Hot on the heels of an initial public beta released last week, Alessandro Levi Montalcini has announced the release of USB Overdrive beta 2 for Mac OS X.
USB Overdrive is a universal USB driver. The software recognizes input from USB devices like mice, trackballs, joysticks and gamepads. Support in this beta version is limited to mice and trackballs only, but the rest are coming soon. With USB Overdrive, you can program your input devices to emulate the keyboard, execute complex macros, support control-clicking, scrolling and more.
The developer advised that the final version of USB Overdrive X will be distributed as shareware; users who registered the original version after Mac OS X's release will be entitled to a free upgrade, and users who registered before then will be entitled to a reduced-cost upgrade.
USB Overdrive is a macOS device driver that handles any USB or Bluetooth mouse, keyboard, trackball, joystick, gamepad or gaming device from any manufacturer and lets you configure it either globally or for specific applications. USB Overdrive reads all kinds of wheels, buttons, keys, switches and controls and assigns them to useful actions like clicking, typing, scrolling, launching, opening documents and so forth. USB Overdrive 1.4 (Mac abandonware from 2003) To date, Macintosh Repository served 1444277 old Mac files, totaling more than 287186.5GB!
Changes in USB Overdrive beta 2 include:
USB Overdrive is distributed as shareware. Registration costs US$20.
Mac Os Versions
At a Glance
Expert's Rating
Cons
Our Verdict
For the past decade, Alessandro Levi Montalcini's USB Overdrive has let Mac users control and customize their USB mice, keyboards, and gaming devices (and, more recently, Bluetooth mice). USB Overdrive generally provides more and finer-grained options than the software included with such peripherals, and it often allows Mac users to take advantage of hardware that has no official Mac support.
The latest version, USB Overdrive 3, functions as a 32- or 64-bit System Preferences pane and works in Tiger, Leopard, and Snow Leopard. With the software, you can do things such as configure mouse button functionality for specific applications (the right button can act as a double-click in the Finder but as a Save button in BBEdit, for example); turn a wired or wireless Mighty Mouse into a left-handed device; or use the special media keys on many third-party keyboards without installing that device's software.
For my tests, I removed Logitech's mouse and keyboard software and installed USB Overdrive. I then programmed it for use with my Logitech diNovo keyboard Mac edition () and MX1100 mouse (). Tetrominoes mac os.
I had few problems with the diNovo keyboard, however. As with many keyboards, the diNovo Edge has special keys for functions such as display brightness, Expose, Dashboard, iTunes playback, volume, and application launching. With Logitech's drivers installed, those keys functioned properly. But with USB Overdrive, some keys worked and others didn't. The developer explains that USB Overdrive generally takes over sections of keyboards (interfaces) that it can see, rather than individual keys, and that many vendors use non-standard or hidden code for their buttons. He has chosen not to try and support individual devices that don't conform to regular human interface device (HID) guidelines. USB Overdrive does, however, include some workarounds for specific devices.
How do you know if a key is supported? When the USB Overdrive preference pane is open, clicking on a button adds it to the list of buttons that you can control. If you click on a button and nothing happens, then USB Overdrive can't handle it. In the case of my keyboard, the keyboard's special commands overlay the F1 to F19 keys, so I could still activate the keyboard's built-in brightness controls, for example, by pressing the fn key along with F1 or F2 (as defined in OS X's Keyboard preference pane).
USB Overdrive is distributed as shareware. Registration costs US$20.
Mac Os Versions
At a Glance
Expert's Rating
Cons
Our Verdict
For the past decade, Alessandro Levi Montalcini's USB Overdrive has let Mac users control and customize their USB mice, keyboards, and gaming devices (and, more recently, Bluetooth mice). USB Overdrive generally provides more and finer-grained options than the software included with such peripherals, and it often allows Mac users to take advantage of hardware that has no official Mac support.
The latest version, USB Overdrive 3, functions as a 32- or 64-bit System Preferences pane and works in Tiger, Leopard, and Snow Leopard. With the software, you can do things such as configure mouse button functionality for specific applications (the right button can act as a double-click in the Finder but as a Save button in BBEdit, for example); turn a wired or wireless Mighty Mouse into a left-handed device; or use the special media keys on many third-party keyboards without installing that device's software.
For my tests, I removed Logitech's mouse and keyboard software and installed USB Overdrive. I then programmed it for use with my Logitech diNovo keyboard Mac edition () and MX1100 mouse (). Tetrominoes mac os.
I had few problems with the diNovo keyboard, however. As with many keyboards, the diNovo Edge has special keys for functions such as display brightness, Expose, Dashboard, iTunes playback, volume, and application launching. With Logitech's drivers installed, those keys functioned properly. But with USB Overdrive, some keys worked and others didn't. The developer explains that USB Overdrive generally takes over sections of keyboards (interfaces) that it can see, rather than individual keys, and that many vendors use non-standard or hidden code for their buttons. He has chosen not to try and support individual devices that don't conform to regular human interface device (HID) guidelines. USB Overdrive does, however, include some workarounds for specific devices.
How do you know if a key is supported? When the USB Overdrive preference pane is open, clicking on a button adds it to the list of buttons that you can control. If you click on a button and nothing happens, then USB Overdrive can't handle it. In the case of my keyboard, the keyboard's special commands overlay the F1 to F19 keys, so I could still activate the keyboard's built-in brightness controls, for example, by pressing the fn key along with F1 or F2 (as defined in OS X's Keyboard preference pane).
USB Overdrive's interface can also be a little tricky to figure out. Cradle of rome mac os. The four options under the Settings tab are Any Mouse, Any Application; Any Gaming, Any Application; Any Keyboard, Any Application; and Any Other, Any Application. As you might guess, those controls are global. To create device- or application-specific controls, you need to choose the New Duplicate Settings command to copy those settings to a new set and then assign that set to a particular device or application. Once you do so, you have complete control over your devices. Gem hunt (mattdaly) mac os. Interestingly, keyboard configurations don't show up under the Keyboard option, but rather under Mouse and Other.
Existing USB Overdrive users (the previous version was called 10.4.8) should take note that version 3 can't read preferences from older versions. So if you have lots of application- or device-specific settings, you'll need to recreate them in the new version. But USB Overdrive 3 can now import and export its settings, so at least you'll be able to move them from one Mac to another.
Neon Overdrive Mac Os X
Despite its limitations, however, USB Overdrive offers Mac users with sophisticated button control that can reduce clicks and speed up productivity. And in my time using it, I've found it to be much more stable than any version of Logitech's own software, which has caused problems for me for years.