Logitech MouseWare 7.2 README File (c) Copyright 1995-1996 Logitech, Inc. All Rights Reserved. ************************************************************** This README file contains important information that supplements the Logitech Mouse User's guide. To view or print this file under DOS, use README.EXE which is supplied on the installation disks. At the DOS prompt type the following: README If you are using Windows, run Notepad and open README.TXT. If MouseWare has already been installed, double click on the "Mouse ReadMe" icon in the Logitech SenseWare Group. ************************************************************** README TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. WHAT'S NEW IN THIS RELEASE 2. WINDOWS 95 2.1 Loading Drivers Only 2.2 Uninstall Program 3. DOS AND WINDOWS 3.X 3.1 Installing Over a Previous Release 3.2 Manually Decompressing Files 3.3 Installing For DOSSHELL 3.4 MOUSEDRV.INI Parameters 3.5 Loading the Driver into High Memory 3.6 Cloaking Feature 3.7 MOUSE.EXE Memory Management Parameters 3.8 Smart Move Feature 3.9 Changing the Keyboard Override 3.10 Two Button Mouse Chording 3.11 Support for COM 3 and COM 4 4. OS/2 Support 5. Windows NT Support 6. ADI DRIVER (DOS VERSION ONLY) 6.1 The DOS AutoCAD Mouse Drivers 6.2 Installing the Real Mode Driver 6.3 Installing the Protected Mode Driver 6.4 Using the ADI Driver 6.5 Programming The Buttons 7. MouseMan Bus Board 7.1 Introduction 7.2 General Description 7.3 Installation 7.4 Software Configuration Utility 8. TROUBLESHOOTING 8.1 Manual Installation for DOS & Windows 3.X (T.BAT) 8.2 Manual Installation for Windows 95 (T95.BAT) 8.3 Restoring Old AUTOEXEC.BAT, CONFIG.SYS, WIN.INI, and SYSTEM.INI 8.4 Mouse Detection Problems 8.4.1 Mouse connected to the MousePort 8.4.2 Mouse on the Serial Port 8.5 Toshiba Notebooks and IBM ThinkPad 8.6 Trouble With Cloaking 8.7 Trouble With America Online Under Windows95 9. DISK CONTENTS 9.1 Windows 95 Program Files 9.2 Windows 3.1 Program Files 9.3 DOS Program Files 9.4 Installation Program Files ________________________________________ 1. WHAT'S NEW IN THIS RELEASE MouseWare 7.2 works with any Logitech or Microsoft-compatible pointing device(s). This release includes a number of new features, mainly for Windows 95 support. There is a new setup program that runs under Windows 3.X and Windows 95. Also included is a new Windows 95 user interface and drivers. For more information about using MouseWare under Windows 95, see the section titled: "Windows 95" below. This release also includes support for the new Logitech MouseMan Bus Board. For information on installing and configuring this board, see the "MouseMan Bus Board" section below. 2. WINDOWS 95 2.1 Loading Drivers Only Windows 95 has the ability to load device drivers without running the Setup program. Loading the devices drivers this way, however, does not install the user interface programs. Windows 95 can load device drivers in two ways: First, you can use the Device Manager which is accessed through the System icon in the Windows 95 Control Panel. Select the entry for the mouse, go to the driver page and select Change Driver. When prompted, press the Have Disk button to load the driver from the floppy (disk 1 of 2). The second method is to run the Add New Hardware Wizard from the Windows 95 Control Panel. Have the Hardware Wizard conduct a complete search for new devices, then use the Have Disk option to copy the mouse driver from the floppy disk. 2.2 Uninstall Program MouseWare 7.2 can be removed from Windows 95 by running the Uninstall program. To access this program, click on the Add/Remove Programs icon in the Windows 95 Control Panel. Select Logitech MouseWare and press the Remove button. The uninstall program will remove all control center files but will not remove the mouse driver itself. 3. DOS AND WINDOWS 3.X A Logitech SenseWare group is created to include the new program icons. You can also access the MouseWare Control Center via the mouse icon in the Windows Control Panel. 3.1 Installing Over a Previous Release To install over a previous version of MouseWare simply run the installation normally. Those files with the same name which need to be replaced will be overwritten. If you are installing over a version prior to 6.3 you may have some files on the hard disk which are not used. To remove these files, first install MouseWare 7.2. At the end of the installation process, reboot your system so that the new mouse drivers will be used. To remove the old MouseWare Windows software: DEL C:\WINDOWS\LMOUSE\*.* RD C:\WINDOWS\LMOUSE DEL C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LMOUSE.DLL This example assumes the Windows directory is named: "C:\WINDOWS." To remove the old MouseWare DOS files: DEL C:\MOUSE\CLICK.EXE DEL C:\MOUSE\LOGIMENU.COM DEL C:\MOUSE\*.MNU DEL C:\MOUSE\GOMENU.* DEL C:\MOUSE\MOUSE.COM DEL C:\MOUSE\MOUSE.SYS This examples assumes that the old MouseWare software is located in the C:\MOUSE directory. 3.2 Manually Decompressing Files Several files on the installation disk have been compressed. These files must be decompressed before you can use them. The SETUP program automatically decompresses these files during installation. However, should the need arise, we have provided a method for you to manually decompress these files. Compressed files have file names that end with a percent sign (%). To decompress a file manually, use the LGEXPAND.EXE utility provided on the installation disk. For example, to decompress the file "WMOUSECC.EXE" to your hard disk, type: A:\lgexpand A:\WMOUSECC.EX% C:\MOUSE\WMOUSECC.EXE Please make sure that the destination directory (C:\MOUSE in this example) exists before you issue this command. 3.3 Installing For DOSSHELL Load the DOS mouse driver prior to loading DOSSHELL in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file. Also, do not launch Windows from DOSSHELL, which may result in a loss of mouse functionality under Windows. Nor should you attempt to load the DOS mouse driver in a DOS box under Windows. 3.4 MOUSEDRV.INI Parameters See MOUSEDRV.TXT for more information on the mouse configuration file. 3.5 Loading the Driver into High Memory It is recommended that you do not use "LOADHI" to load the DOS Mouse Driver, because the driver will optimize the use of available upper memory automatically and free up conventional memory. 3.6 Cloaking Feature The MouseWare 7.2 DOS mouse driver is designed to work in conjunction with a special interface program called "Cloaking". The CLOAKING.EXE interface program allows the DOS mouse driver MOUSE.EXE to be loaded in extended memory, freeing valuable conventional and upper memory for your DOS applications. CLOAKING.EXE is automatically installed during the standard MouseWare 7.2 installation for DOS and Windows 3.X. Cloaking works in conjunction with a supported memory manager to enable the mouse driver to load in extended memory. Without cloaking, the DOS mouse driver consumes about 27k of conventional or upper memory. Working in conjunction with the cloaking interface, however, it uses a mere 1k of conventional or upper memory! This 1k size footprint is called the stub. The main part of the DOS Mouse driver will be loaded in extended memory. If the cloaking interface is present the DOS mouse driver program will automatically load in extended memory. Compatibility: CLOAKING.EXE will work with any of the following extended memory managers: EMM386.EXE Microsoft HIMEM.SYS Microsoft RM386.EXE 3.03 or later Helix QEMM386.SYS 7.1 Quarterdeck 386MAX.SYS 5.0 Qualitas You will need to be running one of these programs in order to use CLOAKING.EXE. The EMM386.EXE and HIMEM.SYS programs are included with DOS versions 5.0 and above, and with Windows. Installing Cloaking: MouseWare 7.2 automatically copies CLOAKING.EXE in the mouse directory. The installation program may also load CLOAKING in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file. This will occur if your DOS version is 6.0 or greater, you are running EMM386.EXE, and you are not already loading a version of CLOAKING. If you wish to run CLOAKING and the above conditions are not met, you will need to edit your CONFIG.SYS or AUTOEXEC.BAT file manually to include CLOAKING. If you wish to install CLOAKING in the CONFIG.SYS file, add the line: "DEVICE=C:\MOUSE\CLOAKING.EXE" after the supported memory manager is loaded. In the AUTOEXEC.BAT file, add the line: "C:\MOUSE\CLOAKING.EXE" before the mouse driver is loaded. 3.7 MOUSE.EXE Memory Management Parameters By default, the DOS mouse driver will try to load the following in the order presented as high as possible in memory: 1) Extended memory 2) Upper memory 3) Conventional memory By default, the stub will try to load the following in the order presented as high as possible in memory: 1) Upper memory 2) Conventional memory You can customize the DOS driver memory location by using the MOUSE.EXE command line parameters. Type: Mouse /? at the DOS prompt for a list of these parameters. 3.8 Smart Move Feature When Smart Move is enabled, the cursor automatically goes to the default push button when a dialog or message box appears. For some applications that use non-standard dialog boxes and/or non-standard buttons, this feature may not work all the time. If the dialog box does not have a default command button, Smart Move moves the cursor to the first button it finds. The cursor is not moved if it cannot find a button. If you prefer to have the cursor move to the center, or upper left corner of the dialog box if no button is found, use a text editor, like Notepad, and edit the file C:\MOUSE\MOUSECC.INI. [Button Assignments] MoveTo=Center or MoveTo=TopLeft To set it back to default, remove the "MoveTo=" line. 3.9 Changing the Keyboard Override The Keyboard Override for disabling the Windows shortcuts temporarily is the Control key. If you would like to change it to the Shift key, or set it to none, use a text editor, like Notepad, and edit the file C:\MOUSE\MOUSECC.INI. [Button Assignments] Disabler=Shift or Disabler=Off To reinstate the default, remove the "Disabler=" line. 3.10 Two Button Mouse Chording If you have a two button mouse, pressing the right and left button simultaneously can act as a third button, we call this feature "chording". 3.11 Support for COM 3 and COM 4 MouseWare 7.2 includes support for COM 3 and COM 4 under both DOS and Windows. This also includes support for atypical addresses and IRQs. To enable a search for such a port some small changes need to be made in the MouseDrv.ini file. First "COM3" or "COM4" must be added to the PortSearchOrder line in the [Global] section. Next, the "BaseAddress=" and "IRQValue=" lines in the [COM3] or [COM4] section of the file must reflect the actual values of the port. Once this is done, the device should work following system reboot. 4. OS/2 Support Do not install MouseWare 7.2 under OS/2. The internal driver provided by OS/2 has three-button support for Logitech serial and PS/2 mouse, and two-button support for Logitech bus mice. OS/2 should automatically detect and support the Logitech mouse connected to your system when OS/2 is installed. If your Logitech mouse does not work properly after installing OS/2, you will have to manually select the proper Logitech mouse driver. Please follow these steps to correct the problem: 1) Determine the type of mouse you own. If you have a PS/2 or bus mouse, skip down to step 2. If you have a Logitech serial mouse you need to know if it is M-series or C-Series. Look at the bottom of your mouse, if it says "CA", "CC", "CE" or "C7," then you own a C-Series mouse, otherwise you own an M-Series mouse. 2) Double click the OS/2 System icon. 3) Double click the System Setup icon. 4) Double click the Selective Install icon. 5) Select the Mouse option and press Enter. 6) If you are using a PS/2 or M-Series serial mouse, you may select any of the following: "PS/2 [tm] Style Pointing Device", "Serial Pointing Device", "Logitech M-Series Mouse". 7) Select the entry "Bus Style Mouse" if you have a bus mouse. 8) If you have a Logitech C-series mouse and are running OS/2 version 2.1, select "Logitech [tm] C-Series Serial Mouse". If, you are running version 2.0, choose "Logitech [tm] Mouse". 5. Windows NT Support If your mouse is not working, try selecting the device driver as follows: 1) In the Program Manager, go to the MAIN group. 2) Select WINDOWS NT SETUP. 3) Select OPTIONS, Change System Settings. 4) Click the down arrow next to the mouse selection and choose one of the following: If you have a Logitech serial Mouse, select "Logitech Serial Mouse", If you have a Logitech PS/2 (Mouse Port) mouse select "Logitech MousePort Mouse", If you have a Logitech Bus Mouse select "Microsoft (green buttons)" or "Logitech Bus Mouse". Do not install MouseWare 7.2 in Windows NT. Use the Logitech mouse driver included in the Windows NT release. This driver has full support for all the Logitech pointing devices. To change the mouse settings, run the Windows NT Control Panel. 6. ADI DRIVER (DOS VERSION ONLY) 6.1 The DOS AutoCAD Mouse Drivers MouseWare 7.2 includes two mouse drivers for use with AutoCAD. These drivers are called: DGLOGI.COM and DGLOGI.EXP. The first of these drivers, DGLOGI.COM, is a real mode driver for use with AutoCAD release 10. In order to use this driver read and follow the instructions in the section entitled: "Installing the AutoCAD Real Mode ADI Driver" below. The DGLOGI.EXP file is a protected mode driver and should be used with AutoCAD release 11 or greater. To use this driver, follow the use the installation instructions from the section entitled: "Installing the AutoCAD Protected Mode ADI Driver". 6.2 Installing the Real Mode Driver First copy the real mode driver to your hard disk (the installation program does not do this automatically). Follow the instructions below: Insert the Logitech MouseWare diskette into the A: or B: drive. Type A: or B: depending on which disk drive you are using. At the A: or B: prompt type: COPY DGLOGI.COM C:\MOUSE [Enter]. Please note that the drive and directory may be different on your computer system. Next load this driver when you want to run AutoCAD by typing DGLOGI.COM from the mouse directory or by adding the line: "C:\MOUSE\DGLOGI.COM" to the AUTOEXEC.BAT file after the point where the DOS mouse driver is loaded. See the example below: C:\MOUSE\MOUSE.EXE C:\MOUSE\DGLOGI.COM While in AutoCAD, configure your digitizer to ADI digitizer or AutoDesk Device Interface (depending on your release), and select the default interrupt (0x79). You can set the ADI sensitivity by loading the Real Mode ADI driver as follows: DGLOGI Snnn Where nnn is a number between 1 and 100. The default value is 50. To remove DGLOGI.COM from memory, type "DGLOGI OUT" or "DGLOGI OFF". 6.3 Installing the Protected Mode Driver AutoCAD release 11, 12, and 13 have a specific directory for protected mode drivers. Copy the DGLOGI.EXP file to this directory. Follow the instructions below: Insert the Logitech MouseWare diskette into the A: or B: drive. Type A: or B: depending on which disk drive you are using. At the A: or B: prompt type: COPY DGLOGI.EXP C:\MOUSE [Enter]. Please note that the drive and directory may be different on your computer system. Next run the AutoCAD configuration utility and choose the Logitech Enhanced Mouse Driver ADI 4.2 V1.0 - by Logitech. 6.4 Using the ADI Driver The Logitech Real Mode ADI driver is compatible with all versions of AutoCAD, as well as other AutoDesk products such as AutoSketch, or AutoShade. The Logitech Protected Mode ADI driver is compatible with AutoCAD releases 11 or greater. Both the real and the protected mode ADI drivers require that you load the Logitech DOS mouse driver prior to using the ADI drivers. Both drivers combine keyboard shift states with mouse buttons to produce 16 ADI button events for complex AutoCAD menu handling. This allows you to access common AutoCAD commands without taking your hands off the mouse. Please refer to your AutoCAD Reference Manual, under the Button Menu section. These drivers also work with 2-button mice by simulating a middle button when you click both buttons at once. The Button Menu map is as follows: BUTTON COMBO DEFAULTS ----------------------------------- PICK = Left Pick 1 = Right Return 2 = Middle Menu (Cursor menu in ACAD11) 3 = Ctrl + Left Cancel 4 = Ctrl + Right Snap ON 5 = Ctrl + Middle Ortho ON/OFF 6 = Alt + Left Grid On/Off 7 = Alt + Right Coordinates ON/OFF 8 = Alt + Middle ISO Plane Top/Right/ Left 9 = Ctrl + Alt + Left Tablet Off 10 = Ctrl + Alt + Right 11 = Ctrl + Alt + Middle 12 = Shift + Left 13 = Shift + Right 14 = Shift + Middle 15 = Ctrl + Shift + Left 6.5 Programming The Buttons According to AutoDesk, the user cannot change the button defaults in AutoCAD Release 11. The mouse buttons CAN be changed within AutoCAD Release 12 or greater. Changing the mouse buttons is documented in the AutoCAD Customization Manual. More information is available in the AutoCAD Interface, Installation, and Performance Guide, and in the AutoCAD Reference Manual. 7. MouseMan Bus Board 7.1 Introduction This section is intended to give a detailed description of how to install and configure the new Logitech MouseMan Bus Board. The first part of this section gives a general description of the board, its capabilities and Hardware and Software requirements. The second part of this section describes how to install the board for a specific combination of BIOS type and Operating System. The last part of this section describes how to use the software configuration utility program. If you are not interested in the technical details of the board skip to Installation section. 7.2 General Description The Logitech MouseMan Bus Board is a single port, 16550 based serial I/O board. It can be used in both 16 bit or 8 bit ISA slots (though IRQ channels above 7 will not be available when the board is installed in an 8 bit slot). The board supports two hardware configuration modes: Automatic mode, and Legacy mode. The board is set to Automatic mode when shipped. In Automatic mode, the boards resources will generally be configured by the BIOS or operating system without user intervention. In Legacy mode, the board supports the four standard comport addresses and numerous IRQs. These are software configurable as described in the Software Configuration Utility section below. You can set the card to legacy mode if you need to configure the cards resources so they will not be altered by a Plug and Play BIOS. 7.3 Installation If your computer supports Plug and Play, by virtue of the Operating system, Software, or BIOS, the MouseMan Bus Board will configure automatically. Simply power down the system, insert the board in an available slot, connect your mouse and restart the system. Your system supports Plug and Play if it has any one of the following elements: -Plug and Play BIOS -Intel Configuration Manager for DOS/Windows 3.x -Logitech MouseWare version 7.1 or above for DOS/Windows3.X -Windows 95 On systems with a Plug and Play BIOS, the BIOS may change the Serial Board settings to accommodate other peripherals. For this reason, the actual board settings may not match those made by the configuration utility. Also, if a non-Plug and Play card is present in a system with a Plug and Play BIOS, the card may be invisible to the BIOS. As a result, the BIOS may configure the MouseMan Bus Board in conflict with this card. Should this happen, it will be necessary to resolve this conflict in one of three ways: 1) Change the jumper settings on the conflicting card so it uses different resources. 2) Change the SBoardFlags parameter in the MOUSEDRV.INI file to 128 (consult the MOUSEDRV.TXT file for details on using this parameter) then use the MMBUS program to direct the board to use free resources. 3) Reserve resources for the legacy card from the BIOS, if your BIOS supports this feature. 7.4 Software Configuration Utility Logitech provides a Bus Board configuration utility for DOS and Windows called MMBUS.EXE. To run this utility type "MMBUS" at the DOS prompt with the desired command line parameters described below. This program can run under DOS and Windows. The supported MMBUS parameters are: /Mode=Automatic | Legacy This parameter can be used to change the board's mode from Automatic to Legacy and vice versa. /ADDR=0x3F8 | 0x2F8 | 0x3E8 | 0x2E8 (Legacy Mode) /ADDR=0x0100 | 0x0108 | 0x0116 ...|0x03F8 (Automatic Mode) The "ADDR" parameter will set the base I/O address of the board. Note that only the default addresses for COM ports one through four are available in legacy mode. /IRQ=3 | 4 | 5| 7 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 15 This parameter sets the boards IRQ level. Only three through seven will be available if the board is in an 8 bit slot. /COM=1 | 2 | 3 | 4 (Legacy Mode) This command can be used only if the board is in legacy mode. It will set the COM port number of the board to the value named. /WINDIR= This command is used to name the directory in which Windows is installed. This command should be used to assure that changes made through the MMBUS program will be reflected in Windows. By default, the board assumes Windows is installed in: C:\Windows. Typing MMBUS without a parameter will display a list of supported parameters. A convenient shortcut is to type only the first letter of the desired parameter; e.g. mmbus /m=a /a=3E8 /I=15 /w=C:|WIN3.1. It is reccommended that MMBUS.EXE be run under Windows rather then DOS. This can avoid some potential conflicts. 8. TROUBLESHOOTING 8.1 Manual Installation for DOS & Windows 3.X (T.BAT) If you experience difficulty running the installation program, you may want to do a manual installation. Included on the MouseWare diskette is a program called T.BAT. This utility will EXPAND all the compressed files from the MouseWare disk to the drive and directory of your choice. To run T.BAT follow instructions below: 1) Insert the MouseWare diskette into the floppy drive. 2) Change your DOS prompt to match the floppy drive being used. 3) At the A: prompt type: T A: C:\MOUSE [enter] Or at the B: prompt type: T B: C:\MOUSE [enter] 5) Pressing any key will start the copy process. 6) When the manual install is complete, you will need to edit the AUTOEXEC.BAT. Please add the following lines: SET LMOUSE=C:\MOUSE C:\MOUSE\MOUSE.EXE 7) You will now need to edit the SYSTEM.INI file located in the WINDOWS directory. Please change the following lines to read as below: [boot] mouse.drv=C:\MOUSE\LMOUSE.DRV [386Enh] mouse=C:\MOUSE\LVMD.386 keyboard=C:\MOUSE\LVKD.386 8) Now reboot the computer to make these changes take effect. 9) To verify the DOS driver is loaded, change directories to C:\MOUSE and type the following command: MOUSECC [enter] Move the mouse to see if the cursor moves in the DOS Mouse Control Center 10) Launch Windows to verify the mouse functions. To access MouseWare Control Center open the Main Group, now double click on the CONTROL PANEL icon. You should now see the Logitech Mouse Icon. Double click this icon to open the MouseWare Control Center. You may now access the Button Assignments and the Cursor Enhancements. 8.2 Manual Installation for Windows 95 (T95.BAT) To manually install MouseWare 7.2 under Windows 95 restart the your computer in MS-DOS mode and run the T95 batch program. To run this program type: "T95 A:" or "T95 B:" at the DOS prompt. This will expand all the compressed files. After running this you will need to load the drivers. See the Windows 95 section above for a description of how to do this. 8.3 Restoring Old AUTOEXEC.BAT, CONFIG.SYS, WIN.INI, and SYSTEM.INI The installation program saves these files starting with the .000 extension, and increments them to the next available numbered extension if it finds an existing file with the same name and extension. 8.4 Mouse Detection Problems 8.4.1 Mouse connected to the MousePort If your mouse is connected to the mouse port and is not detected by the system, attempt the following step(s): 1) Your mouse port might need to be enabled through the SETUP menu of your computer (please check with your computer documentation regarding the SETUP menu). 2) If you have a mouse with both serial and mouse port adapters, connect it to the computer through the serial port. Reboot and check if the mouse is detected properly. 3) If adapter(s) were not including in your package, your mouse was designed to work on only one type of port (Serial OR PS/2). Refer to your package for the type of port your mouse supports. 4) If you must connect the mouse through the mouse port, add the following modifications to the C:\MOUSE\MOUSEDRV.INI file, reboot and check if the mouse is detected properly: [Technical] ForcePS2EquipmentFlag=On If the problem persists, please check for a possible computer BIOS ROM upgrade from your computer manufacturer. Some notebook systems such as IBM Thinkpad, have both an external Mouse Port and an integrated Pointing Stick which is connected to the Mouse Port. If your mouse is having difficulty running on the Mouse Port of this type of system, try using the serial port instead. 8.4.2 Mouse on the Serial Port If your mouse is connected to the serial port and is not detected by the system, add the following modification to the MOUSEDRV.INI file, reboot and check if the mouse is detected properly: [Technical] Timing=Hardware For more information on MOUSEDRV.INI, please refer to the MOUSEDRV.TXT file. 8.5 Toshiba Notebooks and IBM ThinkPad On Toshiba 3400 series sub-notebooks and the ThinkPad line of IBM laptops, f the "pointing device mode" parameter in the computer's setup is set to "simultaneous", an external mouse connected to the mouse port will be identified as a generic two- button mouse. If this external mouse has three buttons, the following modifications should be made to the MOUSEDRV.INI file: [PS2] NumberOfButtons=3 The connected device model may also be specified. For more information on the MOUSEDRV.INI file, please refer to the MOUSEDRV.TXT file. In Windows 95 the information is stored in the registry instead of the MOUSEDRV.INI file. Using the Registry Editor, REGEDIT, search for the NumberOfButtons key and change its value to "3" instead of "2." The REGEDIT program is not easy to use, so try this alternative: copy the text between the dashed lines to a file and save it on your hard disk using the name "PS2.REG" ---------------- REGEDIT4 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Logitech\MouseWare\CurrentVersion\ PS2\0000] "NumberOfButtons"="3" ---------------- Then open the folder containing PS2.REG and double-click on PS2.REG. Reboot your system and the mouse should work correctly. 8.6 Trouble With Cloaking If you experience difficulties with the Cloaking driver, your system might be incompatible with the current version of the Cloaking driver. To disable the Cloaking driver: If you run DOS 6.0 or above: 1) Reboot your computer. 2) During the reboot process press the F5 key to disable CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT. 3) Edit AUTOEXEC.BAT or CONFIG.SYS and remove the Cloaking driver line. If you run DOS 5.0 or under: 1) Reboot your computer. 2) During the reboot process press simultaneously the CTRL- SHIFT-ALT key. This action will prevent the Cloaking driver from loading. 3) Edit AUTOEXEC.BAT or CONFIG.SYS and remove the Cloaking driver line. 8.7 Trouble With America Online Under Windows95 There is a compatibility problem with America Online and MouseWare 7.2 under Windows 95. If you are experiencing difficulty, try turning SmartMove off. 9. DISK CONTENTS 9.1 Windows 95 Program Files BASIC.DLL Mouse Properties CCMSGHK.DLL CCRESGLB.DLL CCRESRCE.DLL CCSTMGLB.DLL CCUSTOM.DLL CMOUSECC.DLL DEVICES.DLL EM_EXEC.EXE Event Macro Executive EVENTEX.DLL COMNCTR.DLL LOGILANG.DLL LMOUSE.VXD Windows mouse driver (for Windows 95) LMOUSE.HLP Mouse Help file 9.2 Windows 3.1 Program Files WMOUSECC.EXE MouseWare Control Center WMCCDLG.DLL WBUTTONS.EXE MouseWare Control Center button engine WBUTTONS.DLL WCURSOR.EXE Cursor Enhancement program WCURSOR.DLL LMOUSE.DRV Windows mouse driver (for Windows 3.1 & 95) LVMD.386 Windows 3.1 virtual mouse driver LVKD.386 Windows 3.1 virtual keyboard driver MOUSEDRV.INI Mouse driver configuration file (for Windows 31 & 95) WMOUSECC.HLP Mouse Help File 9.3 DOS Program Files MOUSECC.EXE DOS Mouse Control Center MOUSE.EXE Logitech DOS mouse driver CLOAKING.EXE Memory enhancement utility DGLOGI.COM Real Mode ADI v4.1 compliant driver DGLOGI.EXP Protected Mode ADI v4.2 compliant driver 9.4 Installation Program Files SETUP.EXE Installation Program DINST.EXE DINST.CFG DINSTENU.SCR LOGILG16.DLL LIMW.DLL SETUP.INI SETUP.LIS UNINSTAL.LIS SWIN95.LIM SWIN31.LIM SDISK1.LIM SDISK2.LIM SLGINIT.LIM ULGENU.LIM EXIT.LIM WIENU.DLL WINST.EXE LGEXPAND.EXE File Decompression Utility COMCHECK.EXE Tests the Connection of your serial mouse README.TXT Readme File MOUSEDRV.TXT Text file documenting MOUSEDRV.INI parameters.