Usb To Ps2 Driver For Mac
Unless it comes with PS/2 support clearly noted, its best to assume it doesn't. As noted on this Wikipedia page, those adapters are nonstandard, so even if the mouse supports PS/2 you might be looking at the wrong adapter. This led to a bit of a myth that all PS/2 female to USB A Male adaptors would work for all PS/2 devices but passive PS/2 > USB converters will generally only work if.
Without having the mouse in hand, is there any way if I can determine if a USB mouse (ie: http://dx.com/p/usb-2-0-wired-red-laser-3200-2400-1600-800dpi-gaming-mouse-black-225631#tabProInfo) supports conversion to a PS/2 interface?
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USB PS/2 Male to USB Female Converter Adapter Adaptor For MOUSE &KEYBOARD FastUS See more like this USB PS/2 Male to USB Female Converter Adapter Adaptor For PS2 Mouse & Keyboard New (Other). That adapter would connect a USB mouse to a PS/2 port on a computer. You would need an adapter like 32185. It has 2 PS/2 ports but you could just use one to connect that mouse to a USB port on a computer. USB to PS/2 Dual PS2 Converter Adapter, Black (106854), The USB to PS2 Converter is the best solution for those who want to use legacy PS2 devices on., By Monoprice Add To Cart There is a problem adding to cart. Simple ps/2 to USB adapters do not use specific software drivers. In general, most users having trouble connecting their keyboard to newer computers are looking for a ps/2 to USB signal CONVERTER. These devices use an integrated circuit (pre-programmed chip) to actively translate the ps/2 keyboard signal and convert it into a USB keyboard signal. The computer will use the standard USB driver for a USB keyboard. Unfortunately, due to the wide variety of combinations of different keyboards, computers, operating systems, user expertise, keyboard cable lengths, age of vintage hardware, etc.
As in, will it work with one of those adapters that convert USB to PS/2?
3 Answers
I have used loads of USB mice and keyboards and those little adaptors always work with them.

(apart from situations where the little adaptor was picky and the computer's usb port was picky. I had a bunch of little adaptors, different makes. The good ones worked always. No special circuitry. The USB mouse/keyboard always supported PS2.
The issue is the other way, Ps2 to USB, then you need a big adaptor with special circuitry.
By the way, when I tried USB-Ps2 adaptors, some slightly larger green ones that looked like the ones you pictured, were a bit picky, but some slightly smaller ones that happened to be red and purple seemed more reliable in that they seemed to work in all my computers including a picky one(they were from a convenient rip off elecronics store called maplin).
I had also heard that all USB mice/keyboard seem to support Ps2. My experience of them is that. I have tried many USB mice/keyboard , cheap ones, and without me having to check, and they've all supported them. Though I suppose it's possible maybe there are some that don't and you could get unlucky, but I doubt it!
The mouse is cheap and finding out if it works is like less than a minute once you get the items i'd just buy it and try it.

I don't know about losing dpi. I just use mouse/keyboard like a normal joe and don't know about dpi in regard to mice.
Note
Ruslan (in 2019) comments 'I've also used lots of USB mice, and until now I hadn't come across one without support for PS/2 via an adaptor. But now here it is: I replaced Logitech M-BJ58 with M100, and.. it doesn't work in PS/2 port, although it works fine when plugged in directly into a USB port, and M-BJ58 does work in both. Dunno how Logitech could throw away such a trivial piece of functionality, but it's so. BTW, I'm not alone with this combination of the replaced and replacement mice, see https://community.logitech.com/s/question/0D53100005101CqCAI/how-to-get-m100-mouse-on-ps2-port '
It might be that as we move forward (in time), some other new USB mice might not support ps2! (as ps2 is more and more phased out)
barlopbarlopUnless it comes with PS/2 support clearly noted, its best to assume it doesn't.As noted on this Wikipedia page, those adapters are nonstandard, so even if the mouse supports PS/2 you might be looking at the wrong adapter. Also, anytime you adapt back to PS/2 you're going to lose features of the mouse (the high DPI settings in this case).
If you really need PS/2, an active adapter should be able to handle any USB mouse - but at their cost, you're better off using a USB mouse (even if that means adding USB to your PC).
Active USB to PS2 convertors should just work. We used a few of these in servers where old servers still needed PS2 input and we only had a KVM with a 'USB mouse' output.
Usb To Ps2 Driver For Macet
On the other had, you did not link to such a device. The device below is a passive plug which does not convert any signals. It assume that the mouse can do both USB and PS2 protocols, and that the mouse will detect which one it needs.
This means that you can not use this on a mouse which only understands USB.
Then there is a minor matter of the purple device you linked to. Colours from that era usually use orange or purple for keyboards, and green for mice. I am not sure that a keyboard plug is wired the same way as the green mouse plug. (The website you linked to call the one a replacement USB keyboard to PS/2).