(In reply to comment #2)
> Such legacy hardware support can actually be quite important from an
> accessibility point of view. Special input devices often use legacy connects (I
> have a serial mouse for example). Users of these devices may not be able to
> simply go out and by a USB replacement. It may be very expensive (ie. $1000), or
> may not be available at all.
Have you tested if your serial mouse is detected correctly? This is supposed to
work in general, and I thought this was a hardware-specific problem...
(In reply to comment #2)
> Such legacy hardware support can actually be quite important from an
> accessibility point of view. Special input devices often use legacy connects (I
> have a serial mouse for example). Users of these devices may not be able to
> simply go out and by a USB replacement. It may be very expensive (ie. $1000), or
> may not be available at all.
Have you tested if your serial mouse is detected correctly? This is supposed to
work in general, and I thought this was a hardware-specific problem...