Control the Acceleration Speeds of a Mac Mouse & Trackpad Separately

Dec 11, 2012 - 2 Comments

Smooth Cursor lets you independently control acceleration

Have you ever wished your MacBooks built-in trackpad could have a different acceleration curve than an external mouse? If you’re a gamer or digital artist, you probably have. Sure, Mac OS lets you control the tracking speeds separately, but the acceleration curve is a whole other beast.

In you’re unfamiliar with cursor acceleration, we’ve discussed mouse acceleration in the past, explaining it as follows:

By default the mouse drivers count the movement of your mouse and depending on your sensitivity settings, the cursor will then move across the screen by a similar and consistent distance. Mouse acceleration is basically a threshold setting on top of this, so when the mouse is moved past a certain point or at a certain speed, the cursor itself moves more quickly and goes further, thus accelerating the movement speed and rate of the mouse cursor.

That acceleration curve is typically either loved or hated, and a lot of people switching over from the Windows world bemoan the perceived quirky behavior of the Mac mouse. Likewise, a lot of digital artists and gamers really hate the acceleration curves, because it can make precise movements very challenging. Up until now, the only real option was to completely disable acceleration for all input devices after a prior version of Mac OS X changed the way acceleration was controlled, thereby preventing a previous control panel from separating the two. But not anymore!

Now there’s a great little app called Smooth Cursor that lets you control the acceleration speeds of the trackpad and mouse separately on a Mac. You can grab the download from the links below via the app developer:

SmoothCursor works with MacOS Mojave, High Sierra, Sierra, Mac OS X El Capitan, Yosemite, Mac OS X Lion, Mountain Lion onward, and it lets you fine-tune the normal acceleration, linear acceleration, and inverse acceleration, or just disable it completely for either the mouse or trackpad. In other words, you’ll finally be able to keep acceleration on your trackpad, because it makes using the trackpad much faster, but disable it on an external mouse when you need to have precise control over cursor movement, like when drawing or gaming.

Heads up to The Graphic Mac for the great find.

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Posted by: Paul Horowitz in Mac OS, Tips & Tricks

2 Comments

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  1. TonyStark says:

    How can I leave natural scrolling on, yet make the mousewheel scroll the traditional way?

  2. icebreaker says:

    Great app but I don’t know any gamer who uses their Mac for gaming…

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