According their site, the mouse works with 'Bluetooth Smart Ready device'.
http://www.logitech.com/en-us/product/mx-anywhere2 ( Check System Requirements in TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS section )
Bluetooth Smart Ready on Mac means Bluetooth 4.0 hardware with Yosemite or later.
HeyI just bought a new mouse, the r.a.t 7 and although i love it, i'm quite cheesed off it didn't come with any drivers or software to programme the buttons. I have looked at mad catz's website. Download and install the best free apps for Mouse Drivers on Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android from CNET Download.com, your trusted source for the top software picks. Free drivers for Mad Catz R.A.T. 9 Wireless Gaming Mouse for PC and Mac. Found 5 files for Windows 8, Windows 8 64-bit, Windows 7, Windows 7 64-bit, Windows Vista, Windows Vista 64-bit, Windows XP, Windows XP 64-bit, Mac OS X. Select driver to download. Onto the rat mouse 5: 1. Dpi lvl changing by itself 2. Mode changing by itself-onto the rat mouse 9: 1. Same 2 issues than the rat 5 2. Signal losses ( glitching in cursor movement) According to these problems i had, i wrote madcatz about a SOLUTION, not a replacement and they simply ignored me.
Unfortunately BT on your Macbook Pro (mid 2010) is BT2.1+EDR
( If you want to be sure, Logitech provides a procedure to check the PC/Mac is Bluetooth Smart Ready or not )
Installing both the drivers and the software works like a charm here! Hope this helps:) Edit: BE AWARE THAT THIS WORKS FOR ME, IT DOESN'T HAVE TO WORK FOR YOU. There's a couple users who reported that their mouse completely stopped working after installing these drivers, if that happens it appears to help to kill every process related to.
I guess your only option is use of USB hub if you don't have available USB port,
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You really can't because anything like that would likely require or somehow gain access to your Admin password and likely install itself in the best possible location possible, in EFI as firmware program.
EFI is a software firmware that loads before OS X or Windows loads and sits right between the hardware firmware and any operating system, can access the boot drive, record keystrokes and communicate over the Internet without you or the operating system even knowing about it.
EFI resides in it's own hidden partition on the boot drive and survives despite the operating system being reinstalled.
Far as I know there is nothing that can verify if the contents of EFI are legitimate or not, if you suspect you installed something from a untrustworthy source and noticing unusual network traffic despite having eliminated all other possibilities, you might be RATTED.
If you have another Mac, you can install KisMAC and enable the passive driver in preferences and watch the network traffic between your suspected Mac and the wifi router. RAT network activity should be rather high when your not doing jack squat with the suspected machine.


The only solution to this is a complete drive reformat or replacement from Internet Recovery, however if it's got in that deep it's likely to be tainted even Internet Recovery, as I believe that's hardware firmware based which is susceptible to unwanted change. You'll have to take your chances, but if your machine boots from the older Snow Leopard disks, then I would start from there and work back up to 10.8 agian that way.
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There is keyboard and battery firmware that also can be changed by malware, however supposedly it's so small that not much can be placed there and reinfect a cleaned system.
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We only know about OS X malware if it makes enough copies it draws the attention of security researchers, limited targeted attacks on users is rather trivial task.
Jun 29, 2013 8:45 AM