![disable magicprefs disable magicprefs](https://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/magicprefs-screenshot-300x257.png)
Tracking Speed adds the ability to increase the maximum mouse speed by an extra 200%.Īlso featured is a real-time display of the fingers touching the surface of the mouse that you can enable to test and monitor the way the mouse sees your input. Touch Sensitivity implements a single point control for a number of factors impacting the algorithms of the taps, swipes, pinch and other gestures. It features the ability to bind a variable number of finger clicks, taps, swipes, pinch and other gestures to functions like Middle Click, Hold Down Both Mouse Buttons, Spaces, Expose, Dashboard, Recent Applications, Tweet, Read Tweets, Google Reader etc.
![disable magicprefs disable magicprefs](https://www.softwarecrew.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/CameraMouse200-175.png)
#Disable magicprefs free#
The solution is if you use a hard drive with Time Machine always connected at your Hackintosh, connect to an USB port in the front panel.MagicPrefs is a free application for OS X which aims to improve the functionality and configuration options of the Apple Magic Mouse, Magic Trackpad and the MacBook glass trackpad. In occasions, if you boot with a hard drive connected in the back panel, will freeze. With this, no more random freezes using USB hard drives.
#Disable magicprefs install#
Install your modified IOUSBFamily.kext with KextBeast. Delete the old AppleUSBXHCI.kext and place the new.ĥ. Right click with the mouse, view the content of the packet. Go to S/L/E and copy IOUSBFamily.kext in your Desktop. Mine is an Via VL800, supported by this Kext.Ĥ.
#Disable magicprefs driver#
BE SURE that the Kext it's specific for Yosemite and support the USB driver of your Motherboard. His name is Patched AppleUSBXHCI v710.4.11.ģ. I find an AppleUSBXHCI.kext patched for Yosemite 10.10.2 in other web.
![disable magicprefs disable magicprefs](https://holyfile.com/upload/program5094-4.jpg)
I find a final solution for mi USB3 problem, inspired by this post (#27):ġ. There are 4 things that constitute MagicPrefs on your drive that you need to remove (this is done by moving them to the trash with the Finder or any other file manager or with unix commands via Terminal.app):ġ- the application itself typically /Applications/MagicPrefs.app (you need to quit it first if it is running, for your convenience it quits itself if you remove its pref pane)Ģ- the preference pane of the application ~/Library/PreferencePanes/MagicPrefs.prefPane (you can also delete it directly from System Preferences by clicking "Remove MagicPrefs Preference Pane")ģ- the support directory that typically includes installed plugins under ~/Library/Application Support/MagicPrefs/ (since the files in this directory are loaded by the application they also can not be deleted if it is running)Ĥ- plists of the application at ~/Library/Preferences/, ~/Library/Preferences/.plist and ~/Library/LaunchAgents/Īfter uninstalling MagicPregs i fix the random laggy mouse, but with more testing, random freezes with USB hard disk are back. After uninstalling Magicprefs, no more freezes when i connect my USB hard drives. If you search in the official Apple forums, a lot of freezes in Yosemite are related to the use of Magicprefs. Forget other solutions posted in this forum, like uninstalling the generic USB3 Kext that comes with Multibeast, needed for my GA-H81M-S2H to works fine. But Magicprefs is now a dead application, years without updates. I use Magic Mouse in all my macs in the past, works like a charm. Magicprefs it's a program that added more functions for the Magic Mouse. And affects also real macs running Yosemite. After weeks of searching a solution for random freezes when using USB mass storage devices, more random freezes when i connect other USB components, and laggy Magic mouse if i connect my ASUS BT-400 in the back panel with other components, i found the problem. (Excuse my level of english, i'm not english native) Fix for Yosemite and random freezes with USB ports (see the second post) Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide