16:21 | 3 |
| re: -1
ooops, notes collision. But it needed the keyword, anyway
|
2170.4 | I'll take your word for it, but... | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto at ABS/ZK, Spitbrook | Tue Jan 30 1990 18:49 | 7 |
| I can't be 100% sure that I have never hit Ctrl-F3 by mistake, but I
was caught in this situation once. Might have been T5.3-1 or V5.3,
but I don't remember exactly. You sure this is the only way to get
into this bind?
--Simon
|
2170.5 | Heavy sigh.... | GSRC::WEST | Variables don't, Constants aren't | Tue Jan 30 1990 20:44 | 23 |
|
I did a DIR/TITLE=ARROW and just under FIVE minutes I received a response.
I'm here in Colorado Springs, CO and five minutes really isn't that long.
Here is what I got...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DECWINDOWS
Created: 30-OCT-1989 11:10 2171 topics Updated: 30-JAN-1990 20:02
-< See 1639.0 for VMS V5.3 kit; 2043.0 for 5.4 IFT kit >-
Topic Author Date Repl Title
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
245 PSG::BUCHANAN 17-FEB-1989 4 Arrows conrol pointer...Why?
380 GLDOA::HACK 10-MAR-1989 5 Loss of arrow keys & locked
'wait' light.
1038 PAXTON::MOORE 29-JUN-1989 3 Where did my arrows go?
1767 TOWNS::SEPPI 20-NOV-1989 1 Lost arrow keys with DECW v2
upgrade.
1771 ELRIC::MARSHALL 20-NOV-1989 0 narrow file menus in VMS5.2
1879 RDF::RDF 10-DEC-1989 2 arrow keys now move mouse..
2056 BRSIS6::BUTTIENS 17-JAN-1990 12 Arrow keys make my pointer
move, not the cursor ...
|
2170.6 | | SITBUL::KLEINSORGE | BFM | Wed Jan 31 1990 00:17 | 10 |
|
Anyone ever consider the fact that the "wait" light isn't exactly
intuitive? Where does the user look? In the index under "Wait
Light"?
Since we're forced to live with this icon box, why not re-implement
this feature so that a new icon is created that says "In Mouse
Emulation Mode. Use CTRL-F3 to resume normal edit key mode".
|
2170.7 | | STAR::MCLEMAN | Hey!!! This Stall is Taken!! | Wed Jan 31 1990 07:38 | 5 |
| Since the driver is the one who intercepts the control-F3, it would have
to build a message to some client application (Window manager? Session
manager?) to have this accomplished. Actually after talking with Bill
Matthews, I like the idea of having to press CONTROL|SHIFT"|F3. THis will
make it harder to accidently go into brain-dead mouse mode.
|
2170.8 | Problem is worth fixing | FRAGLE::WIEGLEB | Once more into the fray... | Wed Jan 31 1990 10:34 | 22 |
| RE: .6, .7
Either of these solutions sound good. It should be much harder to get
into the "dead mouse" mode than it is, or there needs to be a fully
explanatory message when the mode changes. The current solution of
lighting the "wait" light is thoroughly inadequate. It tells the user
absolutely nothing. As a user who has experienced this problem and
has seen others run into it, I can state that the current scheme is
inadequate. Fortunately, since I follow this conference regularly I
was able to find the solution.
RE: .5 and prior
A "PSEUDO-MOUSE" keyword may help the developers find the other topics
in the conference on this problem to point out to users who have run
into the problem, but it won't help users find the notes. The keyword
doesn't describe the symptoms, it gives the name of the disease - not
too helpful if you want to find out what disease you've got. The
frequency with which the problem is reported should be a pretty good
indicator that the problem is worth fixing.
- Dave
|
2170.9 | Thanks | ARTFUL::SCOTT | Mike 'The Whip' | Wed Jan 31 1990 16:31 | 6 |
|
Thanks for the help. My problem is that I never played with the cursor keys for
long enough to notice the pointer move.
I vote for the <CTRL>Shift-F3 solution. It should be much harder to get into
this predicament than it is.
|
2170.10 | Inform the public of the death | GYPSC::BINGER | beethoven was dutch | Thu Feb 01 1990 09:45 | 11 |
| I do not support the make it harder solution. Life is hard enough
without introduced difficulty. The user should be informed that his
mouse is dead. Why should the arrow keys be used. ?? I have a
customer who believes that his people on the shop floor are not
able to handle a mouse. He believes also that the rat will get dust in
its entrails and and wishes to have a backup system. He demanded that
the pointer should be moveable by other means. I then plotted the
demise of the mouse and as a by product I saved myself having to reboot
the system whenever that WAIT light went on.
Rgds,
|
2170.11 | How difficult is it REALLY? :-) | VMSDEV::BALLOU | It's not slow, it's careful! | Thu Feb 01 1990 12:03 | 23 |
| AAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
(There, now I feel *much* better :-)
I'm very tempted to say "give me a break!" We really are not talking
about that great a level of difficulty in pressing the Control key and
the Shift key simultaneously. Admittedly, I am a touch typist (I
learned way back when on one of those old Royal manual typewriters that
were guaranteed to cause a hernia if you tried to lift it [now THAT
machine was a masterpiece of engineering, IMNSHO] :-) However, I just
really have a hard time believing that we will be driving anyone to the
brink of suicide owing to the added difficulty of depressing three keys
instead of two. :-) :-) :-)
Really, how often is this meta-feature used? How often is it
accidentally tripped over? Count the number of notes that appear in
this very conference from people who I would wager are competent to
handle a mouse :-)
Of course, if I had my way, I would get rid of Control-F2 as well as
Control-F3...
- Ken
|
2170.12 | | SITBUL::KLEINSORGE | BFM | Thu Feb 01 1990 13:42 | 14 |
|
> Really, how often is this meta-feature used? How often is it
> accidentally tripped over? Count the number of notes that appear in
> this very conference from people who I would wager are competent to
> handle a mouse :-)
>
> Of course, if I had my way, I would get rid of Control-F2 as well as
> Control-F3...
It's easier to determine that there is a problem - because it generates
noise - than it is to count the number of customers using it. And some
individual customers count more than others :-)
|
2170.13 | How about this? | DECWIN::ROSENBLUM | | Thu Feb 01 1990 14:29 | 7 |
| how about if the cursor mask inverts every so often while you are in this mode
This will give you some visual indication that you can hardly miss if you are
in this mode, we should make sure that it doesn't invert too fast or it will
be hard to position.
Mike
|
2170.14 | | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Feb 01 1990 14:59 | 19 |
| Re: .13
>how about if the cursor mask inverts every so often while you are in this mode
>
>This will give you some visual indication that you can hardly miss if you are
>in this mode, we should make sure that it doesn't invert too fast or it will
>be hard to position.
So instead of people saying "my arrow keys don't work and the Wait light
is on" they'll say "my arrow keys don't work, the Wait light is on, and
every few seconds my cursor gets inverted".
I think it would be preferable to display a message like "Entering pseudo
mouse mode. Press CTRL-F3 to return to normal mouse mode." Since CTRL-F3
is implemented in the server, though, it may not be easy to display such
a message. We should at least make it harder to activate the mode accidently;
CTRL-F3 is too close to CTRL-F2.
-- Bob
|
2170.15 | | FORTY2::SHIPMAN | | Fri Feb 02 1990 06:31 | 6 |
| If it's hard to display the mode message from the server, could you display it
in the operator window instead of the normal display? I guess if this were
done the arrow-mode switch would certainly have to be moved away from the
operator window key...
Nick
|
2170.16 | Successful SW | GYPSC::BINGER | beethoven was dutch | Fri Feb 02 1990 08:08 | 41 |
| >Note 2170.11 An Oldy-But-Goody--The "Wait" Light Problem 11 of 14
> -< How difficult is it REALLY? :-) >-
>
> AAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
>
> (There, now I feel *much* better :-)
>
Hi Ken,
>
Noting often does not give one the necessary time or space to write
a problem thouroughly. I apologise.
My point is that the developers of this wonderful SW... (sincere
complement) are so deep into it that they are unable to see a
problem.
The sooner that someone admits that to drastically change someones
environment and only to shine a little green light that does not
clearly indicate the state is a bug, then quicker this discussion
will end.
There are 3 solutions to this problem.
1. The wait light shoud be labelled "no Mouse", "Keypad
Cursur control"... etc
2. The SW should be changed to produce an icon or some
visible on screen message indicating the change of
state.
And incidentally in VMS 5.3 the problem is also fixed in that when
you hit Ctrl F3. the 'rat (mouse) does not lose control. The keypad
shares control with it. It is not fixed in that the green light
tells you to wait. (for what)
The successful SW is SW that which is intuitive. The sooner that
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>^~~~~~~~~~<
developers of SW realise that the normal user of SW does not have
time to be a professional engineer and read reams of computer
documentation the more of the stuff that we will move. (SELL)
Rgds,
|
2170.17 | Yes, intuitive behavior should be the goal | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Feb 02 1990 10:54 | 27 |
| Re: .16
> There are 3 solutions to this problem.
> 1. The wait light shoud be labelled "no Mouse", "Keypad
> Cursur control"... etc
This isn't a long term solution because future keyboards won't have a
wait light. It also won't help people who already have workstations with
LK201s, unless we go to the expense of shipping them special label strips.
Even in the "medium term" of new systems shipped with the LK201, it would
cost real money to have to put different labels on workstation LK201s than
on terminal LK201s, although this cost may not be significant. Fundamentally
I agree with you that a light that means "your arrow keys now move the
mouse" should not be labelled "Wait".
> 2. The SW should be changed to produce an icon or some
> visible on screen message indicating the change of
> state.
Yes. This is the justifaction for there being no Wait light in the LK201
replacememnt: software or firmware is supposed to put up a visual indication
on the screen. The main problem seems to be that for technical reasons it's
hard for the server to put up this message. I'm not sure that an icon would
be intuitive enough, but at least it would encourage the user to look in the
manual to find out what the icon meant.
-- Bob
|
2170.18 | Rip it out? | DECWIN::KLEIN | | Fri Feb 02 1990 11:46 | 24 |
| >> There are 3 solutions to this problem.
(: I think we have heard a lot more than 3 possibilities. :)
Here's another: Get rid of the feature altogether.
Ironically, one of the big deals about the MOTIF toolkit is that it is fully
functional without a mouse. The arrow keys are interpreted by
client-side software to "emulate" the mouse in a *usable* way. For example,
the arrow keys move focus from one pushbutton to another in a single
keystroke rather than pixel-by-pixel.
Given that using a paint program, etc, is still practically impossible to use
without a *real* mouse, the pseudo-mouse never was a real solution.
Applications that are toolkit-based and don't involve intensive
graphical input will all eventually work in a mouse-less mode.
Just rip the code out and forget that it ever existed.
I'll bet you can't show me two customers who really depend on it, anyway.
And MOTIF will make the mouse even less "critical".
JMHO
-steve-
|
2170.19 | | SITBUL::KLEINSORGE | BFM | Fri Feb 02 1990 14:30 | 9 |
|
You know I bet a good number of us pontificating about this haven't a
clue what customers use these machines for. You'd think to listen to
us that all they do is menu's and motif is going to fix that. Quite
a few engineers I know can't even *name* two of thier customers let
alone find two that use a feature. They'll find *you* when you remove
something they need: 1-800-DIGITAL
_Fred
|
2170.20 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri Feb 02 1990 18:20 | 14 |
| This all reminds me of the argument surrounding removing another software
perversion: the fact that VMS's SET UIC command also changed your default
directory. After much wailing and gnashing of teeth and worrying about
customers who may be depending on this misfeature, it finally was removed.
Guess what? No great hue and cry. In fact, as far as I know, there was not
one complaint.
If we really want to be overcautious about the whole thing, then leave the
code in place, but ship with the feature disabled by default. Use some sort of
server startup option or SYSGEN parameter or something like that so that if
anybody really does want the thing, they can turn it on. The important thing
is that there be no way to get into this mode by default.
--PSW
|
2170.21 | The mouse has not taken over | GYPSC::BINGER | Explode an acronym | Mon Feb 05 1990 04:08 | 24 |
| >
>(: I think we have heard a lot more than 3 possibilities. :)
>
>Here's another: Get rid of the feature altogether.
>
Hello Mr. Moderator,
Can we confirm that this is not serious "discussion" to remove the
feature.
>
>Just rip the code out and forget that it ever existed.
>I'll bet you can't show me two customers who really depend on it, anyway.
>And MOTIF will make the mouse even less "critical".
>
I can show you one. He does not like mice and one question was "can
I make the aplication work without a mouse?". My answer was yes you
can without any extra programming or tweaking. The mouse is there
to enhance performance. Should it go wrong there is an quick
fallback. In a short while the mouse will be an accepted piece
of HW. There are still people out there who do not believe in them.
>
>-steve-
>
|
2170.22 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Mon Feb 05 1990 15:22 | 8 |
| RE: .21
Does the revenue we get from your one customer compensate for the expense of
processing SPRs and service calls from the countless other customers who trip
over this feature? I doubt it. Especially since by your own admission we're
only talking about "a short while" before mice are universally accepted.
--PSW
|
2170.23 | Talk the same language as money does | GYPSC::BINGER | Explode an acronym | Tue Feb 06 1990 04:45 | 30 |
| >Does the revenue we get from your one customer compensate for the expense of
>processing SPRs and service calls from the countless other customers who trip
>over this feature? I doubt it. Especially since by your own admission we're
>only talking about "a short while" before mice are universally accepted.
Brief answer..... YES
>--PSW
The following is for the eyes of Mr PSW.
>
To explain a little.. When we make a mistake the easiest way out is to
admit it and correct as quickly as possible. This wait light "feature" is a
mistake. There is no other word for it. We said 'wait' when we meant to say
was 'your mouse is dead' etc... The wait light is sitting there in between
'meaningful' text like like 'hold screen, insert/overstrike etc...
As soon as you try to justify an error, especially on the grounds that the
man who pays your salary is too stupid to understand what you meant. The
ground beneath your feet begins to fall away. AND the magnitude of the
error grows.
Expressions like "go away and read the manual" no longer sells computer
software. There are plenty of people out there who are willing to stab at
SW which does not require manual reading. And secondly they will then
listen to the user after the SW author has failed to make himself clear.
If one looks from the terminal occasionally there is a world out there of
people who expect us to talk their language.
Rgds.
|
2170.24 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Feb 06 1990 18:27 | 19 |
| RE: .23
You didn't understand a single word of my previous reply, did you? I'll
try to state it more plainly.
The CTRL-F3 mode that allows the arrow keys to be used to move the pointer is a
mistake. It should be removed from the code. Lighting up the "wait" light to
indicate that this feature is in effect similarly should be removed.
So there is one potential customer out there who actually wants to use the
arrow keys in place of the mouse. Too bad for him. When you factor in the
expense of answering SPRs and service calls from other customers who
accidentally activate the arrow-key-as-mouse feature, we make more money by
removing the feature (and the expense of all those service calls) and losing
that one customer's sale than if we keep the sale and incur the service expense
and ill-will of those other customers.
--PSW
|
2170.25 | This isn't a simple yes/no situation since it now exists, but clearly something should be done | CVG::PETTENGILL | mulp | Tue Feb 06 1990 19:57 | 31 |
| This reminds me of the discussions about XON/XOF aka ^S/^Q and ESC, which
is also in the context of keyboards and strong resistance to accepting evolution
by very small minorities. While the current keyboard pointer feature currently
causes consternation and much discussion at all too frequent intervals, removing
this feature would simply change the discussion to `why don't we support this
feature'.
The real problem is that we don't have a keyboard with integral pointer
capability, either in the form of a track ball or a matrix of arrows and buttons.
So, there are some who are willing to settle for the simulation of the latter
with the editing keypad.
The requirement is to make the current keyboard pointer capability more of a
explicitly selectable feature, while retaining is capability.
Based on comments from Jim Gettys in the context of bitpad support, I suggest
that the solution is to provide the current kind of support as a server
extension, add the necessary Xlib support to use it, and add the customization
options to the session manager to allow this to be customized by each user.
This should be done in conjunction making the operator window a user option as
well. I'm sure that there are a number of confused users who can't understand
why every once in a while, there display gets screwed up and the mouse no longer
seems to track correctly.
And in fact, I suspect that the reason that people run in the keyboard mouse
feature is that something comes up in the operator window and someone tells them
that the way you get it back to normal is to "push control or shift plus one
of the function keys - keep trying until it returns to normal".
Entered in QAR V2.4, database DECWINDOWS-IFT as 3972
|
2170.26 | Don't cut off nose to spite face | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Feb 06 1990 21:55 | 12 |
| Completely eliminating the feature strikes me as throwing out the baby
with the bathwater. I haven't done this recently, so maybe the need is
gone, but I recall in UIS days switching to keyboard mouse in a
graphics program to ensure that the line I was drawing didn't waver
from vertical. The arrow keys allow this with absolute certainty; my
hands on a mouse aren't good enough. (Graphics programs which only
provide one line drawing mode are the problem.)
The problem isn't the feature; it's the ease with which the feature can
be accidentally invoked, and the obscurity with which the mode is
displayed. Making it harder to invoke - via Ctrl-Shift-F3 - strikes me
as an adequate solution, and far better than throwing it out entirely.
|
2170.27 | Some complaints are written on CHECQUEs | GYPSC::BINGER | Explode an acronym | Wed Feb 07 1990 08:28 | 15 |
| >
Re .24,
I again aplolgise if you are the person who designed this feature.
Perhaps I have been a little direct with the criticism. It then
appears that I am treading a little heavily.
When you have cooled off I think that you will see that if we
follow your logic of removing all coding that WE fail to document
adequately we will end up with very thin systems.
On to your point of 'the feature that we removed that did
not bring any customer complaint'. You must remember that many
customer complaints are written in their checque books. NOT in the
notesfiles. DIGITALS success is related to the richness of its
offering and the concern for the customer.
Rgds,
|
2170.28 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO3-4/W23 | Wed Feb 07 1990 09:45 | 38 |
| re .27: No, Paul did not design that "feature". We did in the server/hardware
group. We did not have the feature initially, although it had been in UIS.
We got many many complaints (not to mention CSSE's requirements). So we put it
in. The only place that this can be done efficiently is in the driver, so that
is where it went. Unfortunately, the driver is not in a position to put up
messages on the screen. The only method available to the driver to give ANY
kind of feedback is keyclick or the lights. (Maybe we should have the
keyboard go click-click-click when we are in kbmouse mode? :-)
So I would argue that the kb mouse does make SOME sense. As Paul Beck said,
it is nice when you want to draw perfectly horizontal or vertical lines. There
is the issue of a $50 dollar mouse making a $10K or more workstation unusable.
I think that former UISers like me initially liked being able to wheel the pointer
around without taking our hands off the kb. As the pointer use increases, and
especially with pulldown menus, that latter reason has become much less
important.
In any case, though, I strongly agree with the people who have said that mysterious
"features" annoy customers, and the FTFM does not cut it in today's world.
I think that the current kbmouse design has two basic flaws: (1) It is too
easy to get into. and (2) the feedback is insufficient.
We thought we had made it sufficiently hard, having to use both ctrl and F3, but now, it turns out that as modified function keys
are being used in more applications, it is more common to have your finger on
the control key. I have already explained that feedback on the mode is real
hard to do. One could, presumably, add extensions and stuff so that a client
somewhere could do a pop-up, but that seems excessively complicated and would
depend on a session manager that understood. Maybe a console message would be possible (I'm
not a driver person...)
It seems to me that the best all-round compromise is to make it much harder to
get into kbmouse mode. Maybe even CTRL/Shift/Alt F3? Maybe hitting this
combination three times in a row within 1 second? This would keep people
who did not know about it from getting into the mode. If you did know about it,
you could get into it. I would not object to an auto-cancel (with a mouse
movement) either.
Burns
|
2170.29 | Should life be harder or easier | GYPSC::BINGER | Explode an acronym | Wed Feb 07 1990 11:10 | 20 |
| > re .28
Hello Burns, my name is Stephen
I feel as if I am talking to someone who is on my side.
Dont whatever you do change it to ^shift+lock+tab. This is the sort
of thing that Sinclair ofered and we know what happened to them!!
This is also the kind of thing that happen when a book falls on the
keyboard. 8*) (and bounces).. 8*)
Leave the switch "Ctrl F3" as it is... please dont fix it it is not
broken. We should make everything easier to get rather than
"harder".
If mouse movement or clicking can switch it off then this is the
obvious and intuitive Solution. If the user is in the mode either
wilfully or accidentally then when he needs the mouse he has it.
Rgds,
Stephen
|
2170.30 | | SITBUL::KLEINSORGE | BFM | Wed Feb 07 1990 12:00 | 7 |
|
A message
"%DECW-I-MEMODE, Entering mouse emulation mode, press Ctrl-F3 to exit"
sent to OPCOM by the driver just might solve the general case...
|
2170.31 | | SMAUG::MENDEL | I don't want to burn in Paradise! | Wed Feb 07 1990 12:24 | 21 |
| >>> Completely eliminating the feature strikes me as throwing out the baby
>>> with the bathwater.
Totally!
>>> To ensure that the line I was drawing didn't waver from vertical.
Oh, that's good. That's very, very good. Why didn't I think of that?
Even better, you can also use keyboard-mode to move the pointer exactly
one pixel, something that always frustrates me in RAGS.
- - - - - -
Yet Another Hair-brained idea:
Could we sell one of those cheap keyboard function key label strips,
the ones that say "Hold Screen" and "Print Screen" instead of "F1"
and "F2", and have it say "Mouse Off" instead of "Wait". ???
Kevin
|
2170.32 | warts sometimes should be cut off | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Feb 07 1990 18:28 | 19 |
| RE: .27
Some customer complaints are not worth listening to.
Suppose, for example, that I insist I will not buy your workstation unless
there's a pile of fresh dung in the monitor cabinet, because I happen to like
the way that smells. Should DEC therefore ship all their monitors with dung
in them, because one crazy potential customer out there wants it that way?
Even if it means for every one customer we attract this way, we'll drive another
1000 away?
What I'm saying is that if you weigh the benefits of this so-called feature
against the problems that it causes, I think the best thing to do with it is to
remove it from the product.
I am not advocating making our systems feature-poor. I am advocating making
them MISfeature-poor.
--PSW
|
2170.33 | The mouse that ate the conference! | VINO::WITHROW | Mass. recall petitions available here! | Wed Feb 07 1990 18:38 | 7 |
| Actually, If I add all of the replies on this topic together, I'll bet
it would be a record!
I would like to see a serious reply the shows why having real mouse activity
automatically cancel F3 mode does not solve this problem! And this can
be done in the driver. And if you mouse has gone screwy, do as I suggest
in the previous thread: unplug it and get a new one...
|
2170.34 | Self-mouse, maybe... | ASD::DIGRAZIA | | Thu Feb 08 1990 09:36 | 10 |
|
re .33: I would like to see a serious reply the shows why having real
mouse activity automatically cancel F3 mode does not solve
this problem!
Is there some kind of mouse-control board in the monitor that can go
haywire and generate mouse apparitions, even after the mouse has been
flung to someone else's cube?
Regards, Robert
|
2170.35 | Equal Access | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Feb 08 1990 09:53 | 5 |
| Is there any requirements for equal access by handicapped users that supports
the need for the mouseless mode? I would think that users with limited fine
motor control would benefit from keyboard control of the pointer.
Wook
|
2170.36 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Belgium, man, Belgium. | Thu Feb 08 1990 17:02 | 4 |
| I don't think the current keyboard mouse would be useful to someone who
was so handicapped they couldn't use a mouse.
Jon
|
2170.37 | Use Science! That's what it is for. | HPSRAD::KOMAR | You can't fool Nature | Fri Feb 09 1990 10:11 | 37 |
|
I heard a talk by John Whiteside about Useability Engineering.
In the talk, he discussed some studies that were done to
measure the usability of certain systems (All-In-1 and UIS, as
I recall)
I understand that Mr. Whiteside is in charge of Useability
Engineering for DECWindows. What does his group have to say?
Have they been asked?
Since there is concern about what Customers might want,
should'nt a Marketing survey be performed?
Without that information, how about providing the ability for
users to choose. Isn't that the fundamental mode of operation
for DecWindows? (How many readers of this conference secretly
covet the "Let the User Decide" personal name?)
Provide flexibility and reasonable defaults. There exist
methods for determining what is reasonable.
OK?
Paul Komar
VAXCluster Design Validation.
P.S. Here are some more questions:
- Is what is "intuitive for you the same as what is intuitive for me?
- What about for U*ix users?
- What about for secretaries? (perhaps the hardest audience to
satisfy -- How many have time to
take training?)
Disclaimer: The above ideas only represent what I believe at
this time...
|
2170.38 | Case of "The mouse that sapped our brains" | AIRBAG::SWATKO | Electrons are cheap. Trees are not. | Fri Feb 09 1990 10:15 | 46 |
| People, people, PEOPLE. Get a grip! :-)
When you select "mouseless mode" (which should really be called
"arrow-mouse" mode) this does *NOT* shut off your mouse!!! Try it for
yourself. The arrow keys will move the pointer, but the mouse will STILL
move the pointer.
Therefore, the argument in .34
> Is there some kind of mouse-control board in the monitor that can go
> haywire and generate mouse apparitions, even after the mouse has been
> flung to someone else's cube?
doesn't make sense because CTRL-F3 mode doesn't shut off mouse input. If
you had a bad "mouse-control board", you'd be getting bogus mouse input and
there is not way to shut it off! Call field service and go home.
The solution suggested in .33 is right.
>I would like to see a serious reply the shows why having real mouse activity
>automatically cancel F3 mode does not solve this problem! And this can
>be done in the driver. And if you mouse has gone screwy, do as I suggest
>in the previous thread: unplug it and get a new one...
If:
1). If you want (as in actually consciously selected) CTRL-F3 mode, it can
be invoked with no added effort (no SHIFT-CTRL-META-squiggle-F3 needed to
invoke it). Unplug your mouse, flip it upside-down or just don't touch it
as long as you want to be in arrow-mouse mode.
2). If you turned it on by accident, chances are you'll move your mouse or
give some sort of mouse input which would cancel F3 mode. 95% of all users
who accidentally entered CTRL-F3 mode would be back out of it probably even
before they noticed they were in it.
3). If you had a bad mouse that generates noise, unplug it and do as #1.
4). If you have a bad "mouse-control board" (if there is such a thing),
you're sunk anyways. I've never seen this situation happen though.
Keep F3 mode easy to get into (ie. CTRL-F3), make it easy to get out of
(real mouse movement to cancel F3 mode), and document the hell out of it.
-Mike
|
2170.39 | Oh! I am feeling SOOO guilty! | VINO::WITHROW | Mass. recall petitions available here! | Fri Feb 09 1990 21:16 | 10 |
|
> 3). If you had a bad mouse that generates noise, unplug it and do as #1.
I insist that the documentation instruct you to `Swing the mouse around
your head three times by it's tail, release the tail, and shout ``Hughhh''.'
P.S: I didnt invent the .33 solution, I was echoing some much wiser and
more serious person from one of the other arrow key threads!
P.P.S.: Why do you ask if I am a cat lover?
|
2170.40 | my 2 cents | WAIT::DESAI | Jatin Desai | Mon Feb 12 1990 11:11 | 9 |
|
Can the server implement a 'blinking' mouse cursor ? This would atleast give
some feedback to the user that something has changed. Also, it makes it an
easy condition to describe on the phone or to look it up in the fine manual
under 'Blinking cursor'.
Just my 2 cents...
Jatin
|
2170.41 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO3-4/W23 | Mon Feb 12 1990 13:10 | 3 |
| Is a blinking cursor any better than a blinking wait light?
Burns
|
2170.42 | I'd say it's better | 31762::BNELSON | Caribbean Dreamin'.... | Mon Feb 12 1990 13:22 | 10 |
|
I almost never look at the lights on my keyboard. I'm not sure why I never
got in the habit, but even after all these years I still bite myself now and
again with the hold screen. ;-)
A blinking arrow is *much* more noticeable, I'd say.
Brian
|
2170.43 | not another blinking mouse | GYPSC::BINGER | Explode an acronym | Tue Feb 13 1990 03:33 | 9 |
| I thought that this was finished.
The mouse never loses control in 5.3. It should over ride and
switch off the Ctrl F3 any time it is touched.
the user should be informen in clear concise German on the opcom
screen of what has happened.
Rgd,
|
2170.44 | lets get real, a good solution has already been proposed | AIRBAG::SWATKO | Electrons are cheap. Trees are not. | Tue Feb 13 1990 11:48 | 15 |
| The blinking cursor idea is ***TERRIBLE***!!! F3 mode is supposed to be able
to be used as a substitute to the mouse, it's not some error contition! One
of the most useful reasons for using F3 mode is to very accurately position
the cursor. Try doing THAT while its BlInKiNg. Sure, it's more noticable,
but it also makes F3 mode unusable. That's like shooting yourself in the
foot.
C'mon folks, a real solution has already been proposed. If you're in F3
mode and you move the mouse, it cancels F3 mode. If its feedback you're
looking for, a blinking wait light might be more noticable than a steady
wait light and it wouldn't hinder the use of F3 mode. Not everyone runs
OPCOM and others disable the operator window so OPCOM messages aren't
enough.
-Mike
|
2170.45 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Feb 14 1990 14:20 | 13 |
| RE: .44
>If you're in F3
>mode and you move the mouse, it cancels F3 mode.
I'm not sure that will address the problem of people accidentally hitting
CTRL/F3 and then finding the arrow keys don't work. Now they'll find that
the arrow keys don't work for a while, and then just as mysteriously as they
stopped working, they start working again (of course, what really happened is
the user moved the mouse at some point in time). This could still be an SPR
generator.
--PSW
|
2170.46 | | KONING::KONING | NI1D @FN42eq | Wed Feb 14 1990 15:28 | 6 |
| In any case it doesn't work that way in V5.3. Moving the mouse always
moves the pointer, but ^F3 mode remains in effect if it was in effect.
Curiously enough, the Wait light is merely ON, not blinking...
paul
|
2170.47 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Feb 14 1990 15:52 | 5 |
| I just saw that the VT1000 has implemented pseudo-mouse mode. Unfortunately,
there is NO indication that this is on - the keyboard doesn't even have
a wait light! Sigh...
Steve
|
2170.48 | Experiments of a non-expert user | HANDVC::SIMONSZETO | Simon Szeto @HGO, Hongkong | Wed Feb 14 1990 22:13 | 11 |
| Despite what I said in .4, I now see that I must have hit Ctrl-F3
accidentally when going for Ctrl-F2, like Jeff said in .2.
I have not found any real use for this feature yet, although I did try
using it to position windows precisely on the edge of the screen. This
maneuver requires using the 'Find' key to hold MB1 down. ('Select' is
click on MB1. 'Insert Here' and 'Prev Screen' work similarly for MB2.
Is all this documented somewhere?)
--Simon
|
2170.49 | Documentation on Ctrl/F3 | COPCLU::SIIG | Great Dane at Large | Thu Feb 15 1990 03:43 | 7 |
| This brilliant feature is actually documented:
DECwindows V1.0 User's Guide p. 2.2
DECwindows V2.0 User's Guide 3.13
Regards,
Jesper
|
2170.50 | User's Guide? What User's Guide? :-) | HANDVC::SIMONSZETO | Simon Szeto @HGO, Hongkong | Thu Feb 15 1990 04:25 | 5 |
| Was that the UWS UG? In the VMS DECwindows User's Guide (VMS V5.3)
I found the documentation on pp. 3-26,3-27.
--Simon
|
2170.51 | VMS DECwindows User's Guide V5.2 = AA-MG18B-TE | COPCLU::SIIG | Great Dane at Large | Thu Feb 15 1990 06:43 | 5 |
| Bookreader doesn't tell me the pagenumbers.
Mayhaps pp. 3-26,3-27 = paragraph 3.13?
Jesper
|
2170.52 | | FLUME::dike | | Thu Feb 15 1990 07:48 | 5 |
| re .50
You won't find anything about this in the UWS docs. Fortunately UWS doesn't
have this feature.
Jeff
|
2170.53 | Let's be consistent here, do the same for ^f2 and ^f3 | CVG::PETTENGILL | mulp | Thu Feb 15 1990 20:53 | 12 |
|
If ctrl-f3 is a crock, then so is ctrl-f2, because it doens't do anything
useful either. On my system it just puts cross hatches on the top 2/3s
of the screen and disables the mouse and there is not hint as to how to
fix it. (Actually, its worse than that; something I did while seeing
what it does, caused DECW$SERVER to set its working set limit to the
minimum so all it did was pagefault until I restarted the server..)
I still think that they should be setup options because I have actually
put the keyboard mouse to good use and I assume that some people find
the weird screen mode useful for something, but I have no idea what it is.
|
2170.54 | Keep it : but improve! | MEIS::FONSECA | I heard it through the Grapevine... | Fri Feb 16 1990 15:54 | 15 |
| Another vote to keep the feature, just change the way it is
activated. Taking a clue from the way the Amiga reboots,
how about replacing Ctrl/F3 with Shift/Shift/F3 (holding both
shift keys down at the same time...) They ARE treated as two
seperate keys right?
Of course it requires two appendages, or an amazing one-handed
grip...
Of course deactivation on mouse-movement..
RE:-1 So the upper row of keys corresponds to mouse button hold-down! I
always wondered.
-Dave
|
2170.55 | | STAR::MCLEMAN | Jeff McLeman, VMS Development | Fri Feb 16 1990 16:36 | 1 |
| On the LK201, both SHIFT keys are the same scan code.
|
2170.56 | NO MULTIHAND SEQUENCES!!!!! | VINO::WITHROW | Mass. recall petitions available here! | Fri Feb 16 1990 18:48 | 19 |
| RE .-2: ``of course it requires two appendages''
I am surprised that, since you recognize that your suggestion requires
``two appendages'', you even made such a suggestion. I have a
neighbor in the software business who has only one arm. She manages
most control sequences and capital leters fine, and is a rapid typist.
But to boot her PC requires her to resort to the (in my opinion) degrading
expedient of using a pencil with her mouth (You know: CTRL-ALT-DEL). I
get quite annoyed when I encounter SUGGESTIONS of gratuitous multhanded
sequences to do ANYTHING, and positively angry when someone actually
IMPLEMENTS one.
In this case the CTRL-F3 sequence is one handed as it should be. For
those who feel that it is too easy to hit when going for (say) CTRL-F2
do not suggest a multihand seqence, simply suggest moving the function
to CTRL-F4. This will place a buffer space between the two keys
reducing miskeying to almost nil, and still preserve the one-handedness
of the operation.
|
2170.57 | CTRL-F4 is already used for something else (at least on terminals) | HANNAH::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Feb 19 1990 11:25 | 20 |
| Re: .56
>In this case the CTRL-F3 sequence is one handed as it should be. For
>those who feel that it is too easy to hit when going for (say) CTRL-F2
>do not suggest a multihand seqence, simply suggest moving the function
>to CTRL-F4. This will place a buffer space between the two keys
>reducing miskeying to almost nil, and still preserve the one-handedness
>of the operation.
This sounds like a good idea (although I still think there needs to be better
feedback that the workstation has entered a new mode), but I wonder if there
could be a potential conflict with the VT330/VT340's use of CTRL-F4 to control
split screen windowing. It would be better if there were a standard key
sequence to go into arrow key mouse mode that would work regardless of whether
you were on a terminal or a workstation. (Of course, currently the mouse is
not critical for operating the terminal, so there is no arrow key mouse mode
on the VT330/VT340. I'm thinking of a future terminal that might use CTRL-F4
for split screening but would also have a need for an arrow key mouse mode).
-- Bob
|