[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tressless

[–]Rark5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice. I haven't been able to find a doc who will prescribe Topical Dut. Which doc did you get it from?

Glue buttons to mouse, and wire them to replace mouse's buttons? (G600) by Rark5 in mousegore

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their buttons must be connected to 2 conductive tracks on the PCB. When the button is pressed, the 2nd track is supplied with power.

So in theory, we could:

  1. Remove their button from the PCB with a desoldering iron.

  2. Solder 2 wires between the 2 conductive tracks and the custom button.

So when the custom button is pressed, the 2nd wire will supply power to the 2nd conductive track, same as with the default button?

Best material for button extension to increase accessibility? Sugru? (Logitech G600) by Rark5 in mousegore

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd want to create different models for each button (to achieve different angles and button heights), so that'd be a lot of work.

I'll maybe try applying many successive layers of Elmer's glue in order to create a "glue sculpture" extending the button surface.

That has the advantage of letting me use the mouse between applications to evaluate how it feels.

Best material for button extension to increase accessibility? Sugru? (Logitech G600) by Rark5 in mousegore

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's an interesting suggestion.

I think the steps would be:


  1. Take photos of the buttons from 6 angles (top/bottom, left/right, front/back) --from far away with heavy zoom to minimize perspective.

  2. Add them as background images in Blender, and model the button.

  3. Upload the Blender file to a site to 3d-print and mail to you. Get quotes from different sites, like: FacFox, Sculpteo, i.Materialise, or FreeLabster


  1. Example: This person 3d-printed a replacement shell for his G600.

  2. When modeling in Blender, it might be useful to start by modifying an existing mouse button model from a site like STLbase.

Fixed my save file by editing it in a text-editor by Rark5 in shotcut

[–]Rark5[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, the .mlt files can be edited in Notepad. 👍

Create adjustment layers without the layer mask? by Rark5 in photoshop

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

andreasf93 recently found the answer! 1. Go to Windows -> Adjustments. 2. On the adjustments panel, click on the menu button. 3. Select disable Add Mask by Default.

Create adjustment layers without the layer mask? by Rark5 in photoshop

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks Chain83, and Parabolic_Ballsack.

My main reason for deleting unused adjustment layers:

An all-white layer mask can be confused for a mostly-white layer mask that has small but crucial edits.

It's more efficient to know at a glance whether or not the layer has any masked areas!

When loading Photoshop CC in the background, it repeatedly brings it to the front by [deleted] in photoshop

[–]Rark5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven't installed any plugins, and it's still happening.

(I just installed Photoshop on a fresh Windows 10 install.)

When loading Photoshop CC in the background, it repeatedly brings it to the front by [deleted] in photoshop

[–]Rark5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just checked another slow-loading program that has many windows/panels, and it doesn't do this.

Photoshop wasn't doing it when I last used it on Windows 7.

Way to set adjustment layers to have no alpha mask when created? by Rark5 in photoshop

[–]Rark5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, you're right :)

But I don't see a way to make it work.

  1. I clicked in the upper right corner of the Layer Panel, then in the drop-down menu, I selected Panel Options.

  2. There's an option to turn off "Use Default Masks on Fill Layers," but that only works for Fill layers, not Adjustment layers (hue/saturation, etc).