Mice sleep a lot so they don't move much because they are sleeping. If they are always huddled somewhere in the cage, like a house, then taking away the house would make them not hide in there. If it is colder, you mouse will move more.
I would restart the computer with a cold reboot.
Restarting
system hang
if they are not moving, responding or you know........ BREATHING!!
There are several mouse techniques. When moving the mouse do not rest the wrist or forearms. Do not grip the mouse tightly and use the shoulder to move the mouse. Click the mouse buttons softly and do not raise pinky finger when moving or clicking the mouse.
maybe because the thing you have got loaded is not not responding therefore the mouse will not move there
yes
Optical MouseAll mice have moving parts. There is no such thing as a computer mouse not having moving parts. And before you pop off (or mouth off or whatever you want to call it), the "buttons" that you use to "click" an icon or link and the scroll wheel of the mouse are moving parts. As a matter of fact, the entire mouse is a moving part. Unless it is a trackball mouse, in which case only the trackball and the buttons are the only moving parts.
clean the mouse :(
On level 9, you have to wait for the penguin to "think of the key" by not moving the mouse at all. Once he thinks of it, put your mouse where the key is. It will disappear, but if you wait again, it will come back and you can click on it *without moving the mouse.*
They get dirty, they are not as accurate as an optical mouse, and like anything with a moving part they will wear out.
That process is called the dragging process of a mouse
It involves moving the cursor over an object, selecting it, and moving it to a new location. If you are using a mouse, you can drag and drop an object by clicking the mouse button to select an object, then moving the mouse while keeping the mouse button pushed down. This is called "dragging" the object. Once you have moved the object where you want to place it, you can lift up the mouse button to "drop" the object in the new location.
It involves moving the cursor over an object, selecting it, and moving it to a new location. If you are using a mouse, you can drag and drop an object by clicking the mouse button to select an object, then moving the mouse while keeping the mouse button pushed down. This is called "dragging" the object. Once you have moved the object where you want to place it, you can lift up the mouse button to "drop" the object in the new location.