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Wax On posted:Wouldn't a vibrating mouse cause your cursor to jitter every time it went off? Yeah, I am pretty sure its not really a huge issue, or even something that most pc gamers would want. Personally I would find it really really really annoying, and they have already had mice that rumbled, and they sucked (the only game that did much was Black & White).
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# ? Sep 14, 2010 23:56 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 15:20 |
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I love my Logitech MX1000. Bought it 5 years ago for around $100 IIRC. When the battery died, I bought a replacement battery on eBay and now it's better than ever. When I got an iMac at home, I bought another MX1000 used (they discontinued it some time ago) and they're still kinda spendy. Next time I need a mouse, I'll probably go for the G700. I just gotta have all those buttons, laser, long life battery, and wireless connectivity.
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# ? Sep 15, 2010 00:07 |
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Man, I kind of wish they still had the MX300 kicking around. I still am using one that's god knows how old, the paint's worn on the buttons and the rubber looks like a grody mess, but the only thing that's wrong with it now is the mousewheel, which is starting to scroll up sometimes after flicking it downward. If there's a cheap way to fix this, I'm all ears. It's crazy how the MX300 has literally disappeared. You can't even find these things on eBay anymore, I've tried. Someday archaeologists will uncover records from the bombed-out shell of Logitech's corporate offices with the mysterious model number 'MX300' and no-one will be able to locate a sample. ... probably because some hoarder went ahead and hoarded every one he could find to prepare for a lifetime of post-apocalyptic web browsing, I guess.
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# ? Sep 15, 2010 13:02 |
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isnoop posted:Next time I need a mouse, I'll probably go for the G700. I just gotta have all those buttons, laser, long life battery, and wireless connectivity. Don't get the G700 if you need long battery life. That is not its strong suit. In fact it's pretty loving annoying. It'd be my favorite mouse of all time were it not for the crap rear end battery life.
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# ? Sep 15, 2010 15:54 |
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High DPI in newer mice really piss me off, especially on Laptops. The packages boast that higher DPI improves accuracy. I don't notice any improved accuracy. In fact, it makes less accurate to me. Higher DPI = mouse pointer shoots across the screen with the slightest tap. On a Desktop, I can turn the mouse acceleration all the way down and things work better. But on Laptop? Under Windows, the touchpad or ThinkPad nubby also get turned way down if I turn down the mouse acceleration. Windows has a single control for *ALL* mouse-like devices. Turning down the high DPI mouse makes it work fine, but if I'm out somewhere without the mouse, I'll find the nubby no longer makes the cursor budge, so I have turn the acceleration back up. When I get home and plug the mouse back in, the cursor shoots across the screen until I turn acceleration back down. My MacBook Pro has separate acceleration settings for the TrackPad and Mouse. The TrackPad always works fine - but the mouse speed control settings are either "too slow" or (just one notch up), "way too fast". There is no in-between. I've avoided high DPI in the past by getting cheap mice, but now Logitech's cheapest crap boasts "1000 dpi". Is there a way to better configure things?? Xenomorph fucked around with this message at 19:09 on Sep 15, 2010 |
# ? Sep 15, 2010 19:06 |
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Xenomorph posted:Is there a way to better configure things?? A lot of higher end mice these days come with both multiple DPI sensitivity buttons for on the fly adjustments, and software that makes each setting fully customizable. Don't worry about mice that boast about insane settings like 5600 DPI. You'll most likely be able to easily adjust them down to like 800-1000 DPI with pretty much no problems. I use a Logitech G5 that's capable of 2,000 DPI, but I've never even adjusted the highest sensitivity setting past like 1,600, and even that's pushing it. Anyway, I think you'll find it a lot easier to use a modern, more sensitive mouse with whatever OS you're using, just because of how adjustable they are. Even the most senstive mice with 5 million DPI ratings can usually be adjusted to as low as like 400. Set the OS mouse input to a really low sensitivity and the mouse itself to a high sensitivity and vice versa. See which way feels the best to you and just go from there. The more controls you have to work with, the finer the level of detail you'll be able to adjust to will be. GreatGreen fucked around with this message at 19:31 on Sep 15, 2010 |
# ? Sep 15, 2010 19:20 |
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Gigabyte GM-M6880, it feels a little cheap, but for $20, you get rubber grips on the sides and a rubber scroll wheel, designed with at least a minimal amount of effort. It's got a DPI switch right on top that works without drivers (worked on my Mac) that switches between high and low DPI. I'm cheap and insanely picky and I went into a spiraling depression when my ancient USB Dexxa finally kicked it and in denial I used my laptop's trackpad for a month since I've never managed to use anything as comfortable as the Dexxa, but I've managed to move on WITHOUT buying a 100 dollar mouse.
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# ? Sep 15, 2010 19:31 |
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It really blows that mice are marketed by their DPI, as though anything over 800 will good or useful at all. It's like how displays are marketed with 1,000,000:1 contrast ratios.
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# ? Sep 15, 2010 23:42 |
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nftyw posted:Man, I kind of wish they still had the MX300 kicking around. I still am using one that's god knows how old, the paint's worn on the buttons and the rubber looks like a grody mess, but the only thing that's wrong with it now is the mousewheel, which is starting to scroll up sometimes after flicking it downward. If there's a cheap way to fix this, I'm all ears. I would HIGHLY recommend you investigate the Logitech M100. I just got one on newegg and it is very very similar to the mx300 in shape. The wire isn't quite as nice, and the mouse feet are poor quality, but the shape is excellent and the sensor is 1000dpi. Lastly, the M100 is much much lighter than the mx300, which adds to the "cheap" feeling. I believe you can also get a M110, which has tilt scrolling. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16826104365 I would also suggest that you open up your mx300 - the things are very easy to maintain and the wheel is pretty trivial - you probably just have some dirt or something near the wheel sensor that might be causing the issue.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 04:05 |
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I'm looking into getting a new mouse. I've heard great things about the Logitech MX518, should I look at getting a G500 though? I heard that was the new generation of the MX518
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 14:13 |
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Gothmog1065 posted:I'm looking into getting a new mouse. I've heard great things about the Logitech MX518, should I look at getting a G500 though? I heard that was the new generation of the MX518 The G500 is a really solid product all around. The weighted free-scroll is a feature that I wouldn't give up. The texture, materials, and adjustable weight are also nice.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 16:23 |
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Am I the only one waiting for the Cyborg R.A.T 9?
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 16:25 |
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fleshweasel posted:as though anything over 800 will good or useful at all To each his own -- I use 1800 DPI on my Xai for general computing, RTS, and MMOs and I have a switch to toggle to 650 DPI if I'm playing a FPS.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 16:47 |
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Back to the DPI thing for a minute, I use an MS Habu set to 2000dpi on my laptop with 1366*768 resolution display and a SidewinderX8 with buttons preset for 1000-2000-4000dpi on my desktop with two monitors. One 1920*1080 the other 1280*1024. It took a while to get used to but now I find it much more comfortable trying to map 1/2" mouse movement = 1*screen width. When playing FPS games using a sniper rifle or trying to draw anything in an art package I switch down to 1000dpi. A semi-auto pistol with iron sights is ok on 2000dpi and shotguns/machine guns get the full 4000dpi because it's much more important being able to turn 180 by twitching my thumb and third finger a tiny bit.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 16:58 |
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Gothmog1065 posted:I'm looking into getting a new mouse. I've heard great things about the Logitech MX518, should I look at getting a G500 though? I heard that was the new generation of the MX518 Laser mice are poo poo, weights are a complete gimmick, and the free scrolling thing is a gimmick for retarded people who don't realize you can click the middle mouse button. Get an MX518 or some other optical. If you want to spend more money maybe buy a deathadder, they look better to hold than an MX518. K8.0 fucked around with this message at 17:02 on Sep 19, 2010 |
# ? Sep 19, 2010 16:59 |
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K8.0 posted:Laser mice are poo poo, weights are a complete gimmick, and the free scrolling thing is a gimmick for retarded people who don't realize you can click the middle mouse button. Get an MX518 or some other optical. If you want to spend more money maybe buy a deathadder, they look better to hold than an MX518.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 17:13 |
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K8.0 posted:Laser mice are poo poo, weights are a complete gimmick, and the free scrolling thing is a gimmick for retarded people who don't realize you can click the middle mouse button. Get an MX518 or some other optical. If you want to spend more money maybe buy a deathadder, they look better to hold than an MX518. I used a 518 for years, but always just wished it was a little heavier. I also quickly wore out the teflon pads, which pissed me off. They actually came unglued. That is not going to happen on the G500. I had no idea what free scroll was when I bought the G500, but it blows middle click out of the water.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:02 |
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I can't believe anyone could actually use middle click scroll and then prefer something that is slower, less precise, requires more finger gymnastics, and renders your middle button useless for anything else you might want to do with it. What exactly do you like about it?
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:06 |
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K8.0 posted:I can't believe anyone could actually use middle click scroll and then prefer something that is slower, less precise, requires more finger gymnastics, and renders your middle button useless for anything else you might want to do with it. What exactly do you like about it? Considering I don't agree with any of your comparisons, it's probably not worth discussing. A tiny flick of a single finger sends the page scrolling at a measured pace (as fast or slow as I flick it), which I can stop on a dime. This is not gymnastics. When you keep your finger on the wheel it acts like a normal wheel, and is easy to fine tune. Also it doesn't put the mouse in a different mode, which takes away all other functionality. Adjusting the scroll acceleration by moving the entire mouse away from the arbitrary point where you clicked, careful not to move off the page or move it past a threshold that goes way too fast. That is gymnastics.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:38 |
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I don't like free scroll because it means I can't use middle click to open new tabs in browsers.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:40 |
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Mike the TV posted:I don't like free scroll because it means I can't use middle click to open new tabs in browsers.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:53 |
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Duck and Cover posted:Am I the only one waiting for the Cyborg R.A.T 9? Absolutely not.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 18:59 |
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GosuProbe posted:Absolutely not. Yeah. I already have two mice and want this one. It's the same as the 7 just wireless, right? Is it bluetooth or does it need some wireless usb dongle or something? Is the non-wireless version popular? Also I got the Razer vespula mouse pad because I wanted something that was big with wrist support. It's not obnoxiously large, has two side, and the wrist support is quite small and unobtrusive. I recommend it. http://www.amazon.com/Razer-Vespula-RZ02-00320100-R3U1-Dual-Sided-Gaming/dp/B0036WTBFY/ref=sr_1_1?s=gateway&ie=UTF8&qid=1284932081&sr=8-1 I can take photos if you guys would like to see the size.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 22:37 |
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bunky posted:Yes you can. In free scroll mode, the wheel still acts as a button. Well I tried it on a friend's MX Revolution and I couldn't.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 22:44 |
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Mike the TV posted:Well I tried it on a friend's MX Revolution and I couldn't.
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# ? Sep 19, 2010 22:52 |
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headcase posted:Considering I don't agree with any of your comparisons, it's probably not worth discussing. A tiny flick of a single finger sends the page scrolling at a measured pace (as fast or slow as I flick it), which I can stop on a dime. This is not gymnastics. If flicking a round thing with your finger is faster and more precise than using a mouse, why aren't you using a trackball? Your last paragraph makes it pretty obvious you are using mouse acceleration and/or far too many DPI.
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:00 |
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Seeing as this has turned in to a love/hate relationship with free scroll, I have to ask: What is free scroll? It sounds kind of like what my phone does when I flick my finger down it through a long list (The phone actually slows down after a bit unless you keep doing it). Is it similar to this or something completely different. I never use my middle click scroll, I think it's a mildly retarded feature.
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:30 |
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Gothmog1065 posted:Seeing as this has turned in to a love/hate relationship with free scroll, I have to ask: What is free scroll? Most mice wheels have what feels like little notches when you scroll. Definite increments that it clicks through. Free scroll takes that away, the mouse wheel can just spin with no clicking one by one. Kinda hard to describe. It is nice being able to switch between the two
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:35 |
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Phangor posted:Free scroll takes that away, the mouse wheel can just spin with no clicking one by one. Kinda hard to describe. It is nice being able to switch between the two
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:39 |
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Gothmog1065 posted:Oooh, okay. That's actually pretty interesting. Does the G500 have the ability to switch or am I reading the last bit wrong? Yes, it has a button right under the scroll wheel that lets you switch between the two. Pretty neat button, has a nice mechanical thunk to it, really feels like its doing something.
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:47 |
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Gothmog1065 posted:Oooh, okay. That's actually pretty interesting. Does the G500 have the ability to switch or am I reading the last bit wrong? Yeah, you can switch between the smooth scroll and the notchy scroll. There's a button below the mouse wheel for it.
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 00:48 |
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Yeah, if I could do it over I'd buy something that fit my hand better than the G9x, but I love freescrolling. Middle-click scrolling bothers me somehow, and it still feels a little slow. Free scrolling is especially great for really long PDFs, especially ones that are shoddily bookmarked: I can just flick a finger, watch the pages skim by until I see the one I need, and stop it. I noticed someone earlier posting that 800dpi is all you need, which seems a little weird to me, but I guess it's down to personal preferences. My mouse goes all the way to 5600 or so, but it's true that that level is completely ridiculous and I can't think of any reason to go that high. But I spend a reasonable amount of time in Word and Eclipse, and I use 2000dpi as my standard, sometimes 2500. But I like to be able to move my mouse from one end of the screen to the other without moving it more than a centimeter or two from the center of my mousepad.
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 10:14 |
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Duck and Cover posted:Am I the only one waiting for the Cyborg R.A.T 9? I'm still eagerly awaiting. Supposedly, it's supposed to start shipping approximately now
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# ? Sep 20, 2010 13:42 |
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Christoff posted:Yeah. I already have two mice and want this one. It's the same as the 7 just wireless, right? Is it bluetooth or does it need some wireless usb dongle or something? Is the non-wireless version popular? The tech specs say 2.4ghz wireless, so no bluetooth. The non-wireless version is apparently the best gaming mouse out there (or so I've read).. I don't know if it's selling well, but it drat well should be. I can't find any info on availability but /\/\/\ says it's supposed to start shipping roughly now so who knows! Edit: I asked for the release date and got this back: Hi, Thanks for your interest in the R.A.T.9. All I can say at the moment is "before the end of the year" but keep an eye on the blog where we will announce it's availability as and when it happens. Best Regards Richard Neville Gaming Category Manager Mad Catz Europe R&D GosuProbe fucked around with this message at 14:17 on Sep 21, 2010 |
# ? Sep 20, 2010 21:16 |
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I didn't think Mac OS X needed it, but in order to "tame" my new 1000dpi mouse, I had to download the Logitech software. It still doesn't feel as normal as the Trackpad or an old 400dpi mouse, but at least I have more control rather than just two settings of "way too slow" and "way too fast".
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# ? Sep 21, 2010 18:05 |
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Just bought the G500. So far I like it, it's definitely good for gaming. Only thing I dislike are the 3 thumb buttons that are way too close to eachother.
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# ? Sep 23, 2010 02:18 |
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Does anyone have a problem when using their R.A.T 7 on a mac and the mac won't even recognize mouse hover-overs?
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# ? Sep 23, 2010 02:33 |
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K8.0 posted:If flicking a round thing with your finger is faster and more precise than using a mouse, why aren't you using a trackball? I use all three modes depending on circumstances. Pretty much, the whole loving point of a mouse wheel is the convenience. Using the middle click is far less convenient and only has benefit if you are moving either small amounts or doing large jumps. How you can't understand something that is objectively faster (the free scroll is faster to activate and to actually utilize) and is equally precise as middle click is beyond me. Actually, middle click is less precise since you accelerate and decelerate from and to neutral, versus the scroll wheel which matches your movement exactly. Luminous fucked around with this message at 03:05 on Sep 23, 2010 |
# ? Sep 23, 2010 03:03 |
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Luminous posted:I use all three modes depending on circumstances. Pretty much, the whole loving point of a mouse wheel is the convenience. Using the middle click is far less convenient and only has benefit if you are moving either small amounts or doing large jumps. Not trying to start an argument or anything, but I basically disagree with everything you just said. It is not at all objectively faster or more precise. Plus, speed and precision aren't the only factors to consider. Using middle click could be more comfortable than reaching your finger back behind the scroll wheel and then flicking. Or vice versa, of course. I recently bought a G500 and don't much care for free scrolling, after trying to get used to it for a while. I feel that middle-click scrolling is more precise as I can manage the speed more easily. Not sure about speed, though. They seem about equal in that regard.
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# ? Sep 23, 2010 18:48 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 15:20 |
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Not quite a $100 mouse, but in the caliber of pricey mice: I really love my "Razer DeathAdder", it's simple, corded, precise and light weight. Plus I like the pulsing glow of the Razer emblem on the top of it. It's around $50-60. I won't touch a cordless mouse anymore; they're just not worth the hassle. Untimely battery deaths, battery strength weakening over time, forgot to put it in the cradle, link loss. And... more parts to worry about: the mouse, the cradle, and the power supply. I went through several styles of cordless mice though, before I reached this opinion; others really stand by wireless/bluetooth. I also use a Kensington Pro Mouse (trackball) at work, just for some variety in hand/finger movements. Carpel tunnels == bad. I'd really not care to game with this "mouse" though, as I can't make sweeping movements while accurately stopping. But again, for work type stuff: programming, documentation, forums, *cough*, etc it's great.
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# ? Sep 24, 2010 00:24 |