Tales of a Touchpad Kindergartener

David777

Well-known Member
Location
Silicon Valley
Since my Dell XPS-15 laptop running Windows 10 has been unusable the last 13 days as the Master Boot Record became stuck in Write protect Mode, this long time Mouse user has been using a cheap Windows 11 PC with a hated Touchpad (to me) using it like a kindergartener with most gestures turned off using the ARROW keys with SHIFT. (Will need to bring it down to a PC repair service with software that may be able to fix it as my new HP desktop won't arrive for another 2 weeks.)

So today, annoyingly to myself, watched some Youtube tutorials on Touchpad basics. No wonder I've had trouble. Years ago when I was first faced with these devices trying to (impatiently) figure out how some gestures are performed was annoyed because a fair amount of what I read fails say to fully explain when one is supposed to hold a finger down on a touchpad or lift it up as though one is supposed to already intuitively understand such. For example pinhead created directions might state, "Within text intending to SELECT with one finger, tap twice then drag one's finger to a the end of a selection."

More correctly verbosely would be, "Within text intending to SELECT with one finger, tap twice while holding the finger down on the second tap, then without lifting the finger move that finger to the end of the intended selection, and then lift up the finger to end the selection process."

Holding the finger down without accidentally slightly lifting it up is not something I've yet been able to perform consistently so often need to repeat. I'll get better in the next two weeks.

In my tech career, I often wore a hat writing test procedures and process documents. Even numbers of highly educated, intelligent engineers are lousy at writing procedures for others and product documents as they can't seem to understand the perspectives of unfamiliar others. Especially consumer products of smaller companies are too often full of such poor documentation that fails to fully, clearly, communicate how to perform whatever. One reason is because such documentation is often proof read by those that already understand subtle actions that those completely unfamiliar won't. School teachers usually become very good at such because they are taught to communicate so and if not, will soon learn if what they instruct doesn't register with students.

What I did like this morning was how Yahoo Search AI that I am increasingly enjoying upon asking why so many of we older Mouse users had trouble with Touchpads, spit out the below learning to hate laptops that always use such input devices:
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Familiarity with Traditional Input Devices
Older users often have extensive experience with mice, making them comfortable and efficient with traditional navigation methods.
Touchpad gestures can feel unfamiliar and unintuitive, leading to frustration.

Precision and Control
Mice typically offer greater precision for tasks like graphic design or gaming, which touchpads may struggle to replicate.
Users may find it challenging to execute gestures accurately, resulting in errors.

Accidental Gestures
Touchpads can register unintended gestures, causing disruptions during work.
Users may inadvertently trigger actions like scrolling or zooming, which can be annoying.

Learning Curve
Touchpad gestures often require a learning period, which some older users may be reluctant to invest in.
The complexity of multiple gestures can overwhelm users who prefer straightforward navigation.

Physical Limitations
Some older users may have physical limitations that make using a touchpad less comfortable than a mouse.
The tactile feedback of a mouse can be more satisfying and easier to control for those with dexterity issues.
 
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I don't do any exotic operations with the touch-pad, just move the pointer around in the GUI with the left side of the touchpad.. I press the Right corner to Right click to access the available functions.

I'm curious about your "Master Boot Record became stuck in Write protect Mode" issue. Can you enter the BIOS? Attached is a pic of the BIOS for my Dell_Inspiron_15_7657, there are some features- maintenance, support assist,system resolution, restore settings.

Here is an article on a Microsoft site that sounds the same as you situation: Stuck in MBR in UEFI
The MS moderator's suggestion:

"Welcome to the Microsoft Community.

It sounds like you got stuck at Stuck in MBR in UEFI when booting your Windows 10. Sorry to hear this.

According to your description, the situation looks quite complicated. However, in order to ensure the integrity of the system, it is recommended that you try to restore the BIOS first. If that succeeds, it is strongly recommended that you enter the system first and back all files up to avoid unnecessary data loss.

I hope this helps, and feel free to reach back if you need further assistance.

Best regards
| Lynn Sun Microsoft Community Support Specialist"
 

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I'm curious about your "Master Boot Record became stuck in Write protect Mode" issue. Can you enter the BIOS? Attached is a pic of the BIOS for my Dell_Inspiron_15_7657, there are some features- maintenance, support assist,system resolution, restore settings. Here is an article on a Microsoft site that sounds the same as you situation: Stuck in MBR in UEFI. The MS moderator's suggestion:

"Welcome to the Microsoft Community. It sounds like you got stuck at Stuck in MBR in UEFI when booting your Windows 10. Sorry to hear this.
According to your description, the situation looks quite complicated. However, in order to ensure the integrity of the system, it is recommended that you try to restore the BIOS first. If that succeeds, it is strongly recommended that you enter the system first and back all files up to avoid unnecessary data loss.
I hope this helps, and feel free to reach back if you need further assistance.
Best regards
| Lynn Sun Microsoft Community Support Specialist"

After I got home from surgery with modest pain and meds, was a reason I was up most of that night with only 2 hours sleep. Used my smartphone screen to web search for processes to go through possibilities. The expensive Dell laptop upon power up or an attempt to restore, automated most of the repair functions then consistently declared "No Bootable drive found". From the advanced BIOS repair boot options I manually from Command Prompts ran both chkdsk /f and diskpart commands. Chkdsk /f/r was unavailable due to being stuck in Write Protect mode even after running diskpart commands to set Write Protect off directly.

Going through the motions, I ran "chkdisk /f c:" twice each time for about 20 hours that did complete and displayed several HD memory errors some of which were attribute errors in the MBR. Did use a camera to capture the screen outputs. I don't think I have bad physical media just corrupted file locations. When I SHUTDOWN the system in order to not be late for my surgery the system had unexpectedly already taken 20 minutes to shutdown that I suspected was because Microsoft was actually doing a hidden update in the background that is often how it is sometimes done on Windows 10 systems, admins loath. Pi$$ed off and running late, just forced whatever using the Power Off switch that normally is not risky but potentially can corrupt.

Tomorrow will create a txt file listing of my screen captures and add some info on what I'd already done then email a few local PC repair services that have software to hopefully rebuild the MBR files manually. Something even a tech savvy person ought leave to experienced repair experts. My important data is backed up on two sets of 4tb WD hard drives. At most would just lose some trivial ski season GoPro videos and minor logs. The painful loss will be I had Adobe Photoshop CSR6 legally on the drive I need for graphics work. Adobe helped me 2 years ago move the app license to the laptop from an old desktop. Other graphic programs too that would just be a tedious nuisance to reinstall.

But doubt they will do so another time because that is the only leverage they have to force we old users into their monthly $34 subscription model from the old $599 lifetime product. If the drive remains unrepairable, I could reformat the drive and do a fresh OS reinstall but that would remove all my graphics software. One way or another minus actual physical media damage, the laptop will run again. But if I have to do the latter have no need to hurry since am using this Windows 11 toy and my just ordered HP Omen is being built.
 
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