Then click the Plus button, choose the Application you want to add a shortcut for, type in the menu command, and then select the key combination you’d like to use. I bought an external USB Bluetooth dongle I want to plug into my monitor on my desk, so the mouse is closer to the controller. I figured, the reason for this could be the distance between my Mac and the mouse (about 1.5 meters / 5 foot).
Launch System Preferences, go to the Keyboard preference pane, choose the Keyboard Shortcuts tab, and then click on Application Shortcuts. I'm using a Magic Mouse with my MacBook Pro and Mountain Lion. Apple computers come with a proprietary Bluetooth radio that’s compatible with the Bluetooth transceiver placed in the Apple Magic Mouse, and thus no additional setup is required on an Apple computer. The Keyboard is working fine, however when using the mouse it is really erratic making it near impossible to use accurately. To use an Apple Magic Mouse on a computer other than Apple MacBook, the user needs to buy a separate receiver for the mouse. I'm running my mac through my 37' LCD tv using DVI to HDMI.
In a few moments a device driver installation will start in the tray and a bit later you will see this. Wait for the wizard to complete and press Close.
Click on the Apple Magic Mouse icon, and press Next. If there’s a particular menu command that you use frequently, and it either lacks a corresponding keyboard shortcut or you don’t like the shortcut that’s assigned, you can always customize your own key combination. I recently bought a apple wireless keyboard and a logitech v470 bluetooth mouse, They are paired to my 2006 macbook pro fine with no connection drops etc. Turn your Magic Mouse on, click Start, type Add a Bluetooth device on the search box, and Press Enter. And when you’re in those windows, you can switch between your tabs with Command-Shift. Who among us hasn’t ended up with too many windows filled with too many tabs in our favorite Web browser? Command-~ (and its brother that rotates through open windows in reverse, Command-Shift-~) is a great tool for navigating all those windows. Many Command-Tabbers forget about Command-~, which switches through open windows in the current application.