How To Disable Pointing Stick On Dell Latitude

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How To Disable Pointing Stick On Dell Latitude 9,8/10 8588 votes

If you have Dell Touchpad application installed, Dell Touchpad tab will show up. Click on the image inside the Dell Touchpad tab content. Select Button Settings from Dell Touchpad window. Select Device Select tab and click Disable radio button of Pointing Stick and then click Apply. The mouse stick pointer will be disabled instantly. I have read Dell manual on Dell Latitude D830 and it does not state how to disable the track stick that is in the middle of the keyboards. I want to keep the touchpad enabled but because the track stick is a nusiance I would like to disable it. Jul 3, 2017 - In this guide, we'll walk you through the easy steps to disable the. Clear the Disable internal pointing device when external USB pointing device is. The setting to disable the touchpad is located in the Dell's support software.

I am using a Dell Latitude E6520, with a pointstick. I've tried disabling the pointstick, and disabling tap-to-click on the pointstick within the Dell touchpad control panel (screenshot below), but every time my machine reboots, the pointstick and tap-to-click are re-enabled. How can I permanently disable the pointstick, or at the very least the tap-to-click?

magicandre1981
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xdumaineHow to disable pointing stick on dell latitude and longitudexdumaine
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6 Answers

Go into msconfig, hit the startup tab, and check for a disabled option called 'Alps Pointing-device Driver'. Reenable that, and your pointing device settings should become sticky.

Worked for me, anyway!

I think this is specific to the custom image that gets rolled out where we work. I'd guess a vanilla Dell laptop doesn't have this disabled.

jaredforsheyjaredforshey

The console window pictured above is less than useless. On my E6420 it says that it is disabled but the point stick still works regardless. The registry info supplied in various forums did not work for me because I could not find the referenced points in the registry.

NOTE: What follows is for advanced computer hardware types and not for a newbie.

Out of frustration I did a little surgery on the keyboard and unhooked the 4 conductor ribbon from where it feeds the point stick on the bottom of the keyboard. See youtube for keyboard removal videos. After the two screws on the bottom (located in the square holes on either side of the docking station jack) are removed (they MUST be removed), pry off the plastic trim ring around the keyboard.

Besides the two screws on the back in the inset square holes, There are 4 small screws that come out next, that hold the black tabs of the keyboard at the edge near the from edge of the computer.

The keyboard should now lift out if the 2 screws are removed from the back of the computer.

Now lift out from the near edge and carefully disengage the multi-ribbon from the laptop chassis. If you don't know how to do this then don't. You will ruin it. Once the keyboard is loose turn it over. You will see a small 4 conductor ribbon going to the bottom of the keyboard where the point stick is located.

Follow the ribbon back to the small circuit board on the bottom of the keyboard where the bigger multi-ribbon also attaches.

Lift the black tape covering the connection of the 4 conductor ribbon cable and carefully open the connector to remove the ribbon. Close the connector and lay the ribbon on top. The point stick is now dead. Place the tape back over everything and reassemble the keyboard to the computer. Surgery complete. Time to close it up doctor.

I just finished doing this to the E6420 that I am typing this on. Nothing else worked. No more annoying point stick.

nhinkle
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Jake ArrJake Arr

For me, the path to the apoint.exe was set to an 'X:' mapped drive. I confirmed the path listed actually existed on my C drive, and then by searching for apoint.exe in regedit and changing the path to c: resolved the issue for me.

John VargoJohn Vargo

Same registry issue with X: mapping. Editing the key seems to work for Dell Latitude.

Excellll
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HowardHoward

My registry did not contain the entry in the Run list. So, I added a new string value named APoint with the path that I found on my laptop:

C:Program FilesDellTPadApoint.exe

I probably disabled this inadvertantly because I thought it was just a configuration access shortcut. Well, it is not, it actually reacts to the settings and configures the driver's behavior on what events it reports to the OS.

grwwwgrwww
  1. Type Touchpad in Start search box.
  2. Click 'Dell Touchpad' from Start menu.
  3. Click Pointstick Icon at the top 'Blue icon with keys GHVBN'.
  4. Click 'Buttons' option on the left side navigation pane.
  5. Turn Pointstick Button On using the toggle switch on the screen. It'll turn green.
  6. Select 'Do Nothing' from dropdown menus for: Left Button, Right Button and Middle Button.
  7. Click Save.Ta da:)
VandanaVandana

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged mousedell-latitude or ask your own question.

Although it is meant to make using your Dell Latitude laptop easier, the touchpad may get in the way while you are typing and may even cause typing errors. If you choose to use a USB mouse instead of the touchpad or are just annoyed by the mouse cursor movement while typing, you can easily disable the Dell Latitude’s touchpad using one of two options.

Disable With Dell Latitude Function Keys

Most Dell Latitude laptops allow you to temporarily disable the touchpad by using a combination of function keys. Press the “Fn” and “F5” keys together to turn off your touchpad on many models. Models that do not use this combination of keys may instead use the “Fn” key along with another “F” key – look for the “F” key with a small square and two smaller squares within it. Press “Fn” and that “F” key together to disable or enable the touchpad.

Touchpad Disable In Windows 8/10 Telecharger police ars maquette pro.

Disable your Latitude’s touchpad by pressing the “Windows” and “Q” keys together to open the Windows search box. Type “Touchpad” into the search box and press “Enter” to open the “Mouse & touchpad settings” program. Click the “Touchpad On/Off” option to toggle it on or off.

If this toggle is not currently visible, click “Additional Mouse Options” and then the “Dell Touchpad” tab. Click the picture of the touchpad, then 'Touchpad On/Off,” followed by the “Save” button to either enable or disable the touchpad.

Touchpad Disable In Windows 7

Latitudes without a built-in touchpad function key can still have the touchpad temporarily or permanently disabled using Dell’s touchpad software on Windows 7. Click the “Windows” key and type “main.cpl” in the search box, then press “Enter” to open the Dell software. Click the “Dell Touchpad” tab in the program, then the touchpad picture in the program to select it. Click the on/off toggle to disable or re-enable the touchpad, then click “Save.” If this toggle is not visible, enable it by clicking the “Device Select” tab and then the Touchpad toggle to enable or disable the touchpad.

Disable

Latitudes With Both Function Keys and Software

Some Latitudes may have both the touchpad on/off key and the touchpad software. If your Latitude has both, use either option to disable the touchpad. Note that the software option is considered more permanent as it will stay disabled until you go into the software to enable it again. On the other hand, disabling a touchpad with the function keys may work only until the computer is restarted. If you want your touchpad to stay disabled, choose the software option.

How To Disable Pointing Stick On Dell Latitude Screen

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