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Halp! Artificial resuscitation required on a mouse

PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 11:53 am
by Staiduk
'Lo!

Yeesh; you don't realize how dependant you are on these little wireless rodents until they're gone. My mouse is dead; and I have no idea why. It seems to have something to do with its hookup, but I'm not sure.

OK; my computer is probably the ugliest on Earth. It's old and worn out, but I'm quite attached to it - it's done sterling service since I built it around 3 years ago. At least. The sides of the case are held on with duct-tape, you get the idea.

Well lately, I've been having trouble starting it - the power switch on the front of the case was sticking and WD-40 wasn't helping. So I took the front face off, disconnected the button, and used it that way. Works great. Until this morning, when I went to turn it on, had a momentary cat-induced lack of stability and wound up crashing to the floor. With the power button still in my hand. Oops.

So after picking the cat out of the drapes a claw at a time, I opened the computer and tried to hook the button back up again. It took a little doing - I'd forgotten where the power jacks went etc. but after a few minutes of trial and error found the right spot, so at least the button works, even if the little LED's don't.

But now my mouse doesn't work. I've tried shutting down and replugging it in several times and it says it's working in the Control Panel, but nada. I tried plugging it into a different USB port and I get the 'bloop' sound when it disconnects and the 'blooip' sound when it reconnects, but the damn thing just doesn't operate. (It's a centrios wireless. Cheap, but works well.)

I'm unwilling to buy a new one until all repair possibilities have been exhausted (and believe me, it's pretty exhausting tabbing around the Internet, let me tell you!)

Any troubleshooting ideas to help get my mouse back on line?

Thanx!

Re: Halp! Artificial resuscitation required on a mouse

PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 12:05 pm
by vgbaron
I assume the mouse was connected when the system took it's trip. Very possible the cord got pulled hard enough to break one of the wires in the cable.

If it's battery powerd - reseat the batteries.

Reconnect the mouse to the transmitter. Usually a connect button on both

Try the mouse in another system

Good luck

Re: Halp! Artificial resuscitation required on a mouse

PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 12:26 pm
by Staiduk
Heh heh - thanks, vgbaron. :)

It's working again. I've either got to stop asking for help on these forums, or my compuiter just like annoying the hell out of me because every time I post a help question, I wind up fixing the thing within five minutes.

(Actually, stepping away and writing down the problem is] an extremely useful troubleshooting tactic; one I use a lot in my trade. It helps focus the mind around the problem.)

However; the fix here was a little more simple: I dropped the mouse off the desk. It bounced, I swore, then picked it up and the cursor moved. Old mouse - twitchy connection. Go figure. :-)

Thanks for the help though; great ideas for future issues - and with this piece of crap garbage; they're likely to be common. ;-)

Cheers!

Re: Halp! Artificial resuscitation required on a mouse

PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 12:48 pm
by MWISimmer
Mice are so cheap. you can pick up an old second user corded mouse here in the UK for under a pound, I'm sure it's the same across the pond.
I have a box full of old suff like that, for just that type of problem.