

By positioning the pointer and clicking the primary and secondary buttons on the mouse, users can select objects and perform actions on them. Mouse devices often have a primary button (usually the left button), a secondary button (usually the right), and a mouse wheel between the two. The pointer has a variety of shapes to indicate its current behavior. Physically moving the mouse moves the graphic pointer (also referred to as the cursor) on the screen. Truly Canonical and the Ubuntu community need to do some work for this in terms of End-User customization, but bottom line is that this works.Guidelines related to accessibility, pen, and touch are presented in separate articles. Log out and log back in and you're set.In the Gnome Tweak Tool it look like this: Now install Gnome/Unity Tweak Tool and change the cursor theme within them. Within the 'icons' folder you'll see a 'default' folder - open it - and open the 'index.theme' file (in gedit, in-case it doesn't open automatically), and change the theme name to the name of the cursor folder you copied (for example: 'neutral').After doing so, go to /usr/share/icons and paste the folder of the cursors.Now, go to your downloads folder (from the Root Nautilus you just opened) and copy the folder of the downloaded cursor theme (not the.VERY CAREFUL DELETING AND MOVING FILES IN IT Next, open a terminal and type sudo nautilus and a Root Nautilus will launch.Sources, and untar it in the folder you downloaded. Download your favorite cursor theme from Gnome Look or other.
