1
After resetting my company's ASUS N551J laptop using its recovery partition, I'm stuck between two annoying options:
- Use the native driver for the trackpad, which doesn't support any form of scrolling guesture (not with a two-finger drag, and not with a one-finger drag on the side).
- Have ASUS Smart Gesture installed, which is awful in every way imaginable. To limit my complaints to functional issues: it recognises unwanted guestures that can't be disabled (i.e. horizontal scrolling), it has unwanted inertia and acceleration in its pointer and scolling behaviour, and scrolling is ridiculously laggy.
Preferring minimality over garbage, I chose for the first option. I wonder, however: is there a simpler way to just support scrolling without bells and whistles that induce noticable lag? I can't seem to find an option in Windows 10's multiple (sigh) configuration screens, but since it's so touch-oriented, Windows 10 surely must have some way to enable this kind of gestures...
Under option 1, the trackpad is probed through ACPI and shows up as a "Microsoft PS/2 Mouse" (claimed by the i8042prt.sys
and mouclass.sys
drivers).
Windows 10 is focus on touch-oriented when it comes to touchscreens, a touchpad gesture, isn't something Microsoft would focus on. – Ramhound – 2016-08-31T15:42:37.753
@Ramhound Sounds like a missed opportunity for code reuse. – Rhymoid – 2016-08-31T17:29:42.340
Perhaps; touchpad environment is a good bit different then touchscreen – Ramhound – 2016-08-31T17:39:40.243