

But it takes a steady wrist to keep the mouse from jumping to the next PC (or back to the first) if you get too close to the edge, especially in widescreen displays. Optionally disconnect/disable your keyboard and test your mouse buttons. Open your Keyboard Viewer and make sure that your Control key is not stuck. We could use our mouse and keyboard normally in the active PC. Go to: Apple > System Preferences > Keyboard & Mouse > Mouse and check to make sure that your Primary Mouse Button is set to Left. Huge arrows indicate control direction, even across a large room. We moused to the edge of our main PC's screen, and the cursor activated in the next PC's screen while the first screen dimmed. The Monitor Manager displays available monitors in a desktop window and also identifies each display with a large letter: A, B, and so on, as required. Under Data Exchange, we could enable Drag and Drop (A Demo feature) and Clipboard Synchronization, including a customizable hot key for pasting shared clipboard data. The app's settings include hot keys, scroll speed, and choice of network adapters and ports as well as some Demo features. The installer can configure Windows Firewall and applicable services, but be sure to enable ShareMouse in your other antivirus and security software. We installed ShareMouse on two networked Windows PCs. This free tool works fine, though it takes practice.
#Sharemouse mac ctrl stuck password#
There's a QuickJump hot key combo, too, and there's a Panic key that also reverts to the main system and even a password option.

Moving the cursor back restores control to the first PC. Rolling your mouse to the edge of one PC's desktop moves control to the next PC and dims the first PC's screen. ShareMouse Mouse and Keyboard Sharing lets you control network computers with one keyboard and mouse, and share files, too.
