USB Mice not working, but USB Keyboard is











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I am new to Linux based operating systems, and I decided to dual (boot/load?) Windows 10 and version 18.04 of Ubuntu. I am not booting from a USB as I do not have one available. It is being dual booted from my harddisk.



I have tried several mice, all of which work on Windows 10 (including the one I'm using currently, which is just a plain, $10 Logitech mouse from Walmart) but they do not want to work on Ubuntu.



Upon getting to the Ubuntu OS screen—where one can see the icons, press Ctrl+Alt+t, etc.—my mouse is frozen in the bottom right-hand side of the screen. My mouse will light up for a few minutes, and then turn off. This happened to all of my mice, regardless of what USB port it was in. I am able to use keyboard commands.



Is there anything I can do to get my mice working in Ubuntu?



As I said, and I feel like it's worth repeating: all of my mice (three of them) work completely fine on two laptops and my desktop while on Windows 10. There are only issues when I am loaded onto Ubuntu.



I do not consider this to be a duplicate question, as none of the other questions of this sort answered it in such a way that solved my problem.










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  • 1




    You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:23










  • Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
    – Sermo
    Dec 1 at 23:24










  • Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:29










  • Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
    – heynnema
    Dec 2 at 3:18










  • Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
    – Sermo
    Dec 2 at 3:26















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I am new to Linux based operating systems, and I decided to dual (boot/load?) Windows 10 and version 18.04 of Ubuntu. I am not booting from a USB as I do not have one available. It is being dual booted from my harddisk.



I have tried several mice, all of which work on Windows 10 (including the one I'm using currently, which is just a plain, $10 Logitech mouse from Walmart) but they do not want to work on Ubuntu.



Upon getting to the Ubuntu OS screen—where one can see the icons, press Ctrl+Alt+t, etc.—my mouse is frozen in the bottom right-hand side of the screen. My mouse will light up for a few minutes, and then turn off. This happened to all of my mice, regardless of what USB port it was in. I am able to use keyboard commands.



Is there anything I can do to get my mice working in Ubuntu?



As I said, and I feel like it's worth repeating: all of my mice (three of them) work completely fine on two laptops and my desktop while on Windows 10. There are only issues when I am loaded onto Ubuntu.



I do not consider this to be a duplicate question, as none of the other questions of this sort answered it in such a way that solved my problem.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:23










  • Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
    – Sermo
    Dec 1 at 23:24










  • Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:29










  • Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
    – heynnema
    Dec 2 at 3:18










  • Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
    – Sermo
    Dec 2 at 3:26













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I am new to Linux based operating systems, and I decided to dual (boot/load?) Windows 10 and version 18.04 of Ubuntu. I am not booting from a USB as I do not have one available. It is being dual booted from my harddisk.



I have tried several mice, all of which work on Windows 10 (including the one I'm using currently, which is just a plain, $10 Logitech mouse from Walmart) but they do not want to work on Ubuntu.



Upon getting to the Ubuntu OS screen—where one can see the icons, press Ctrl+Alt+t, etc.—my mouse is frozen in the bottom right-hand side of the screen. My mouse will light up for a few minutes, and then turn off. This happened to all of my mice, regardless of what USB port it was in. I am able to use keyboard commands.



Is there anything I can do to get my mice working in Ubuntu?



As I said, and I feel like it's worth repeating: all of my mice (three of them) work completely fine on two laptops and my desktop while on Windows 10. There are only issues when I am loaded onto Ubuntu.



I do not consider this to be a duplicate question, as none of the other questions of this sort answered it in such a way that solved my problem.










share|improve this question















I am new to Linux based operating systems, and I decided to dual (boot/load?) Windows 10 and version 18.04 of Ubuntu. I am not booting from a USB as I do not have one available. It is being dual booted from my harddisk.



I have tried several mice, all of which work on Windows 10 (including the one I'm using currently, which is just a plain, $10 Logitech mouse from Walmart) but they do not want to work on Ubuntu.



Upon getting to the Ubuntu OS screen—where one can see the icons, press Ctrl+Alt+t, etc.—my mouse is frozen in the bottom right-hand side of the screen. My mouse will light up for a few minutes, and then turn off. This happened to all of my mice, regardless of what USB port it was in. I am able to use keyboard commands.



Is there anything I can do to get my mice working in Ubuntu?



As I said, and I feel like it's worth repeating: all of my mice (three of them) work completely fine on two laptops and my desktop while on Windows 10. There are only issues when I am loaded onto Ubuntu.



I do not consider this to be a duplicate question, as none of the other questions of this sort answered it in such a way that solved my problem.







18.04 mouse






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edited yesterday









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asked Dec 1 at 22:51









Sermo

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  • 1




    You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:23










  • Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
    – Sermo
    Dec 1 at 23:24










  • Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:29










  • Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
    – heynnema
    Dec 2 at 3:18










  • Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
    – Sermo
    Dec 2 at 3:26














  • 1




    You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:23










  • Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
    – Sermo
    Dec 1 at 23:24










  • Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
    – guiverc
    Dec 1 at 23:29










  • Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
    – heynnema
    Dec 2 at 3:18










  • Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
    – Sermo
    Dec 2 at 3:26








1




1




You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
– guiverc
Dec 1 at 23:23




You have said you are using the latest version of Ubuntu, which is Ubuntu 18.10 (2018.October release), but have tagged 18.04 (2018.April release) so please confirm you version. I would also suggest adding the command & output of lsusb (list usb devices) to your question (edit it & add there, not as a comment please, and when mouse is attached of course)
– guiverc
Dec 1 at 23:23












Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
– Sermo
Dec 1 at 23:24




Apologies, it is indeed 18.04. I will correct it.
– Sermo
Dec 1 at 23:24












Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
– guiverc
Dec 1 at 23:29




Better yet, if I'm troubleshooting a usb device, I lsusb >before.txt ie. save the list of usb devices to a text file, add the device I want to diagnose, then lsusb >after.txt to get that info, then diff before.txt after.txt to see the differences. (filenames are examples only) This maybe helpful for you for each mouse - confirm it's recognized, and how mouse-device identifies itself to the OS... just a thought
– guiverc
Dec 1 at 23:29












Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
– heynnema
Dec 2 at 3:18




Look at your BIOS settings for USB and see if it's set for legacy. Report back to @heynnema
– heynnema
Dec 2 at 3:18












Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
– Sermo
Dec 2 at 3:26




Yes, it is set to legacy @heynnema
– Sermo
Dec 2 at 3:26















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