It's happened across office moves (in the same building), so I'm less inclined to believe that it's the location of the receiver specifically. Since my company creates wireless devices, we've just got a ton of interference all the time (I'd estimate that at any given point in time we have around 100 APs talking in a 100 yard radius. I've got four in my office, not to mention the four stations).

Also it's fine most of the time ... when I replace the batteries, it chooses a new channel often, and is borked until I get it to move to a clear channel, and then it works fine for another month or two until the batteries die.

Funny enough ... the keyboard just works ... I've not changed the batteries in two years, and never had interference problems ... hooray for super low-bandwidth applications :)

Cheers,

Lee

On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 1:31 PM, Richard Klein <richspk@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 1:19 PM, Lee Keyser-Allen <frozbiz@gmail.com> wrote:
> FWIW, I don't believe that this (bizzare mouse behavior) is a Linux issue.
>
> I have a wireless logitech keyboard/mouse at work hooked up to a thinkpad
> running XP, and find that sometimes the mouse goes haywire. It seems to be
> due to wireless interference (there's a crapload of that in my office).

Have you tried relocating the receiver?

--
Rich
Sent from Framingham, Massachusetts, United States
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--
Lee Keyser-Allen
(lkeyser@alum.wpi.edu)