

On a hunch, I discovered that the built-in OS X preference pane Mouse > Tracking Speed may be intended to work alongside LGS. * No acceleration controls, just DPI and polling speed. This bug was discussed several months ago on the Logitech forums, and acknowledged. There is a workaround to return all of a profile's settings to defaults-then, even though the wheel tilt areas don't light up when moused over, at least the assignments are floating in mid-air, and you can right-click on those to re-assign. * LGS didn't display the G700s' left/right mouse-wheel tilt in the UI, so nothing could be assigned. It can be hidden in your Dock after booting, but if you ever need to launch LGS to adjust something, there will be a giant "G" sitting in the Dock until you reboot again. So you must have LGS running all the time. kext files, if you quit LGS, custom mouse buttons stop working. * Even though LGS installs a couple of extension. So I temporarily put Steermouse away and gave this a shot, since LGS "takes over" any Logitech hardware that it sees.

I wanted to buy a Logitech G710+ mechanical keyboard, which necessitated using Logitech Gaming Software (LGS) to access the extra keys. It also enables some cool features on that mouse, not accessible otherwise.īut there are still problems.

I managed to get everything I needed mapped onto my Logitech G700s mouse, including a Shift-Right-Click using the Macro editor. The overall design is much more ambitious, and it has handy features like being able to copy an app profile and a GUI of the hardware you're working with.
