Mouse Icon Distorted on Secondary Display












19














I have a strange issue with a dual monitor, extended desktop setup where the mouse is always fine on the primary monitor, but sometimes when I move to the secondary display the icon becomes garbled and distorted (sometimes it just looks like a vertical line, instead of a pointer). If I move the mouse back and forth rapidly between primary and secondary displays the level of "garbledness" of the icon will change and sometimes go away completely. If I switch the display settings and set it to "Duplicate Monitor 1" then I end up with a garbled icon on the primary display and an accurate one on the secondary. Very annoying.



Computer is Windows 7 Ultimate with an HD5780 and the newest video drivers. Monitors are two Dell 24" displays connected via DVI cables. I have also tried VGA cables.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:14












  • @glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
    – Nathan Taylor
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:22










  • My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:27










  • @glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
    – Nathan Taylor
    Feb 1 '11 at 17:35






  • 1




    What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
    – Iceking007
    Feb 18 '11 at 14:52
















19














I have a strange issue with a dual monitor, extended desktop setup where the mouse is always fine on the primary monitor, but sometimes when I move to the secondary display the icon becomes garbled and distorted (sometimes it just looks like a vertical line, instead of a pointer). If I move the mouse back and forth rapidly between primary and secondary displays the level of "garbledness" of the icon will change and sometimes go away completely. If I switch the display settings and set it to "Duplicate Monitor 1" then I end up with a garbled icon on the primary display and an accurate one on the secondary. Very annoying.



Computer is Windows 7 Ultimate with an HD5780 and the newest video drivers. Monitors are two Dell 24" displays connected via DVI cables. I have also tried VGA cables.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:14












  • @glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
    – Nathan Taylor
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:22










  • My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:27










  • @glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
    – Nathan Taylor
    Feb 1 '11 at 17:35






  • 1




    What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
    – Iceking007
    Feb 18 '11 at 14:52














19












19








19


8





I have a strange issue with a dual monitor, extended desktop setup where the mouse is always fine on the primary monitor, but sometimes when I move to the secondary display the icon becomes garbled and distorted (sometimes it just looks like a vertical line, instead of a pointer). If I move the mouse back and forth rapidly between primary and secondary displays the level of "garbledness" of the icon will change and sometimes go away completely. If I switch the display settings and set it to "Duplicate Monitor 1" then I end up with a garbled icon on the primary display and an accurate one on the secondary. Very annoying.



Computer is Windows 7 Ultimate with an HD5780 and the newest video drivers. Monitors are two Dell 24" displays connected via DVI cables. I have also tried VGA cables.










share|improve this question















I have a strange issue with a dual monitor, extended desktop setup where the mouse is always fine on the primary monitor, but sometimes when I move to the secondary display the icon becomes garbled and distorted (sometimes it just looks like a vertical line, instead of a pointer). If I move the mouse back and forth rapidly between primary and secondary displays the level of "garbledness" of the icon will change and sometimes go away completely. If I switch the display settings and set it to "Duplicate Monitor 1" then I end up with a garbled icon on the primary display and an accurate one on the secondary. Very annoying.



Computer is Windows 7 Ultimate with an HD5780 and the newest video drivers. Monitors are two Dell 24" displays connected via DVI cables. I have also tried VGA cables.







windows multiple-monitors mouse graphics cursor






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 13 '12 at 22:54

























asked Apr 21 '10 at 15:11









Nathan Taylor

3531724




3531724








  • 1




    I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:14












  • @glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
    – Nathan Taylor
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:22










  • My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:27










  • @glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
    – Nathan Taylor
    Feb 1 '11 at 17:35






  • 1




    What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
    – Iceking007
    Feb 18 '11 at 14:52














  • 1




    I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:14












  • @glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
    – Nathan Taylor
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:22










  • My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
    – glenneroo
    Jan 28 '11 at 17:27










  • @glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
    – Nathan Taylor
    Feb 1 '11 at 17:35






  • 1




    What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
    – Iceking007
    Feb 18 '11 at 14:52








1




1




I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
– glenneroo
Jan 28 '11 at 17:14






I have a similar issue (same OS, gfx-card and screens) which randomly comes and goes, except in my case its not just the mouse pointer that's garbled.
– glenneroo
Jan 28 '11 at 17:14














@glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
– Nathan Taylor
Jan 28 '11 at 17:22




@glenneroo Where else are you seeing this behavior?
– Nathan Taylor
Jan 28 '11 at 17:22












My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
– glenneroo
Jan 28 '11 at 17:27




My entire 2nd display. It's most noticeable with text - it seems like text is stretched/shrunken making it somewhat strenuous to read.
– glenneroo
Jan 28 '11 at 17:27












@glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
– Nathan Taylor
Feb 1 '11 at 17:35




@glenneroo This sounds a little different than what I am experiencing, but could be relevant just the same. So far, ATI/AMD has ignored my bug reports.
– Nathan Taylor
Feb 1 '11 at 17:35




1




1




What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
– Iceking007
Feb 18 '11 at 14:52




What happens if you leave the settings as is and then switch which monitor is plugged into which output; then you can rule out if it is a Computer-software/hardware or monitor-hardware issue. You could try uninstalling the drivers and doing a clean reinstall. Also check with the computermanufacturer/ Dell monitor to see if there is a known issue/ and Microsoft to see if there is a Win7 bug?!
– Iceking007
Feb 18 '11 at 14:52










9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















26














The problem is unfortunately an old bug with ATI cards under some multi-monitor setups that is being reported since at least 2009. I experienced it with an HD 4770. It was particularly recurring when I would host a virtual machine in fullscreen mode on my secondary monitor. But would also happen without it when I moved between screens. Just not so often.



There's no known fix at this time, Nathan. There's however a workaround:



If you enable mouse pointer trails, the corruption will go away.




  1. In your Windows 7 go to Control Panel -> Mouse -> Pointer Options Tab

  2. Enable Pointer Trails.

  3. If you don't like the effect, move the slider all the way to the left. This will make the trailing effect all but disappear.


That's it. The mouse corruption will "not" happen again. The constant redrawing of the mouse trails is effectively hiding the bug from view.






share|improve this answer





















  • Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
    – BobbyTables
    Jun 9 '16 at 8:01










  • I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
    – twigmac
    Aug 11 '17 at 7:50



















5














I'll add my workaround to the mix here, since they all suck a little. I've fixed the problem each time by moving the mouse to the top-right or bottom-right corner of the screen. I think by getting the mouse completely off screen, it's forcing the problem to resolve itself.



I'm using Windows 8.1 and have an AMD 7870.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
    – twigmac
    Aug 11 '17 at 7:52



















4














I had this problem, too, my mouse pointer sometimes looked very trashy, like I have serious memory or display driver problems. Windows 7, dual screen, Vmware, integrated Intel display adapter, HP desktop PC. I don't think this problem is connected to any specific hardware component. The problem is with Windows and VMware, but I believe it's only in dual screen mode. Hardware doesn't matter.



My solution:
Control Panel / Change how the mouse pointer looks = Mouse Properties
then go to Pointer Options tab, check Display pointer trails.
This is going to make the movement of your mouse pointer crazy I know, but now slide to the trail delay to the shortest. (slide it to the left)



After setting the above options my mouse pointer started to behave normally, and the the cursor distortion has gone forever! (After two PCs and two weeks I am almost sure actually)
(After applying these new settings perhaps you will need to change the pointer look once)






share|improve this answer





























    3














    Workaround: Try to enable pointer shadow (apply settings), and then disable it (apply settings). The mouse pointer should be fixed.






    share|improve this answer





















    • For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
      – twigmac
      Aug 11 '17 at 7:56



















    1














    I was able to immediately remove the corruption by opening my desktop -> screen resolution control panel and adjusting my side monitor's position, accepting changes, then moving it back to where it was and saving changes again. The process of recycling the display shook the garble off the cursor for me.






    share|improve this answer





























      0














      Having had the same issue with AMD FX-8350 / CLUB 3D RADEON HD 7870 ROYAL KING. The cursor will randomly become distorted on 2nd display. The only workaround I have found, apart from the mouse trail one, is:



      Create Monitor Group in Catalyst (you now have ''1 monitor'' with an effective res. of 3840x1080) (if u use full HDs) and keep Vert. Sync on. Problem gone.






      share|improve this answer































        0














        If you are using Virtual Desktop Interface (VDI) take the following step: Power-off the VDI-router box, count to five, and power it on again. The pointers on both primary and secondary monitors return to their normal arrow shape.
        (FYI: Restarting your VDI-session will not help; the text-select or garbled pointer will persist; you need to power-off/on the physical box; you will of course be required to log back in to the VDI).






        share|improve this answer





















        • Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
          – DavidPostill
          Jan 13 '16 at 17:12



















        0














        Here is another solution that hasn't been stated and is a bit better than setting mouse trails, etc.



        On the host computer, create a text file called config.ini in the
        "C:ProgramDataVMwareVMware Workstation" folder. If this folder does not exist, create it.



        Add the following line to the file:



        mks.noHostCursor= "True"



        Save the file and relaunch your VM. The mouse should be back to normal.






        share|improve this answer





























          0














          I was getting this problem with a new NVIDIA GTX 1080.
          It went away when I turned of cursor shadow, and came back when I turned on cursor shadow.






          share|improve this answer




















            protected by Community Mar 4 '17 at 22:33



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes








            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            26














            The problem is unfortunately an old bug with ATI cards under some multi-monitor setups that is being reported since at least 2009. I experienced it with an HD 4770. It was particularly recurring when I would host a virtual machine in fullscreen mode on my secondary monitor. But would also happen without it when I moved between screens. Just not so often.



            There's no known fix at this time, Nathan. There's however a workaround:



            If you enable mouse pointer trails, the corruption will go away.




            1. In your Windows 7 go to Control Panel -> Mouse -> Pointer Options Tab

            2. Enable Pointer Trails.

            3. If you don't like the effect, move the slider all the way to the left. This will make the trailing effect all but disappear.


            That's it. The mouse corruption will "not" happen again. The constant redrawing of the mouse trails is effectively hiding the bug from view.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
              – BobbyTables
              Jun 9 '16 at 8:01










            • I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:50
















            26














            The problem is unfortunately an old bug with ATI cards under some multi-monitor setups that is being reported since at least 2009. I experienced it with an HD 4770. It was particularly recurring when I would host a virtual machine in fullscreen mode on my secondary monitor. But would also happen without it when I moved between screens. Just not so often.



            There's no known fix at this time, Nathan. There's however a workaround:



            If you enable mouse pointer trails, the corruption will go away.




            1. In your Windows 7 go to Control Panel -> Mouse -> Pointer Options Tab

            2. Enable Pointer Trails.

            3. If you don't like the effect, move the slider all the way to the left. This will make the trailing effect all but disappear.


            That's it. The mouse corruption will "not" happen again. The constant redrawing of the mouse trails is effectively hiding the bug from view.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
              – BobbyTables
              Jun 9 '16 at 8:01










            • I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:50














            26












            26








            26






            The problem is unfortunately an old bug with ATI cards under some multi-monitor setups that is being reported since at least 2009. I experienced it with an HD 4770. It was particularly recurring when I would host a virtual machine in fullscreen mode on my secondary monitor. But would also happen without it when I moved between screens. Just not so often.



            There's no known fix at this time, Nathan. There's however a workaround:



            If you enable mouse pointer trails, the corruption will go away.




            1. In your Windows 7 go to Control Panel -> Mouse -> Pointer Options Tab

            2. Enable Pointer Trails.

            3. If you don't like the effect, move the slider all the way to the left. This will make the trailing effect all but disappear.


            That's it. The mouse corruption will "not" happen again. The constant redrawing of the mouse trails is effectively hiding the bug from view.






            share|improve this answer












            The problem is unfortunately an old bug with ATI cards under some multi-monitor setups that is being reported since at least 2009. I experienced it with an HD 4770. It was particularly recurring when I would host a virtual machine in fullscreen mode on my secondary monitor. But would also happen without it when I moved between screens. Just not so often.



            There's no known fix at this time, Nathan. There's however a workaround:



            If you enable mouse pointer trails, the corruption will go away.




            1. In your Windows 7 go to Control Panel -> Mouse -> Pointer Options Tab

            2. Enable Pointer Trails.

            3. If you don't like the effect, move the slider all the way to the left. This will make the trailing effect all but disappear.


            That's it. The mouse corruption will "not" happen again. The constant redrawing of the mouse trails is effectively hiding the bug from view.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jul 13 '11 at 3:47









            A Dwarf

            17.1k13665




            17.1k13665












            • Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
              – BobbyTables
              Jun 9 '16 at 8:01










            • I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:50


















            • Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
              – BobbyTables
              Jun 9 '16 at 8:01










            • I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:50
















            Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
            – BobbyTables
            Jun 9 '16 at 8:01




            Had the same issue on a Geforce GT720, mousetrail was not an option since it actually leaves a short trail. Changing the pointer-theme from "none" to "windows default" fixed the issue
            – BobbyTables
            Jun 9 '16 at 8:01












            I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
            – twigmac
            Aug 11 '17 at 7:50




            I had this issue with an external USB graphics card. Unfortunately I don't know which chip is built into it. My question to y'all: did this bug appear right from the start after you've set up multiple monitors? In my case I didn't show up for a long time and now suddenly it's there. Any idea what causes this sudden appearance?
            – twigmac
            Aug 11 '17 at 7:50













            5














            I'll add my workaround to the mix here, since they all suck a little. I've fixed the problem each time by moving the mouse to the top-right or bottom-right corner of the screen. I think by getting the mouse completely off screen, it's forcing the problem to resolve itself.



            I'm using Windows 8.1 and have an AMD 7870.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:52
















            5














            I'll add my workaround to the mix here, since they all suck a little. I've fixed the problem each time by moving the mouse to the top-right or bottom-right corner of the screen. I think by getting the mouse completely off screen, it's forcing the problem to resolve itself.



            I'm using Windows 8.1 and have an AMD 7870.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:52














            5












            5








            5






            I'll add my workaround to the mix here, since they all suck a little. I've fixed the problem each time by moving the mouse to the top-right or bottom-right corner of the screen. I think by getting the mouse completely off screen, it's forcing the problem to resolve itself.



            I'm using Windows 8.1 and have an AMD 7870.






            share|improve this answer












            I'll add my workaround to the mix here, since they all suck a little. I've fixed the problem each time by moving the mouse to the top-right or bottom-right corner of the screen. I think by getting the mouse completely off screen, it's forcing the problem to resolve itself.



            I'm using Windows 8.1 and have an AMD 7870.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Apr 7 '14 at 15:55









            Ryan

            2,32452044




            2,32452044








            • 1




              It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:52














            • 1




              It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
              – twigmac
              Aug 11 '17 at 7:52








            1




            1




            It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
            – twigmac
            Aug 11 '17 at 7:52




            It didn't work for me with Windows 10 and an external USB graphics card.
            – twigmac
            Aug 11 '17 at 7:52











            4














            I had this problem, too, my mouse pointer sometimes looked very trashy, like I have serious memory or display driver problems. Windows 7, dual screen, Vmware, integrated Intel display adapter, HP desktop PC. I don't think this problem is connected to any specific hardware component. The problem is with Windows and VMware, but I believe it's only in dual screen mode. Hardware doesn't matter.



            My solution:
            Control Panel / Change how the mouse pointer looks = Mouse Properties
            then go to Pointer Options tab, check Display pointer trails.
            This is going to make the movement of your mouse pointer crazy I know, but now slide to the trail delay to the shortest. (slide it to the left)



            After setting the above options my mouse pointer started to behave normally, and the the cursor distortion has gone forever! (After two PCs and two weeks I am almost sure actually)
            (After applying these new settings perhaps you will need to change the pointer look once)






            share|improve this answer


























              4














              I had this problem, too, my mouse pointer sometimes looked very trashy, like I have serious memory or display driver problems. Windows 7, dual screen, Vmware, integrated Intel display adapter, HP desktop PC. I don't think this problem is connected to any specific hardware component. The problem is with Windows and VMware, but I believe it's only in dual screen mode. Hardware doesn't matter.



              My solution:
              Control Panel / Change how the mouse pointer looks = Mouse Properties
              then go to Pointer Options tab, check Display pointer trails.
              This is going to make the movement of your mouse pointer crazy I know, but now slide to the trail delay to the shortest. (slide it to the left)



              After setting the above options my mouse pointer started to behave normally, and the the cursor distortion has gone forever! (After two PCs and two weeks I am almost sure actually)
              (After applying these new settings perhaps you will need to change the pointer look once)






              share|improve this answer
























                4












                4








                4






                I had this problem, too, my mouse pointer sometimes looked very trashy, like I have serious memory or display driver problems. Windows 7, dual screen, Vmware, integrated Intel display adapter, HP desktop PC. I don't think this problem is connected to any specific hardware component. The problem is with Windows and VMware, but I believe it's only in dual screen mode. Hardware doesn't matter.



                My solution:
                Control Panel / Change how the mouse pointer looks = Mouse Properties
                then go to Pointer Options tab, check Display pointer trails.
                This is going to make the movement of your mouse pointer crazy I know, but now slide to the trail delay to the shortest. (slide it to the left)



                After setting the above options my mouse pointer started to behave normally, and the the cursor distortion has gone forever! (After two PCs and two weeks I am almost sure actually)
                (After applying these new settings perhaps you will need to change the pointer look once)






                share|improve this answer












                I had this problem, too, my mouse pointer sometimes looked very trashy, like I have serious memory or display driver problems. Windows 7, dual screen, Vmware, integrated Intel display adapter, HP desktop PC. I don't think this problem is connected to any specific hardware component. The problem is with Windows and VMware, but I believe it's only in dual screen mode. Hardware doesn't matter.



                My solution:
                Control Panel / Change how the mouse pointer looks = Mouse Properties
                then go to Pointer Options tab, check Display pointer trails.
                This is going to make the movement of your mouse pointer crazy I know, but now slide to the trail delay to the shortest. (slide it to the left)



                After setting the above options my mouse pointer started to behave normally, and the the cursor distortion has gone forever! (After two PCs and two weeks I am almost sure actually)
                (After applying these new settings perhaps you will need to change the pointer look once)







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Apr 26 '12 at 17:36









                user1277459

                411




                411























                    3














                    Workaround: Try to enable pointer shadow (apply settings), and then disable it (apply settings). The mouse pointer should be fixed.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                      – twigmac
                      Aug 11 '17 at 7:56
















                    3














                    Workaround: Try to enable pointer shadow (apply settings), and then disable it (apply settings). The mouse pointer should be fixed.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                      – twigmac
                      Aug 11 '17 at 7:56














                    3












                    3








                    3






                    Workaround: Try to enable pointer shadow (apply settings), and then disable it (apply settings). The mouse pointer should be fixed.






                    share|improve this answer












                    Workaround: Try to enable pointer shadow (apply settings), and then disable it (apply settings). The mouse pointer should be fixed.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 26 '14 at 20:19









                    John

                    311




                    311












                    • For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                      – twigmac
                      Aug 11 '17 at 7:56


















                    • For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                      – twigmac
                      Aug 11 '17 at 7:56
















                    For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                    – twigmac
                    Aug 11 '17 at 7:56




                    For me disabling the shadow brought the trashy pointer back BUT the mouse shadow is my preferred option to make it go away. It's just a click and doesn't really bother. :)
                    – twigmac
                    Aug 11 '17 at 7:56











                    1














                    I was able to immediately remove the corruption by opening my desktop -> screen resolution control panel and adjusting my side monitor's position, accepting changes, then moving it back to where it was and saving changes again. The process of recycling the display shook the garble off the cursor for me.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      1














                      I was able to immediately remove the corruption by opening my desktop -> screen resolution control panel and adjusting my side monitor's position, accepting changes, then moving it back to where it was and saving changes again. The process of recycling the display shook the garble off the cursor for me.






                      share|improve this answer
























                        1












                        1








                        1






                        I was able to immediately remove the corruption by opening my desktop -> screen resolution control panel and adjusting my side monitor's position, accepting changes, then moving it back to where it was and saving changes again. The process of recycling the display shook the garble off the cursor for me.






                        share|improve this answer












                        I was able to immediately remove the corruption by opening my desktop -> screen resolution control panel and adjusting my side monitor's position, accepting changes, then moving it back to where it was and saving changes again. The process of recycling the display shook the garble off the cursor for me.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Apr 17 '14 at 21:06









                        Joe

                        112




                        112























                            0














                            Having had the same issue with AMD FX-8350 / CLUB 3D RADEON HD 7870 ROYAL KING. The cursor will randomly become distorted on 2nd display. The only workaround I have found, apart from the mouse trail one, is:



                            Create Monitor Group in Catalyst (you now have ''1 monitor'' with an effective res. of 3840x1080) (if u use full HDs) and keep Vert. Sync on. Problem gone.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              0














                              Having had the same issue with AMD FX-8350 / CLUB 3D RADEON HD 7870 ROYAL KING. The cursor will randomly become distorted on 2nd display. The only workaround I have found, apart from the mouse trail one, is:



                              Create Monitor Group in Catalyst (you now have ''1 monitor'' with an effective res. of 3840x1080) (if u use full HDs) and keep Vert. Sync on. Problem gone.






                              share|improve this answer


























                                0












                                0








                                0






                                Having had the same issue with AMD FX-8350 / CLUB 3D RADEON HD 7870 ROYAL KING. The cursor will randomly become distorted on 2nd display. The only workaround I have found, apart from the mouse trail one, is:



                                Create Monitor Group in Catalyst (you now have ''1 monitor'' with an effective res. of 3840x1080) (if u use full HDs) and keep Vert. Sync on. Problem gone.






                                share|improve this answer














                                Having had the same issue with AMD FX-8350 / CLUB 3D RADEON HD 7870 ROYAL KING. The cursor will randomly become distorted on 2nd display. The only workaround I have found, apart from the mouse trail one, is:



                                Create Monitor Group in Catalyst (you now have ''1 monitor'' with an effective res. of 3840x1080) (if u use full HDs) and keep Vert. Sync on. Problem gone.







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited Mar 16 '13 at 17:11









                                Carl B

                                5,734123759




                                5,734123759










                                answered Mar 16 '13 at 14:39









                                TheCardPlayer

                                1




                                1























                                    0














                                    If you are using Virtual Desktop Interface (VDI) take the following step: Power-off the VDI-router box, count to five, and power it on again. The pointers on both primary and secondary monitors return to their normal arrow shape.
                                    (FYI: Restarting your VDI-session will not help; the text-select or garbled pointer will persist; you need to power-off/on the physical box; you will of course be required to log back in to the VDI).






                                    share|improve this answer





















                                    • Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                      – DavidPostill
                                      Jan 13 '16 at 17:12
















                                    0














                                    If you are using Virtual Desktop Interface (VDI) take the following step: Power-off the VDI-router box, count to five, and power it on again. The pointers on both primary and secondary monitors return to their normal arrow shape.
                                    (FYI: Restarting your VDI-session will not help; the text-select or garbled pointer will persist; you need to power-off/on the physical box; you will of course be required to log back in to the VDI).






                                    share|improve this answer





















                                    • Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                      – DavidPostill
                                      Jan 13 '16 at 17:12














                                    0












                                    0








                                    0






                                    If you are using Virtual Desktop Interface (VDI) take the following step: Power-off the VDI-router box, count to five, and power it on again. The pointers on both primary and secondary monitors return to their normal arrow shape.
                                    (FYI: Restarting your VDI-session will not help; the text-select or garbled pointer will persist; you need to power-off/on the physical box; you will of course be required to log back in to the VDI).






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    If you are using Virtual Desktop Interface (VDI) take the following step: Power-off the VDI-router box, count to five, and power it on again. The pointers on both primary and secondary monitors return to their normal arrow shape.
                                    (FYI: Restarting your VDI-session will not help; the text-select or garbled pointer will persist; you need to power-off/on the physical box; you will of course be required to log back in to the VDI).







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Jan 13 '16 at 16:30









                                    Guest

                                    1




                                    1












                                    • Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                      – DavidPostill
                                      Jan 13 '16 at 17:12


















                                    • Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                      – DavidPostill
                                      Jan 13 '16 at 17:12
















                                    Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                    – DavidPostill
                                    Jan 13 '16 at 17:12




                                    Where does the OP say they are using VDI?
                                    – DavidPostill
                                    Jan 13 '16 at 17:12











                                    0














                                    Here is another solution that hasn't been stated and is a bit better than setting mouse trails, etc.



                                    On the host computer, create a text file called config.ini in the
                                    "C:ProgramDataVMwareVMware Workstation" folder. If this folder does not exist, create it.



                                    Add the following line to the file:



                                    mks.noHostCursor= "True"



                                    Save the file and relaunch your VM. The mouse should be back to normal.






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      0














                                      Here is another solution that hasn't been stated and is a bit better than setting mouse trails, etc.



                                      On the host computer, create a text file called config.ini in the
                                      "C:ProgramDataVMwareVMware Workstation" folder. If this folder does not exist, create it.



                                      Add the following line to the file:



                                      mks.noHostCursor= "True"



                                      Save the file and relaunch your VM. The mouse should be back to normal.






                                      share|improve this answer
























                                        0












                                        0








                                        0






                                        Here is another solution that hasn't been stated and is a bit better than setting mouse trails, etc.



                                        On the host computer, create a text file called config.ini in the
                                        "C:ProgramDataVMwareVMware Workstation" folder. If this folder does not exist, create it.



                                        Add the following line to the file:



                                        mks.noHostCursor= "True"



                                        Save the file and relaunch your VM. The mouse should be back to normal.






                                        share|improve this answer












                                        Here is another solution that hasn't been stated and is a bit better than setting mouse trails, etc.



                                        On the host computer, create a text file called config.ini in the
                                        "C:ProgramDataVMwareVMware Workstation" folder. If this folder does not exist, create it.



                                        Add the following line to the file:



                                        mks.noHostCursor= "True"



                                        Save the file and relaunch your VM. The mouse should be back to normal.







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Jan 27 '16 at 18:10









                                        pmilin

                                        1




                                        1























                                            0














                                            I was getting this problem with a new NVIDIA GTX 1080.
                                            It went away when I turned of cursor shadow, and came back when I turned on cursor shadow.






                                            share|improve this answer


























                                              0














                                              I was getting this problem with a new NVIDIA GTX 1080.
                                              It went away when I turned of cursor shadow, and came back when I turned on cursor shadow.






                                              share|improve this answer
























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0






                                                I was getting this problem with a new NVIDIA GTX 1080.
                                                It went away when I turned of cursor shadow, and came back when I turned on cursor shadow.






                                                share|improve this answer












                                                I was getting this problem with a new NVIDIA GTX 1080.
                                                It went away when I turned of cursor shadow, and came back when I turned on cursor shadow.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Dec 21 '18 at 0:55









                                                Sanjay Manohar

                                                2641315




                                                2641315

















                                                    protected by Community Mar 4 '17 at 22:33



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