Hi James,
Actually, I find that the elderly folks are the best learners, they love to
learn and are less resistant to "new" things than those in middle age who
are generally resist any change in their routine.
Check the control panel/mouse options. If the proper driver set is
installed, you should be able to set each button on the mouse (including the
wheel) to do the same thing (act like the left click button). If the options
are not there, check with the manufacturer for a mouse driver update.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers aka "Nutcase" MS-MVP - Win9x
Windows isn't rocket science! That's my other hobby!
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Associate Expert - WinXP - Expert Zone
www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone
Win98 Help -
www.rickrogers.org
"James Bond" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:Xns943826BFF2Djbonduniversalexport@216.168.3.30...
> Hello. My very elderly father has decided to buy his first computer.
> Due to his age (and I suspect a lack of playing pong as a kid like I did)
> he lacks the manual dexterity to use a mouse well. He frequently
> accidentally hits the right button instead of the left. This, of course
> causes a context menu to appear which greatly confuses him (that may seem
> strange to some of you, but try to envision how steep the learning curve
> is for a 80+ year old person who has *never* used a computer before). He
> also occasionally hits the middle button (wheel) also creating confusing
> effects for him.
>
> Now he is slowly getting better with practice, but the frustration level
> is high for him, threatening to ruin the whole thing for him. Since he
> is not really doing anything that requires him to use the right button, I
> would like to simply disable it, or perhaps even better, make it operate
> the same as the left button. But I cannot figure out how to do that. I
> was wondering if there was a registry hack that could do that. Any help
> or suggestions for alternate solutions would be greatly appreciated.
>
> TIA
>
> James