![]() Do the same for the rest of the exposé and spaces features you want. Test that it works by pressing the mouse button/wheel you assigned F9 to – it should work. Go back to System Preferences > Exposé & Spaces and assign F9 to “All Windows” again. Go back to Logitech Control Center, select Keystroke, click “F9” in the “Type a key…”-field. Pick one, say “All Windows” and remove the “F9” assignment (or whatever you have). So go to System Preferences > Exposé & Spaces. Now, in order to assign the proper F key the mouse button/wheel, you will have to remove that very F key assignment from within Exposé & Spaces in your Mac’s System Preferences, otherwise LCC cannot “capture” the key when you press it. You can change the “assigned action” within Logitech Control Center from the “Exposé, Dashboard & Spaces” you’re probably using right now, to “Keystroke”. I’ve heard of two possible solutions to this problem, the first one is the route I took and worked for me. In Snow Leopard, it doesn’t support the features of Exposé and Spaces, not out of the box at least – or if you upgraded from Leopard. That’s why I’m flabbergasted to learn that Logitech is yet to release an update for their Logitech Control Center (LCC) software. Up until then I’ve been using mostly Logitech UltraX which was great, an amazingly cheap keyboard with really good keys on it and not cramped with a ton of useless features and shortcuts. Keyboard-wise though, I switched to Apple when they released their new Alu keyboards. Logitech has also been my favorite maker for keyboards and mice for as long as I can remember. The company I’m talking about is Logitech and they are not just any company, they are a huge company with 7,500 employees, producing products like the one mentioned above plus more. I think they create a few computer accesory parts every now and then, an occassional keyboard, mouse and computer speakers. Seriously, Logitech, if you can't write a driver that continues to function for more than three days at a time, you should outsource to somebody who can.I found another incompatiblity issue with Snow Leopard, this time it’s from a small company, you might have heard of it. This is with a clean install on two different OSes over a period of months. It has reduced a fantastic piece of hardware to something that is maddeningly unpredictable. Only solution is to log out and back in.Ĭalling this frustrating is putting it mildly. Force quitting the process won't fix it, either. Open the Options, and everything is configured right, the driver has just decided to completely ignore your configuration. Suddenly scrolling will stop working until I turn it off and back on, or the back button will start doing the equivalent of option-click, or the Expose buttons will stop doing anything at all. Sometimes as often as once a day, and always within a week, the mouse will just start ignoring all Logitech configuration. except it is absolute garbage when it comes to stability, which is what really counts. Support? Regularly updated and actually supported 10.14 on day one! Interface? Beautiful and has a mix of ease of use and advanced features buried one level deep. Features? Fantastic! It's incredibly customizable and has cool extras like Flow. But you know what? When they eventually got around to it, at least it usually worked correctly. I used to lament Logitech Control Center because it was crusty-looking and took weeks or months to be updated to support new products or OSes. ![]()
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