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#21
Lady F I saw your earlier thread that derekimo just posted and I now know you have a synaptic touchpad.
If you don't have the setting to disable the touch pad in "mouse properties" you will have to use a vista driver to get it. Lenovo took it out for 7. I'm looking for it, but haven't found it yet.
The only other option I've found is:start menu > run > type: regedit [enter]
browse: hklm\software\microsoft\windows\currentversion\run
find entries starting with "syn" as this relates to the synaptics touchpad. delete those entries.
you will not longer be able to use the tap function until u re-install the driver.
Source, 3rd post down: How to disable the touchpad on my Lenovo Ideapad G... - Lenovo Community
Have you any experience with task scheduler? I looked at it briefly but it doesn't look promising.
These two touch on it:
c# - How to simulate pressing Fn+F6? - Stack Overflow
This one's for 32bit
Fn+F6 sendkey
This looks promising:
http://crunchbang.org/forums/viewtopic.php?pid=259796
Sadly, I don't understand any of it.
Same here. I would say it was Greek to me but I know a handful of words in Greek.
With every solution I've seen to writing a script the problem is the Fn key, it is hardware supported and difficult to write for.
The only thing I can think of is similar to PooMan's suggestion of removing the cable connector. You need to isolate the pad.
You'll need a piece of hard, thin plastic like an expired credit or gift card. Gift card preferably, because it won't have the embossing on it and no bank numbers. Then fasten it over top the touch pad, in your case, permanently.
You could use small dabs of hot glue, an epoxy, the thinnest double-sided tape you can find.
After looking at that tape maybe even several layers of FRYS.com*|*Bazic clear packing tape
This might even work: FRYS.com*|*Lamitek Usa Usually one side is completely sticky just center it up, lay it down, and stick it!