![]() This new feature is one of the many ways in which Apple is bringing iOS concepts to OS X. That might sound weird but if you’re an iOS user you have already witnessed this “reversal” in the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch where gesturing up the screen brings you down and visa versa. But with OS X Lion, scrolling up will bring you down the page, while scrolling up will bring you down. We are accustomed to scrolling up to go up, and scrolling down to move down a web page or app with our mouse. It’s a semi-complicated and maybe alien concept, so bear with me… reverse scrolling is basically where you scroll with your mouse (or trackpad), but in reverse. ![]() Whether you’re using OS X 10.7 Lion, 10.8 Mountain Lion, 10.9 Mavericks, 10.10 Yosemite, 10.11 El Capitan, or the forthcoming macOS Sierra, that’s all you need to do to make your scroll wheel function as it does on every Windows computer, every Linux computer, and every Mac running OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard or earlier.When OS X Lion finally arrives, it will bring with it one fairly major change Reverse Scrolling. Click on the checkbox to change scroll direction from what Apple thinks is natural to what the rest of us know is normal. Open System Preferences, and then double-click Mouse. Return to Normal ScrollingĪt least Apple gave us the option of turning off the so-called natural scrolling. ![]() Scroll wheel action was established in 1995, and Apple has no right to reverse standard scroll wheel behavior by default. Mouse direction was established with the Apple Lisa in 1983, if not prior to that with the Xerox Star. It would be the same as Apple deciding to give us natural mousing so that moving the mouse to the right would make the screen move left and moving the mouse away from the user would scroll down. There is no scroll wheel on the iPhone or iPad, and to treat the action of a scroll wheel like the action of your finger or stylus on the screen is not intuitive. To add insult to injury for those who object to the change, Apple would call this backwards behavior Natural Scrolling. After all, this is the was scrolling works on your iPhone, iPad, or Android device. Prior to the release of OS X 10.7 Lion in 2011, Apple decided that this was unnatural behavior – and that “natural” scroll wheel behavior would be the opposite of what it had been throughout the computer industry for over 15 years. Some Logitech and Microsoft keyboards had scroll wheels, which could be a real convenience. Without third-party drivers, the scroll wheel wouldn’t function, since the Classic Mac OS only supported a single mouse button natively – and nothing beyond that. When Macs got USB ports, Mac users suddenly had a lot of choices in multi-button mice, with and without scroll wheels. If you rolled the scroll wheel away from you, the contents of the window would scroll down. If you rolled it toward you, whatever was in the window would scroll up. ![]() (This was also one of the first optical mice.)įrom the start, every scroll wheel worked the same way. The scroll wheel became popular when the Microsoft IntelliMouse shipped in 1996. However, PCs had them starting in 1995 with the Genius EasyScroll Mouse, also marketed by Mouse Systems (right). Until Apple introduced the original iMac in 1998, Macs used ADB to connect a mouse and keyboard to the computer, and to the best of my knowledge nobody ever made an ADB mouse with a scroll wheel. The closest they ever came was the scroll ball in the Apple Mighty Mouse. In fact, although every version of Mac OS X includes support for a scroll wheel, no Apple mouse has ever had a scroll wheel.
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