Check your mouse cord to see if it's plugged in all the way. If it's of PS/2 type, the little needles may need to be straightened if you plugged it in too excitedly a few times. Some needle-nose pliers and some TLC should do the trick. Also, if you plug in a PS/2 mouse while the computer's on, you'll need to restart in order for it to work. If it's USB, make sure there's no junk in either the plug or the connector and try again. There may be a problem with that USB port. Try another one. Another thing to do is clean the mouse. If it's an optical (laser) mouse, make sure there's no hair on the lens. Use a dry, clean, soft, lint-free cloth, just in case. If it's a mouse with the traditional ball, take the ball out and clean the little rollers with an (unused) ear cleaner and some cleaning solution. Still have problems? Make sure the cord isn't frayed or broken anywhere. If it is, or if nothing else works, throw it out and buy a new mouse! If you just can't live without your specific beloved mouse and don't want to buy another one, see if you can find a loophole in the manufacturer's warranty. Otherwise, you're out of luck! P.S. If you ever upgrade to another mouse for no real reason, don't throw the old, working mouse away. Instead, keep a supply in your basement or somewhere for when calamities such as this one strike.
Apply some astro-glide and pull on the cord.
It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.It will move the cursor up your page a number of rows.
you just go into settings on the windows icon
You can move the cursor up and down by using the arrow keys on your keyboard. Press the up arrow key to move the cursor upwards and the down arrow key to move the cursor downwards.
Start, control panel, mopuse and from there :)
Well on Windows, press the 'Start' button and then 'Control Panel.' Then press the icon labelled 'Mouse' and go onto the tab 'Cursor' you can then go onto a screen and scroll through cursors. You can add a new cursor by getting a cursor, saving it to the desktop and going onto 'Browse' on the cursor menu, then 'Desktop' and then you can select the cursor you like.
To make your cursor turn into a vertical line (also known as an I-beam cursor) in a text box, simply place your mouse pointer over the text box where you want to type. The cursor will change automatically to the I-beam shape, indicating that you can start typing or select text. If you're using a touch device, tapping the text box will usually bring up the keyboard and place the cursor at that location.
You need to use a "style" mark-up language known as CSS (which is short for Cascading Style Sheet). Put this in the head of your HTML document: <style type=text/css> body { cursor: CURSOR_NAME; } </style> And these are the valid values for CURSOR_NAME - simply replace that bit with the appropriate cursor type from this list: cursor: auto (uses what is set by user) cursor: crosshair (should produce a cross) cursor: default (cursor remains as it is) cursor: e-resize (arrow pointing right) cursor: hand (the traditional pointing hand) cursor: help (a Question Mark should appear) cursor: move (a cross with arrows on the tips) cursor: n-resize (an arrow pointing north or up) cursor: ne-resize (an arrow pointing northeast) cursor: nw-resize (an arrow pointing northwest) cursor: pointer (that hand again) cursor: s-resize (an arrow pointing south or down) cursor: se-resize (an arrow pointing southeast) cursor: sw-resize (an arrow pointing southwest) cursor: text (looks like the end of an I-beam) cursor: w-resize (an arrow pointing west) cursor: wait (an hourglass)
The cursor
If you want to get the curser, you will have to extract it from warcraft 3's MPQ archive, and then build it into a .ico file
To unstick a frozen up parking brake in a 1999 Olds 88 Royal, start the engine and repeatedly set and release the brake. Allow the vehicle to warm up.?æ
nothing