I've been putting xinput disable 12 (the number for the touchpad service) into .xinitrc. That works fine, except when the screen times out and you type a password to get back, or when switching users and come back. Then I have to run it manually from a terminal. Is there a more appropriate place to put it? Sorry for top posting, but I respond in the OP's method (and I don't hate top posting on simple messages like most people here do, please don't flame me). Jim On 10/24/2012 12:38 AM, Phil Savoie wrote:
Hey Jim,
Not sure if Opensuse has synclient as I now use centos but this should work.
synclient TouchpadOff=1 (disables the touchpad)
Should be put in either the .bash_profile or in the .bashrc file.
Phil
On 10/23/2012 11:51 PM, Jim Sabatke wrote:
OK, I gave up on Windows and assumed that I could get my laptop running with Suse. At first I had really big network trouble. I could get it connected, but every time I rebooted it wouldn't connect and wouldn't show me my wireless router until I deleted the connection and rebooted again. Then I tried Ubuntu; what a huge mistake. It worked great with the network, but it's an incredible PITA with loading software and security is a disaster; any user can su with their own password. I was looking for a solution where my girlfriend couldn't add things she didn't understand where harmful, and there is no good reason she should know. So, I went back to Suse and after getting the network up again, I went through the enormous online update. That fixed the network disconnection problem!!!
Next I had used a Samba mount to save my M$ files to my desktop. I couldn't get Samba running from either Ubuntu or Suse as client, and NFS turned out to be a huge time investment. I remember the days when I just typed in the server and client information and it just worked. After quite a few hours I hit on the right combination and that is working just fine too.
Now I just need a reliable way to kill the Synaptics touchpad; it doesn't stay off when switching users or timing out to a login screen. I wish there was an easy way to have it turn itself off when a USB mouse is plugged in. For now I'll just make a couple of scripts and put them into the screen menu so my g/f can remember how to turn it off.
The webcam works right out of the box too, so life is now good.
As long as I have one box, my desktop, that can dual boot M$, then I can update any hardware devices that are only supported by M$ applications.
I'm a very happy camper.
Jim
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