<tt><font size=2>> From: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com></font></tt>
<br><tt><font size=2>> <br>
> Oh, I should also note that, IIRC, the intent is that the driver should<br>
> detect if there are no physical buttons and enable tap-to-click in
this<br>
> case. So touchpads which have no buttons and are only supposed to
work<br>
> with tap-to-click should be OK.<br>
</font></tt>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Where does my notebook's touchpad fall
in this continuum? At the bottom corners of the touch-sensitive area
are two "buttons" which click with tactile feedback, but yet
are still part of the touch-sensitive surface. In other words, the
bottom corners can actually be deformed/depressed. FWIW, I enabled
tap-to-click -- did I just answer my own question? -- simply because my
wife and I both found the mouse to be moving off target too often when
tried using these "buttons".<br>
--<br>
John Florian</font>
<br>