Category:Other inputs
This page connects information about devices other than keyboards and mice which can be used to interact with computers running Arch Linux. The lists on this page are intended as a quick overview and not meant to be exhaustive.
This category includes
Physical interaction
Devices in this category generally provide input through some use of your arms and legs.
- Other pointing devices (mouse-like devices)
- Most mouse-like
- Trackballs (may also be considered a mouse, though they predate them and the first mice were only the slide around and click type)
- Pointing sticks (e.g. the red nub, TrackPoint, in the center of ThinkPad keyboards)
- Slate-like
- Touchpads / trackpads
- Pens / stylus / tablet-based pointers
- Touchscreens
- Gyroscopic / accelerometer (e.g. WiiMote)
- Wireless presenters
- Most mouse-like
- Game controllers (many are repurposed for other uses as well, e.g. gamepads used to control telescope mounts)
- Gamepads
- Joysticks
- HOTAS (Hands-on-Throttle and Stick, used for flight simulators)
- Pedals / Rudders / Foot controls
- Steering Wheels
Audio interaction
Devices in this category generally provide input through use of your voice and/or limbs, or allow recording audio from instruments or the environment. See Sound system for tools to handle these devices.
- Microphones
- Instrument amplifiers (e.g. the line in from an electric guitar)
- MIDI Devices (e.g. musical keyboards and synthesizers)
Visual interaction
Devices in this category generally capture light in snaps/frames (e.g. press a button to capture an image), in video (e.g. periodic or continuous recording), or provide some sort of light analysis (e.g. light meter).
- Webcams
- Scanners
- Security cameras
- Self-contained cameras with a means of direct connection to the computer (e.g. HDMI, USB, or Wi-Fi)
- SLR, Mirrorless, Camcorders, etc.
- Microscopes
- Telescopes
- Motion detectors
- Light meters
Esoteric and bespoke
Devices in this category are unusual or designed for a niche purpose. Examples...
- Hobby projects with buttons and knobs and custom firmware.
- Movement trackers
- Heart rate monitors
- Eye trackers
- Brainwave monitors
- Fingerprint readers
- Accessibility hardware (e.g. Stephen Hawking's famous vocoder interface)
Some of these are niche now but with future developments may become mainstream.
This category currently contains no pages or media.