Unless it is under warranty, then you should contact the manufacturer. NOTE: While the battery may be complicated to get to, it should be replaceable. Should that not be the problem, then check the battery to see if it needs replacing.
![thinkpad red button accidentally hit it thinkpad red button accidentally hit it](https://izzylaif.com/ru/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/The-laptop-does-not-turn-off.jpg)
If it works then, the cord is probably the issue. Accustomed to touch pad users, must be pat touch pad left mouse button, clap two touch pad left mouse button Double-click The way quite familiar, in fact. You may also want to try charging it when the device is off, rather than on. Either try your cord in another device, or try another devices cord in your laptop. If this doesn't help, then test the power cord to see if it is good. Press and hold the "Power" button for 30 seconds.Ĥ. Try the following and see if it will turn on.ģ. Now the cursor is rapidly retreating in the opposite direction as its position at the mechanical centre is being treated as movement in the other direction. If you can't see on the external monitor at all, or the problem occurs on the external monitor as well, then it is probably the graphics card/GPU that is the problem, which may require the motherboard be replaced. You then either hit the maximum deflection limit and have to stop trying or else finish your scrolling and let go of it (and the left-button/whatever that youre also holding down). If you can see fine on the external monitor, then your attached display, or the ribbon cable that connects it, are your problem. Could be the f4 button or a button with two monitors on it, for the external monitor to work. NOTE: You may have to press an "external monitor" button. Connect an external monitor to the laptop. Turn the laptop off (not sleep or hibernate but off).Ģ. If it gives no signs of life at all, try option 2.ġ. Synaptics Pressure Motion Factor (290): 1.000000, 1.If it shows any signs of life (lights, internal sounds, etc.) try option 1. Synaptics Circular Scrolling Trigger (284): 0
![thinkpad red button accidentally hit it thinkpad red button accidentally hit it](https://i2-prod.dailystar.co.uk/incoming/article28089327.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/0_KP-bruise.jpg)
Synaptics Circular Scrolling Distance (283): 0.100000 Synaptics Locked Drags Timeout (279): 5000 Synaptics Edge Motion Speed (275): 1, 349 Synaptics Edge Motion Pressure (274): 30, 160 Synaptics Two-Finger Scrolling (272): 1, 0 Synaptics Scrolling Distance (270): 87, 87 This is the list of the Touchpad (device 12) properties: ~ > xinput -list-props 12ĭevice Accel Constant Deceleration (257): 2.500000ĭevice Accel Velocity Scaling (259): 12.500000 This is the output of xinput on my machine: ~ > xinput Anybody can help me here, or at least point me in the right direction? I assume that it can be achieved with the xinput utility, but as I'm not very familiar with it, I don't know how. What I'm thinking is there should be a way to disable the mouse motion feature of the touchpad but still keep it clickable so I can use it as the mouse buttons for the trackpont. As you can probably imagine, this is not very useful. I can disable the touchpad (in System Settings > Mouse & Touchpad) and use the trackpoint to move the mouse pointer around, but then there is no way to click.
![thinkpad red button accidentally hit it thinkpad red button accidentally hit it](https://images.nztechblog.net/Lenovo-ThinkPad-X1-Carbon-Touch-2-300x225.jpg)
This is a picture of my model (the e531):Īs you can see, there are no buttons. You can see it has a separate buttons above the touchpad which you can use when using the trackpoint. Problem is, there are no dedicated trackpoint buttons on e531. I'd like to use the Trackpoint, because I'm used to it from my previous laptop, but I'd also like to disable the touchpad, to prevent accidentally touching it. This model has both a touchpad and a trackpoint.