Disable Control Click In Games Mac

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When it comes to using a mouse, everyone is different. Some like fast double-clicking, others like natural scrolling. Maybe you prefer a traditional button mouse to Apple's Magic Mouse. Maybe you want to use right-clicking again. Whatever your preferences are, you can customize them to suit you better. Here's how.

How to change the scroll direction, right-click, and tracking speed of your mouse on a Mac

The Mac operating system makes it possible for you to make adjustments to the basic actions on your mouse with just a few simple steps.

  1. Click the Apple icon in the upper-left corner of your screen.
  2. Select System Preferences.. from the dropdown menu.

  3. Click on Mouse in the System Preferences window.
  4. Click on Point & Click.

  5. Tick the box for Scrolling direction: natural to make the mouse scroll the same direction that your finger moves.
  6. Tick the box for Secondary click to enable right-clicking.

  7. Click the arrow below Secondary Click to choose whether you use the right or left side of the mouse to trigger secondary clicking.

    Note: you cannot change the secondary clicking side on a non-Apple mouse.

  8. Game clients for mac pro. Drag the Tracking Speed slider left or right to increase or decrease the speed at which your mouse pointer moves across the screen.

How to change the speed of double-clicking your mouse on a Mac

If you are a fast mover, you may sometimes accidentally trigger double-clicking when you didn't mean to. You can change how fast or slow you need to click a second time to trigger double-clicking on the Mac operating system.

  1. Click the Apple icon in the upper-left corner of your screen.
  2. Select System Preferences.. from the dropdown menu.

  3. Click on Accessibility in the System Preferences window.
  4. Scroll down and select Mouse & Trackpad from the menu on the left side of the Accessibility window.
  5. Drag the Double-click speed slider to the right or left to increase or decrease how fast you must click the mouse to trigger the double-click feature.

    Note: At its slowest, you can wait as long as four seconds between clicks to trigger double-clicking.

  6. Tick the box for Spring-loading delay to enable the feature that opens a folder when you hover over it with a file.

    Note: This feature is usually enabled by default.

  7. Drag the Spring-loading delay slider right or left to increase or decrease how long you have to hover over a folder with a file before it opens.

How to change the scrolling speed of your mouse on a Mac

  1. Click the Apple icon in the upper-left corner of your screen.
  2. Select System Preferences.. from the dropdown menu.

  3. Click on Accessibility in the System Preferences window.
  4. Scroll down and select Mouse & Trackpad from the menu on the left side of the Accessibility window.

  5. Click on Mouse Options
  6. Drag the Scrolling speed slider to the right or left to speed up or slow down how fast you can scroll down on a page.
  7. Click OK to exit.

How to change the gestures of your Magic Mouse on a Mac

  1. Click the Apple icon in the upper-left corner of your screen.
  2. Select System Preferences.. from the dropdown menu.

  3. Click on Mouse in the System Preferences window.
  4. Click on Point & Click.
  5. Tick the box for Smart zoom to enable the ability to double-tap the Magic Mouse to zoom in a window.
  6. Click on More Gestures.
  7. Tick the box for Swipe between pages to use your finger to swipe or scroll left and right on the Magic Mouse.
  8. Click the arrow below Swipe Between Pages to choose whether you scroll left and right with one finger, swipe left and right with two fingers, or swipe left and right with one or two fingers.

  9. Tick the box for Swipe between full-screen apps to enable the ability to swipe left or right to switch from one full-screen to another.
  10. Tick the box for Mission Control to enable the ability to lightly tap the Magic Mouse to call up Mission Control.

Any questions?

Do you have any questions about how to change the mouse settings on your Mac? Let us know in the comments and we'll answer them for you.

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Meeting policies are used to control the features that are available to meeting participants for meetings that are scheduled by users in your organization. After you create a policy and make your changes, you can then assign users to the policy. You manage meeting policies in the Microsoft Teams admin center or by using PowerShell.

You can implement policies in the following ways, which affect the meeting experience for users before a meeting starts, during a meeting, or after a meeting.

Implementation typeDescription
Per-organizerWhen you implement a per-organizer policy, all meeting participants inherit the policy of the organizer. For example, Automatically admit people is a per-organizer policy and controls whether users join the meeting directly or wait in the lobby for meetings scheduled by the user who is assigned the policy.
Per-userWhen you implement a per-user policy, only the per-user policy applies to restrict certain features for the organizer and/or meeting participants. For example, Allow Meet now in channels is a per-user policy.
Per-organizer and per-userWhen you implement a combination of a per-organizer and per-user policy, certain features are restricted for meeting participants based on their policy and the organizer's policy. For example, Allow cloud recording is a per-organizer and per-user policy. Turn on this setting to allow the meeting organizer and participants to start and stop a recording.

By default, a policy named Global (Org-wide default) is created. All users in your organization are assigned the Global meeting policy by default. You can either make changes to it or create one or more custom policies and assign users to them. Users will get the Global policy unless you create and assign a custom policy. When you create a custom policy, you can allow or prevent certain features from being available to your users, and then assign it to one or more users who will have the settings applied to them.

Change or create a meeting policy

To change or create a meeting policy, go to the Microsoft Teams admin center > Meetings > Meeting policies. Select a policy from the list or select Add. If you're creating a new policy, add a name and description. The name can't contain special characters or be longer than 64 characters. Choose your settings, and then select Save.

For example, say you have a bunch of users and you want to limit the amount of bandwidth that their meeting would require. You would create a new custom policy named 'Limited bandwidth' and disable the following settings:

Under Audio & video:

  • Turn off Allow cloud recording.
  • Turn off Allow IP video.

Under Content sharing:

  • Disable screen sharing mode.
  • Turn off Allow whiteboard.
  • Turn off Allow shared notes.

Then assign the policy to the users.

Note

A user can be assigned only one meeting policy at a time.

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Assign a meeting policy to users

  1. In the left navigation of the Microsoft Teams admin center, go to Users, and then click the user.
  2. Select the user by clicking to the left of the user name, and then click Edit settings.
  3. Under Meeting policy, select the policy you want to assign, and then click Apply.

To assign a policy to multiple users at a time, see Edit Teams user settings in bulk.

Or, you can also do the following:

  1. In the left navigation of the Microsoft Teams admin center, go to Meetings > Meeting policies.
  2. Select the policy by clicking to the left of the policy name.
  3. Select Manage users.
  4. In the Manage users pane, search for the user by display name or by user name, select the name, and then select Add. Repeat this step for each user that you want to add.
  5. After you finish adding users, select Save.

Note

You can't delete a policy if users are assigned to it. You must first assign a different policy to all affected users, and then you can delete the original policy.

Meeting policy settings

When you select an existing policy on the Meeting policies page or select Add to add a new policy, you can configure settings for the following.

Meeting policy settings - General

Allow Meet now in channels

This is a per-user policy and applies before a meeting starts. This setting controls whether a user can start an ad hoc meeting in a Teams channel. If you turn this on, when a user posts a message in a Teams channel, the user can click Meet now under the compose box to start an ad hoc meeting in the channel.

Allow the Outlook add-in

This is a per-user policy and applies before a meeting starts. This setting controls whether Teams meetings can be scheduled from within Outlook (Windows, Mac, web, and mobile).

If you turn this off, users are unable to schedule Teams meetings when they create a new meeting in Outlook. For example, in Outlook on Windows, the New Teams Meeting option won't show up in the ribbon.

Allow channel meeting scheduling

This is a per-user policy and applies before a meeting starts. This setting controls whether users can schedule a meeting in a Teams channel. If you turn this off, the Schedule a meeting option won't be available to the user when they start a meeting in a Teams channel and the Add channel option is disabled for users in Teams.

Allow scheduling private meetings

This is a per-user policy and applies before a meeting starts. This setting controls whether users can schedule private meetings in Teams. A meeting is private when it's not published to a channel in a team.

Note that if you turn off Allow scheduling private meetings and Allow channel meeting scheduling, the Add required attendees and Add channel options are disabled for users in Teams.

Meeting policy settings - Audio & video

Allow transcription

This is a combination of a per-organizer and per-user policy. This setting controls whether captions and transcription features are available during playback of meeting recordings. If you turn this off, the Search and CC options won't be available during playback of a meeting recording. The person who started the recording needs this setting turned on so that the recording also includes transcription.

Note that transcription for recorded meetings is currently only supported for users who have the language in Teams set to English and when English is spoken in the meeting.

Allow cloud recording

This is a combination of a per-organizer and per-user policy. This setting controls whether this user's meetings can be recorded. The recording can be started by the meeting organizer or by another meeting participant if the policy setting is turned on for the participant and if they're an authenticated user from the same organization.

People outside your organization, such as federated and anonymous users, can't start the recording. Guest users can't start or stop the recording.

Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyAllow cloud recording
DanielaGlobalFalse
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyTrue
John (external user)Not applicableNot applicable

Meetings organized by Daniela can't be recorded and Amanda, who has the policy setting enabled, can't record meetings organized by Daniela. Meetings organized by Amanda can be recorded, however, Daniela, who has the policy setting disabled and John who is an external user, can't record meetings organized by Amanda.

To learn more about cloud meeting recording, see Teams cloud meeting recording.

Allow IP video

This is a combination of a per-organizer and per-user policy. Video is a key component to meetings. In some organizations, admins might want more control over which users’ meetings have video. This setting controls whether video can be turned on in meetings hosted by a user and in 1:1 calls and group calls started by a user. Meetings organized by a user who has this policy enabled, allow video sharing in the meeting by the meeting participants, if the meeting participants also have the policy enabled. Meeting participants who don't have any policies assigned (for example, anonymous and federated participants) inherit the policy of the meeting organizer.

Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyAllow IP Video
DanielaGlobalTrue
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyFalse

Meetings hosted by Daniela allow video to be turned on. Daniela can join the meeting and turn on video. Amanda can't turn on video in Daniela's meeting because Amanda’s policy is set to not allow video. Amanda can see videos shared by other participants in the meeting.

In meetings hosted by Amanda, no one can turn on video, regardless of the video policy assigned to them. This means Daniela can't turn on video in Amanda’s meetings.

If Daniela calls Amanda with video on, Amanda can answer the call with audio only. When the call is connected, Amanda can see Daniela’s video, but can't turn on video. If Amanda calls Daniela, Daniela can answer the call with video and audio. When the call is connected, Daniela can turn on or turn off her video, as needed.

Media bit rate (KBs)

This is a per-user policy. This setting determines the media bit rate for audio, video, and video-based app sharing transmissions in calls and meetings for the user. It's applied to both the uplink and downlink media traversal for users in the call or meeting. This setting gives you granular control over managing bandwidth in your organization. Depending on the meetings scenarios required by users, we recommend having enough bandwidth in place for a good quality experience. The minimum value is 30 Kbps and the maximum value depends on the meeting scenario. To learn more about the minimum recommended bandwidth for good quality meetings, calls, and live events in Teams, see Bandwidth requirements.

If there isn’t enough bandwidth for a meeting, participants see a message that indicates poor network quality.

For meetings that need the highest quality video experience, such as CEO board meetings and Teams live events, we recommend you set the bandwidth to 10 Mbps. Even when the maximum experience is set, the Teams media stack adapts to low bandwidth conditions when certain network conditions are detected, depending on the scenario.

Meeting policy settings - Content sharing

Screen sharing mode

This is a combination of a per-organizer and per-user policy. This setting controls whether desktop and/or window sharing is allowed in the user's meeting. Meeting participants who don't have any policies assigned (for example, anonymous, guest, B2B, and federated participants) inherit the policy of the meeting organizer.

Setting valueBehavior
Entire screenFull desktop sharing and application sharing is allowed in the meeting
Single applicationApplication sharing is allowed in the meeting
DisabledScreen sharing and application sharing turned off in the meeting.

Free dating sim games for mac pc. Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyScreen sharing mode
DanielaGlobalEntire screen
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyDisabled

Meetings hosted by Daniela allow meeting participants to share their entire screen or a specific application. If Amanda joins Daniela’s meeting, Amanda can't share her screen or a specific application as her policy setting is disabled. In meetings hosted by Amanda, no one is allowed to share their screen or a single application, regardless of the screen sharing mode policy assigned to them. This means that Daniela can't share her screen or a single application in Amanda’s meetings.

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Currently, users can't play video or share their screen in a Teams meeting if they're using Google Chrome.

Allow a participant to give or request control

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This is a per-user policy. This setting controls whether the user can give control of the shared desktop or window to other meeting participants. To give control, hover over the top of the screen.

If this setting is turned on for the user, the Give Control option is displayed in the top bar in a sharing session.

If the settings is turned off for the user, the Give Control option isn't available.

Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyAllow participant to give or request control
DanielaGlobalTrue
BabekLocation1MeetingPolicyFalse

Daniela can give control of the shared desktop or window to other participants in a meeting organized by Babek whereas Babek can't give control to other participants.

To use PowerShell to control who can give control or accept requests for control, use the AllowParticipantGiveRequestControl cmdlet.

Note

To give and take control of shared content during sharing, both parties must be using the Teams desktop client. Control isn't supported when either party is running Teams in a browser. This is due to a technical limitation that we're planning to fix.

Allow an external participant to give or request control

This is a per-user policy. This setting controls whether external participants in a meeting can give control of their shared desktop or window to other participants in the meeting. External participants in Teams meetings can be categorized as follows:

  • Anonymous user
  • Guest users
  • B2B user
  • Federated user

Whether federated users can give control to external users while sharing is controlled by the Allow an external participant to give or request control setting in their organization.

To use PowerShell to control whether external participants can give control or accept requests for control, use the AllowExternalParticipantGiveRequestControl cmdlet.

Allow PowerPoint sharing

This is a per-user policy. This setting controls whether the user can share PowerPoint slide decks in a meeting. External users, including anonymous, guest, and federated users, inherit the policy of the meeting organizer.

Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyAllow PowerPoint sharing
DanielaGlobalTrue
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyFalse

Amanda can't share PowerPoint slide decks in meetings even if she's the meeting organizer. Daniela can share PowerPoint slide decks even if the meeting is organized by Amanda. Amanda can view the PowerPoint slide decks shared by others in the meeting, even though she can't share PowerPoint slide decks.

Allow whiteboard

This is a per-user policy. This setting controls whether a user can share the whiteboard in a meeting. External users, including anonymous, B2B, and federated users, inherit the policy of the meeting organizer.

Disable

Let's look at the following example.

UserMeeting policyAllow whiteboard
DanielaGlobalTrue
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyFalse

Amanda can't share the whiteboard in a meeting even if she's the meeting organizer. Daniela can share the whiteboard even if a meeting is organized by Amanda.

Allow shared notes

This is a per-user policy. This setting controls whether a user can create and share notes in a meeting. External users, including anonymous, B2B, and federated users, inherit the policy of the meeting organizer. The Meeting Notes tab is currently only supported in meetings that have less than 20 participants.

Let's look at the following example.

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UserMeeting policyAllow shared notes
DanielaGlobalTrue
AmandaLocation1MeetingPolicyFalse

Daniela can take notes in Amanda's meetings and Amanda can't take notes in any meetings.

Meeting policy settings - Participants & guests

These settings control which meeting participants wait in the lobby before they are admitted to the meeting and the level of participation they are allowed in a meeting.

Note

Options to join a meeting will vary, depending on the settings for each Teams group, and the connection method. If your group has audio conferencing, and uses it to connect, see Audio Conferencing in Office 365. If your Teams group does not have audio conferencing, refer to Join a meeting in Teams.

Let anonymous people start a meeting

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This is a per-organizer policy. This setting controls whether anonymous people, including B2B, and federated users, can join the user's meeting without an authenticated user from the organization in attendance.

Here's the join behavior of anonymous people when authenticated users are present in the meeting.

Let anonymous people start a meetingAutomatically admit peopleJoin behavior of anonymous people
TrueEveryoneJoin directly
Everyone in your organizationWait in lobby
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsWait in lobby
FalseEveryoneJoin directly
Everyone in your organizationWait in lobby
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsWait in lobby

Here's the join behavior of anonymous people when no authenticated users are present in the meeting.

Let anonymous people start a meetingAutomatically admit peopleJoin behavior of anonymous people
TrueEveryoneJoin directly
Everyone in your organizationWait in lobby
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsWait in lobby
FalseEveryoneWait in lobby. Users are automatically admitted when the first authenticated user joins the meeting.
Everyone in your organizationWait in lobby
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsWait in lobby

Automatically admit people

This is a per-organizer policy. This setting controls whether people join a meeting directly or wait in the lobby until they are admitted by an authenticated user.

Meeting organizers can click Meeting Options in the meeting invitation to change this setting for each meeting they schedule.

Setting valueJoin behavior
EveryoneAll meeting participants join the meeting directly without waiting in the lobby. This includes authenticated users, federated users, guests, anonymous users, and people who dial in by phone.
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsAuthenticated users within the organization, including guest users and the users from federated organizations, join the meeting directly without waiting in the lobby. Anonymous users and users who dial in by phone wait in the lobby.
Everyone in your organizationAuthenticated users from within the organization, including guest users, join the meeting directly without waiting in the lobby. Federated users, anonymous users, and users who dial in by phone wait in the lobby.

Allow dial-in users to bypass the lobby

This is a per-organizer policy. This setting controls whether people who dial in by phone join the meeting directly or wait in the lobby regardless of the Automatically admit people setting.

Here's the join behavior of people who dial in by phone.

Allow dial-in users to bypass the lobbyAutomatically admit peopleJoin behavior of people who dial in
TrueEveryoneJoin directly
Everyone in your organizationJoin directly
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsJoin directly
FalseEveryoneJoin directly
Everyone in your organizationWait in lobby
Everyone in your organization and federated organizationsWait in lobby

Allow Meet now in private meetings

This is a per-user policy and applies before a meeting starts. This setting controls whether a user can start an ad hoc private meeting.

Enable live captions

This is a per-user policy and applies during a meeting. This setting controls whether the Turn on live captions option is available for the user to turn on and turn off live captions in meetings that the user attends.

Setting valueBehavior
Disabled but the organizer can overrideLive captions aren't automatically turned on for the user during a meeting. The user sees the Turn on live captions option in the overflow (..) menu to turn them on. This is the default setting.
DisabledLive captions are disabled for the user during a meeting. The user doesn't have the option to turn them on.

Allow chat in meetings

This is a per-organizer policy. This setting controls whether meeting chat is allowed in the user's meeting.

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