Author: Xiao
More and more web browsers are now equipped with "mouse gestures). It enables users to go online, as long as the right mouse button is not placed, and can achieve a predetermined back, forward, refresh, shut down window, and other common operations.
This function of running trajectories using mouse runs quickly, not only can fully excavate the potential of the mouse, but also bring a lot of fun to the user's online surf. Unfortunately, it is, the most widely used IE browser does not have the practical function of "mouse gesture".
However, if you don't always throw away IE in your hand, you want to experience the coolest "mouse gesture" function, then download the free software SmartgeSture Lite, use it to set a variety of "gestures" to help you apply the arm.
[Click now to download SmartgeSture Lite]
After installing and running SmartgeSture Lite, you can see that the left window will find several default "mouse gestures" on the main interface, each gesture, each gesture, can be set on the right setting column.
For example, if the user wants to open the specified web page with a certain gesture, you can select the appropriate "gesture" from the "Gestures" menu, then select or cancel "Left" in the "Button Pressed" column. "Right" to determine if you need to hold a mouse button while executing the Mouse Gesture. Then, in the "Actions" column, select the type of action that you need to "gesture" from the "Action Type" menu. In the "Open" space, enter the URL you want to open, and finally click on the green painted button to add the URL to the following action list (as shown in Figure 1). At this time, you can make a corresponding action according to the set "Gesture". Is it found that the system will immediately open the IE browser and enter your set web page!
Figure 1 Add URL list
SmartgeSture Lite's built-in "minimize all" and "maximize all" gestures can be used to minimize or maximize the window being browsed. Therefore, when you use IE to browse the webpage, you want to maximize or minimize the IE window, just make the specified mouse gesture to achieve the purpose. Of course, you can also choose other gestures in the "Gestures" drop-down list (Figure 2).
In fact, "Gestures" can also activate many of Windows conventional operations (such as copy, cut, and paste, open search window, etc.) through mouse gestures. You only need to select "Generate Keystrokes" in "Action Type", select the name of the action name that you want to activate by the mouse gesture in "Basic Windows Keystrokes" below, and then add the hotkey to the next to the action list.
Figure 2 Replace the mouse gesture list