![]() I guess this is just the price I pay for refusing to ever use/own wired peripherals. Either way it’s done. Maybe if I had used the receiver before I could have completed the set up without having to take another trip to the Mac store to ‘borrow’ a keyboard and mouse duo. It kept prompting me to turn on my keyboard for pairing but would not recognize it, I tried using the USB receiver, and although the Mac Studio recognized that something had been plugged in, I had never set up that USB receiver to receive input from my logitech keyboard, my keyboard was already paired to three other devices none of which were that receiver, and I could not pair it to that receiver before setting up my computer. Make sure you have a proper USB mouse to connect with the Mac computer. In the Details box, choose the task you want to assign to. Select the mouse button you want to configure, and then choose the action you want it to perform from the Assigned action drop-down menu. On the top-left side of the window, click Buttons. Maybe some other people could or have tried to set up their Mac Studios with a third-party wireless keyboard and it worked for them, but it did not work for me. You need to turn on your MacBook first and check the hardware connection. In the Logitech Control Center window, double click the picture of the mouse you want to customize. Here’s Lex’s description of what happened: To change the gestures of your Magic Mouse on a Mac, click on Mouse in the System Preferences, choose Point & Click, then tick the box for Smart zoom. Redditor Lexphalanx complained about the hassle over getting his new Mac Studio to work with Logitech input devices in a post titled, “ After 2 trips to the Mac store, the Studio has been successful integrated into my setup.”
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