How long do your computer mice last?
Displaying poll results.29160 total votes.
Most Votes
- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on February 28th, 2024 | 8481 votes
- Will ByteDance be forced to divest TikTok Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 7678 votes
Most Comments
- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 68 comments
- Will ByteDance be forced to divest TikTok Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 20 comments
meeses (Score:2, Insightful)
The optical mice last much longer than the old roller-ball mice
Re:meeses (Score:5, Insightful)
The optical mice last much longer than the old roller-ball mice
I've had to use a mechanical mouse again, last time I used one was about 7 years ago. Geez. These things suck! I have to clean the contact rollers every day of the lint, skin oil, yuck, wut? and whatever else the ball picks up and sticks to those things. How did we ever suffer through those days, before optical or tablets?
Re:meeses (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:meeses (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, they were atrocious. I often found myself cleaning *other peoples' mice* just to be able to use them. Ewww!!
Years back I'd often go to someone's desk to try to show them something or change a system setting and found their mouse was all bockety. A twist of the bottom plate and a few seconds scraping big chunks of gross stuff out and they couldn't believe how wonderful the mouse worked, never mind what I was sent over to sort out or demonstrate for them.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
Fond memory from when I was in support:
Customer: my keys are stuck, sorry.
Me: Have you tried turning your keyboard upside down and shaking it?
(sound of customer doing such).
Customer: Ewww, there's oh, gross... .
I don't remember if the call continued or she hung up. I bet her keyboard worked better after that though, or got replaced.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
Rollers also work better when you are using the mouse on a highly reflective surface.
I actually still have my old Microsoft mouse from the 1990s. I have it on a server now, which doesn't have a gui installed, but it's there if I need it for something. I haven't checked the ball in a while, but I mostly remote that server anyway.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Re: meeses (Score:3)
I thought it was insane to drop $100 on a mouse... until I tried a friend's Logitech MX for a day. Then I bought one. Figured it would last; my last Logitech mouse was still working after 12 years.
Re: meeses (Score:2)
I've actually repaired a few mice, I have a female mouse Logitech that had a bad momentary for the primary mouse button, I swapped one from a male mouse and got it working again.
If I find a mouse shape that I like, I tend to stick with it. Same with keyboards; I'm using a Gateway 2000 "Anykey" keyboard at home still.
Re: meeses (Score:2)
The Anykeys that I used back in the day were prone to spontaneously jumping into programming mode while you were typing, leading to somewhat random keyboard mappings. I did stick with a Dell 101 until I got a desktop machine with no PS2 ports. I've got a Lenovo one now that's passable, but not great.
Re: meeses (Score:2)
Re: meeses (Score:2, Insightful)
What are these "drivers" you speak of?
Must be a Windows thing.
I just plug hardware into my Linux box, and it works. No idea why other operating systems can't be this easy to use.
Re: meeses (Score:5, Informative)
Or just don't install Logitech drivers?
Unless you need 16 programmable buttons on your mouse, generic Windows 'oh look, a mouse!' drivers work perfectly well with Logitech mice. Or indeed, as you've noticed, rather better than Logitech's.
I love Logitech mice. I hate Logitech mouse drivers. I find the mice are magnificent if I just plug them in and let them work.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
So you're not "down with OPM"?
Re:meeses (Score:3)
So, you found yourself cleaning other people's balls?
BWAAAAK! It's a living!
Re:meeses (Score:3)
The optical mice last much longer than the old roller-ball mice
I've had to use a mechanical mouse again, last time I used one was about 7 years ago. Geez. These things suck! I have to clean the contact rollers every day of the lint, skin oil, yuck, wut? and whatever else the ball picks up and sticks to those things. How did we ever suffer through those days, before optical or tablets?
Try using one for very long when you have a cat. You left "cat hair" out of your list so I'm guessing you don't have a cat. Semmantically kind of funny when a mouse chokes on a cat hair ball.
Cheers,
Dave
Re:meeses (Score:2)
Re:meeses (Score:2)
We had an excuse to procrastinate before we had Wikipedia available.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
Re:meeses (Score:2)
I actually had an optical mouse die. The left button micro-switch started failing so a click of the button didn't always translate into a button event. Really annoying when it first started to go because I was always wondering if I had just "missed" whatever I was attempting to click. Finally started seeing some really obvious things.
Cheers,
ave
Re:meeses (Score:2)
Re:meeses (Score:2)
I bought a Logitech mouse/keyboard package in 2002. The thing lasted, without any issues, for 10 years. Loved it. Wound up replacing the mouse with another Logitech mouse, not six months in the middle button started failing. Sounds like this isn't an isolated incident and that Logitech isn't making mice like they used to. Shame.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
There are NO optical switches but there were lots of HALL switches in 1980-s years mainframe computers. I don't throw them away. Unfortunately, they need about 3-4 millimeters displacement to work and they don't click. The mechanical switches are easily replaceable; I keep boxes of dead mice for repairs.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
The optical mice last much longer than the old roller-ball mice
This may be true, but I've never had anything go wrong with a roller-ball mouse than couldn't be fixed by cleaning out a bit of lint from the ball.
My current optical mouse has lasted through at least 3-4 computers, possibly more.
Re:meeses (Score:2)
The original OEM mice for Amiga were TERRIBLE though, although it wasn't the ball / roller tech which was equivalent to other mice at the time.
They were boxy and uncomfortable, but the buttons were the worst bit - they used leaf switches, not microswitches, and they'd wear out with relatively little use. I remember dismantling the mouse and inserting pieces of cereal box to try and eke more life out of them. I was so glad when I changed to a new mouse with microswitch buttons.
I use a tablet (Score:3)
What is this "mouse" thing of which you speak?
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
I use laptop with touchpad. What is this "mouse" of which you speak?
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
I use laptop with touchpad. What is this "mouse" of which you speak?
I found the touchpad to be too annoyingly oversensitive, so I prefer to use a good old wireless Logitech Trackman Marble T-RA18 with mine. I was surprised at how quickly I took to using a trackball.
On my gaming rig though, I am rather fond of my Logitech G300, and really should shop around for a spare just in case this one ever bites the dust...spaaaaaace cadet...
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
What is this "mouse" thing of which you speak?
"Use the mouse? How quaint." Lt Cmdr Scott.
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
I have my tablet hooked up to my 6 core/32GB DDR3 RAM system with 6 TB RAID V and 250GB SSD boot drive. Works so much nicer than a mouse. I hate going back to mice.
I look forward to the day I can just pick things out with my brainwaves. Those neurohelmets, of which much is written, where are they?
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
I have my tablet hooked up to my 6 core/32GB DDR3 RAM system with 6 TB RAID V and 250GB SSD boot drive. Works so much nicer than a mouse. I hate going back to mice.
I presume this is supposed to mean you use the tablet as an input device, which leads me to ask a couple questions:
1) What software do you use on the tablet for this interface?
2) How well does that work with drawing programs? Would you say it's better than a Wacom tablet, or not as good?
Thanks in advance.
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
I have my tablet hooked up to my 6 core/32GB DDR3 RAM system with 6 TB RAID V and 250GB SSD boot drive. Works so much nicer than a mouse. I hate going back to mice.
I presume this is supposed to mean you use the tablet as an input device, which leads me to ask a couple questions:
1) What software do you use on the tablet for this interface?
2) How well does that work with drawing programs? Would you say it's better than a Wacom tablet, or not as good?
Thanks in advance.
It' is a Wacom tablet. And it beats fooling around with meeses.
Re:I use a tablet (Score:2)
Neurohelmets? About 7 years ago I got a specimen of 4-channel 24-bit ADC suitable for making a neurohelmet. And now there is a technology to process brainwaves. But brain input is still too slow to be useful except for some niche applications.
Obligatory IBM Mouse Ball Memo (Score:5, Funny)
Mouse balls are now available as FRU. Therefore, if a mouse fails to operate or should it perform erratically, it may need a ball replacement. Because of the delicate nature of this procedure, replacement of mouse balls should only be attempted by properly trained personnel.
Before proceeding, determine the type of mouse balls by examining the underside of the mouse. Domestic balls will be larger and harder than foreign balls. Ball removal procedures differ depending upon manufacturer of the mouse. Foreign balls can be replaced using the pop-off method. Domestic balls are replaced using the twist-off method. Mouse balls are not usually static sensitive. However, excessive handling can result in sudden discharge. Upon completion of ball replacement, the mouse may be used immediately.
It is recommended that each replacer have a pair of spare balls for maintaining optimum customer satisfaction, and that any customer missing his balls should suspect local personnel of removing these necessary items.
To re-order, specify one of the following:
P/N 33F8462 - Domestic Mouse Balls
P/N 33F8461 - Foreign Mouse Balls
Re:Obligatory IBM Mouse Ball Memo (Score:3)
I first saw that memo in the late 80s. One of the IBM field engineers brought it in, it was hilarious!
Re:Obligatory IBM Mouse Ball Memo (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say legitimate memo, written by someone with a sense of humor.
Legitimate because domestically and foreign-produced ball mice did have distinct differences in how the ball was made, and what it was made of. Used to frustrate the hell out of me as a kid trying to swap enough parts from three broken mice to make one that works.
Someone with a sense of humor because... well, the obvious.
Re:Obligatory IBM Mouse Ball Memo (Score:2)
TrackPoint? (Score:2)
I've been using the TrackPoint as my primary pointing device on Dell Laptops or ThinkPads for over ten years, so my mice don't get a lot of use. I use synergy [synergy-foss.org], so I can control my desktop and laptop using just the laptop keyboard.
But, I still have a couple of working keyboards that are over twenty years old, and mice that are nearly twenty years old.
Who uses mice? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:2)
I feel the same about my Cordless Optical Trackman. It's finally starting to act up after many, many years and I found out there's no replacement for it. Not only that, all the other trackballs I've seen suck. I don't know what I'm going to do when it stops working - maybe get a touch screen? [/sarcasm] It's better than using a mouse.
I've always wondered why they made it cordless when it doesn't move...
have you looked at the CST L-trac? (Score:2)
On-the-fly adjustable DPI, wide scroll wheel, options for two additional buttons, quality components.
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:2)
I'm surprisingly fond of Thinkpad clit mice. Er, trackpoints? Damn, what is the polite name?
(Okay, surprisingly? Heh.)
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:2)
I always called them mouse nipples.
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:3)
+1 for the clit. I first learned to work the clit when I bought a Toshiba Satellite Pro 2400CT back in '94 that had a green clit. I totally fell in love with the clit as it allowed me to mouse around without the need for a hand to leave the keyboard, which I'd think a great deal of touch-typists would appreciate. I loved it so much I went out and bought an IBM keyboard with a nice red clit that cost me over a $100; which back then was 1/3 of a month's rent. Since then every Intel PC keyboard that has been attached to a system I used regularly has had one. It kinda annoyed some of my co-workers as I'd always get the KVM keyboards replaced with clit-endowed ones; praise be to the ergonomics fad which makes it easier to justify.
Unfortunately, the clit has fallen on disfavor and is mostly only available on business-class laptops. You can, however, still buy nice IBM Model M-type mechanical-keyed keyboards with a clit from the company who bought IBM's IP for their keyboard technology and the factory in which they were manufactured - Unicomp. www.unicomp.com
Re:Who uses mice? (Score:2)
I've been using Kensington trackballs since the early '90s. I actually prefer the old mechanical Turbo Mouse line over the current optical Expert Mouse design. The Turbo's large stainless steel rollers didn't collect nearly as much gunk as the little plastic beads in the Expert Mouse.
Obviously depends on maker (Score:2)
I just replaced a 5+ year old Apple Mighty Mouse - the first Apple mouse I've ever worn out (bluetooth was getting flakey). On the other hand, the mice that I get with my work PC laptops have generally lasted months, not years. Dell mice are utter crap.
Re:Obviously depends on maker (Score:2)
The maker definitely matters.
I've been using the same mouse for the past 5 years, when I replaced the Logitech 3-button mouse that I purchased in 1994. So, that's 2 mice in 20 years. And that old mouse was doing just fine, but I needed something that was USB, and the switch to an optical mouse was a nice upgrade. However, I'm starting to think about going wireless on the mouse and keyboard. Not sure if that will work well with my KVM switch.
Re:Obviously depends on maker (Score:2)
I've never had any trouble with the Dell mice that I've used at work but then again I never had to use any one of them for more than a few years before getting replacement during a tech refresh. That said I don't care for the ergonomics of them at all.
My favorite mouse of all time was some old model of microsoft intelli mice they made back in 2002 or so. I used the same mouse for six years straight with no problems at all. It had a very nice feel in the hand and was light weight. I had to leave it when I ended my employment at that work place.
I've only ever had two mice stop working that I used at home. Both were logitechs the first was just their basic 3 button optical mouse which lasted about 3 years before the left button gave out. Then I used a couple wireless mice, a microsoft and a logitech if I remember right. After the experience with those I don't think I'll ever opt for a wireless mouse again. The reception was always poor and it was hard to tell if the battery was going dead or if reception was flaking out again, on top of which the batteries made them very heavy in comarison to a corder optical mouse. I went back to a corded logitech, 5 button this time, which worked great for about 6 or 7 years before it developed a short in the wiring. So now I use a relatively new logitech 5 button and hope for another 5 years of use.
Trackball (Score:2)
Less the 5 years? (Score:3)
It would almost be easier for me to list the ones that have broken then put a lifespan to them.
Ever since I have moved to optical USB mice, of the dozens that I have used at home or work, only 3 no longer work. Ironically 2 of those were "high end" mice. The budget Microsoft and Logitech mice seem to last forever. I only just replaced the original Microsoft optical wheel mouse my grandmother had after ~10 years of use after a button broke. My other ones of that era are still going fine.
Re:Less the 5 years? (Score:2)
The only mouse I have ever worn out is an Amiga mouse. This was in 1999-ish, on an Amiga dating back to about 1990. The left button microswitch wore out, it still pointed fine.
Re:Less the 5 years? (Score:2)
Strewth. The only mouse I can remember having that died was an early Logitech USB optical mouse from around '01. It'd been my mouse until ~'08 and then my wife's until just a few months ago, when one of the button actuators finally got clogged up with something and quit. I might have been able to fix it (and maybe even put it back together again), but mice are so cheap that it wasn't worth it.
It depends (Score:2)
They don't make them like they used to (Score:3)
Re:They don't make them like they used to (Score:2)
My old Logitech MX500 mouse pointer was ONLY retired because the scroll wheel no longer worked after five years of yeoman service. I've replaced it with a Logitech M500 model.
Re:They don't make them like they used to (Score:2)
I still have an old ball-mouse that's coming up on 22 years and still working.
Rapamycin?
Re:They don't make them like they used to (Score:2)
I still have an old ball-mouse that's coming up on 22 years and still working.
Rapamycin?
My oldest ball mice still work fine as well, several Apple IIGS mice, a few Commodore 1350 mice, a 1351 or two, and a Tandy mouse (which has a bigass steel ball that a much younger me would have been tempted to use as a steelie in the marbles arena back in grade school).
Re:They don't make them like they used to (Score:2)
A good mouse is hard to find these days... (Score:2)
Re:A good mouse is hard to find these days... (Score:2)
Microsoft Intellimouse Explorer mouse. It's the best mouse I've ever used, I'm not sure why Microsoft ever went away from the design. Clearly by the price, they are still highly sought after.
That is another one I never pass up at Goodwill or St. Vinnie's, the 3.0 and the 4.0 especially. Those are also consistent resellers for me.
Microsoft? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Microsoft? (Score:3)
Microsoft Wheelmouse Optical -- the only virtually flawless product Microsoft ever made, so of course they discontinued them.
Flawless for the user mean fatally flawed for the manufacturer. The manufacturer wants something like a mouse to work well enough but last just long enough that you're willing to replace it when it breaks. If it lasts longer than that, they missed a chance to extract more $$$$ from you. See "planned obsolescence."
Cheers,
Dave
User error (Score:2)
My mice would last much longer if I could resist the urge to smack them against the monitor whenever my computer slows down. I know perfectly well that the mouse is blameless, but my lizard brain needs to SMASH something.
"Forever, I have an MX500/MX510" (Score:2)
Where is that option?
It's the perfect mouse. Will never be exceeded and they seem to never break either.
Re:"Forever, I have an MX500/MX510" (Score:2)
Or a Logitech MX518.
I should have remembered that one.
My Evoluent Vertical Mouse 4 just hit year 3 (Score:3)
Depends entirely on the mouse (Score:2)
My very first Rising Star mouse from the mid 80s was still working when I tossed it a couple years ago. I used the bus mouse I got with my 286 until I built a machine with no ISA slots (and therefore no way to plug in the mouse's interface card). On the flip side, when Apple switched from the angular ADB mice to the rounded one in the early 90s, the rounded pieces of crap would start double-clicking after a month or two. I had to scrounge a box of the old mice to replace the new ones in our department. Oh, and Apple's clit-mice were bad, too. The little ball would quickly stop responding in one direction at a time until it did nothing. Again, I experienced their failure in a production environment with many mice in use by many people.
In general (excluding Apple meece), the more I spend, the longer it lasts. I'm currently 3 years into a $90 Mionix mouse and it works as well as the day I bought it.
Microsoft Trackball Optical 1.0 (Score:2)
I have had this mouse for ages, closer to 10 years than 5. I went looking for a replacement on the off chance that this one died and found that they now go for 300$ new in the box!
15+ years? (Score:2)
Violent mouse users and my history with crapgadget (Score:2)
My mouses (sic) tend to last a couple of years. Main reasons are that I buy them on the cheap rather than the proper choice of Logitech/MS product. I'd go for more expensive stuff but then I see the wife clicking with increasing violence and with her indicator finger reaching considerable height before slamming on the buttons when things don't quite work as she expects. Can't wait to get a laptop with a touchscreen to see her punch that Start screen.
My first mouse cost me EUR35, had a huge rubber ball and worked better to move the cursor to the right and down than in other directions.
I had a A4Tech mouse that was wireless but had a very weak sensor at the end of a long USB cable. That setup was clunky as hell under the desk. It worked fine with line of sight, not so great otherwise.
I once had a mouse branded Trust which outlasted the keyboard that was part of the set. I bought another set hoping I could mix and match. mix and fail was more like it.
I used a Microsoft optical mouse with a Mac and I think this was the one that lasted the longer, despite being used by everyone back at home, including 4 year old kids.
I currently have a Logitech mouse and keyboard combo and the mouse scroll wheel is becoming too old to register middle-clicks.
With my work laptop (HP Elitebook) I sometimes use a HP bluetooth mouse which loses signal every now and then. The same mouse worked fine with a Dell laptop but seems to dislike being paired with a HP machine.
Evoluent vertical mouse (Score:4, Interesting)
I've had an Evoluent Vertical Mouse for 6 years now and my wrist has already forgotten why to thank me for it, and see no reason to replace it anytime in the foreseeable future.
One (Score:2)
How long do your computer mice last? (Score:2)
Until a fancier mouse hits the market.
All my Logitech mouses are still operational when I replace them with a better model and I don't change very often (every 4 years?).
Trackballin' (Score:2)
As I suffer from multiple sclerosis, my right hand isn't what it used to be - operating a mouse became incredibly hard, so I switched to a thumb-operated trackball (M570). After a not too long learning period and honing my precision, I am now 100% trackballed.
That said, however, this is actually my third trackball in three years. The first one was a victim of my stupidity: it stopped working on me, I opened it up, found that the battery connectors are so shoddily put together that if you put in a battery enough times, they'll just slide off. After sliding them back in, I didn't fully control my sick hand and ripped off one of the capacitors. Unfortunately, my days of soldering were over and I had no one to help me, so I had to buy a replacement. The second one had a strange fault, also engineering-related, or maybe transport damage, no idea. It also stopped working on me, I opened it up and, not seeing any problem, I was literally stumped. It so happened that I accidentally touched a capacitor with a probe, and boom - it's working. I angled the capacitor a little, thinking maybe the connectors weren't properly soldered in, and, a couple months later, it's still working. In the meantime I found a deskjob that required using a pointer, so I bought a third one, which keeps working without fail... for now.
I wish more companies would make thumb-operated trackballs - a frontal trackball isn't a good solution for my right hand, and I fear the whole concept of a trackball will soon be a thing of the past.
I think some are indestructable (Score:2)
Out of all the mice I've owned, only a few have actually died. One was a small travel mouse that came with my previous laptop - it lasted about two years, and was actually pretty nice because it had a cord perfectly sized for a laptop (about 40cm long). Eventually the left-click stopped working. I've also had a few ball mice die, but since I ended up with an entire shoebox full of ones that still worked, I never really cared (I eventually just threw them away, because a working ball mouse is still worse than a broken optical mouse).
My current three mice are:
A Logitech Anywhere Mouse MX. It really does work on everything, except, ironically, one of my mousepads. It's easier to use on the solid-glass desk surface than on the mousepad I have on said desk. It's small and wireless, so I keep this one with my laptop. Probably my favorite mouse - five buttons, scroll wheel has both tilt and unlockable speed (I can scroll about 4000 lines with one flick). Only feature it's missing is variable DPI, which I rarely use, and the middle mouse button isn't very well-positioned. It's lasted about a year so far with just a bit of wear and about four changes of battery.
An Asus GX800 gaming mouse. It came with my current laptop, but it's horribly suited for it (too big and flat-surfaced), so I use it with my primary desktop. It's currently about a year and a half old and has had zero problems (unlike the laptop). I'm not sure I would have spent money on it, but it was essentially free and it works just fine.
A Microsoft IntelliMouse, which dates back to (I think) 1999 or so (it's an optical, but it came with a Windows 98 computer). I use it with my secondary desktop, another old piece of junk that's still somehow more reliable than the brand-new top-of-the-line stuff. Seriously, the only "damage" it's suffered is some yellowing of the plastic and me misplacing the PS/2->USB adapter at some point. So that one's been running for 14 years with no problem.
Define "last" (Score:2)
I tend to use mine for just a few years before the style either bores me or my usage pattern changes enough to warrant an upgrade.
Buy good ones (Score:2)
Way back when (early 90s) I bought inexpensive mice and they'd die after a few months. Since then I bought better quality (e.g. more expensive ones) and they last for a very long time. I have a MSFT USB Intellimouse (optical) from 1998 or so that I used at work until a few months ago when I cut over to a laptop for my daily use. The plastic has gone a bit yellow and I've cleaned it a number of times with rubbing alcohol to get the gunk off.
The Obligatory Related Resource (Score:2)
The original mouse included within the 1968 "(Mother of all demos) Demonstration [stanford.edu]" presented by the inventor, Doug Engelbart.
Oblig. Star Trek Quote, Just use the keyboard! (Score:2)
Computer... Computer? {is handed the mouse and speaks into it} Hello, Computer? (Scotty)
Just use the keyboard. (Dr. Nicolas)
Keyboard? How quaint. (Scotty)
Trackball (Score:2)
I used a Kensington Expert Pro Mouse trackball at home, a Logitech MX620 wireless mouse for my laptop, and a Logitech S510 wireless mouse at work. I prefer the trackball as it's more precise and takes up less room on my desk.
Way back when I used the keyboard for playing Quake CTF. A bunch of my clan buddies switch to mice and started wiping the floor with my ass. I switch to a mouse but found that it would reach the edge of my desk or roll off the mouse pad (this was before laser mice) at inopportune times. I switched to a Kensington trackball (big trackball, not the tiny thumb ones) and never looked back.
I been through five tackballs over the last 20 years. Fortunately, Kensington has a 5 year warranty and many of the replacements have been free.
I don't think that I have ever actually killed a mouse. I've been through roller ball and laser mice but most swaps been due to upgrades and not device failure.
LAAAASERS! (Score:2)
My favorite mouse is an old Logitech MX LASER. It has built-in rechargeable batteries with a charging stand that also serves as the receiver. This also allows me to put the receiver closer to the mouse Most importantly, it has a PS/2 connector which is pretty hard to come by these days.
Now I just need to get a shark for it.
Re:Trackballs FTW (Score:2)
I started using a Marconi trackball in the '80s, never understood why somebody would want to use them upside down.
Only problem with them is they're still mechanical and subject to cleaning. A bit vexing taking apart my old trackball for the occasional scrub. I met someone who had one which didn't require screwdrivers to take theirs apart, the ball could simply be tipped out for cleaning of rollers and such.
Re:Trackballs FTW (Score:2)
Spaceballs are even better, but i don't think they are made any longer, and they were a lot more expensive than a good trackball.
Re:Trackballs FTW (Score:2)
Spaceballs are even better, but i don't think they are made any longer, and they were a lot more expensive than a good trackball.
Those tend to deplete your air supply though.
Re:Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:4, Informative)
Re: Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:3)
Paradoxes are cute little wiener-dogs!
Re: Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:2)
funny, but I think this might have been funnier
Paradoxes are cute little wiener-doxs!
Re: Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:2)
Re: Pop them in the TARDIS every 10 years (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanity_Has_Declined
Re:they wear out? (Score:2)
Fifteen years ago, when mice were expensive, I would have replaced the micro switch. Not any more. Sanitary landfill!
Re:they wear out? (Score:2)
Just as a heads up, if you ever come across used working MS Trackball Explorers, either wired or wireless at a good low price, yoink em. Those are like gold apparently. Your inner Jawa will not be disappointed.
Re:I have been using my mouse intensively for 7 ye (Score:2)
I've been using a Logitech 5 button gaming mouse (I think it's the G3) for a number of year snow, I've forgotten how long. My husband has been through several in the same time, but mine just keeps on keeping on. I have to clean it fairly regularly because cat hair sticks to the glide pads on the base, but other than that it's like it's brand new.
Re:Until the day after the warranty expires. (Score:2)
Not just mice but a lot of other items also tend to last just a little longer than the warranty. I usually take the extended warranty if available on more expensive items otherwise that 1 year manufacture warranty will expire a day/week/month before the item breaks.
Visio brand televisions used to be notorious for that.
Re:Mouse is still fine, it's the stupid switch (Score:2)
Re:P/N: X812824 Going on ~9 years. MS FTW (Score:2)
Logitech M185 = cheap shitty crap, know that.
Re:Logitech MX1000 Laser Mouse (Score:2)
I loved mine. No clue what happened to it, it is still around somewhere. I stopped using it when I stopped using my old desktop and then I had no desktop for a while. Only problem I ever had was it was finicky about charging, sometimes I had to mess with it to get a good connection to the charger.
It likely is dead now; but it is also likely that if it is dead, it is because the battery has gone years without a charge (tends to be bad for them).
That said, I have switched to others, I got a logitech "gamer mouse" (its home don't know the model) that even has swapable weights in it; and a logictech trackball at work (which i bought and brought in). Both are at least 2-3 years old now.
My favorite of all time though was the trackball I was issued back in 1999. I had just started working at the university and requested my favorite mouse at the time: A logictech "mousman" I believe it was called (kind of wide and paw shaped 3 button). My boss agreed and said "while its on order try this" and handed me one of these: http://www.itacsystems.com/evolution.html [itacsystems.com]
My mouse man came in, I never used it. Stuck with the evolution the entire time I worked there, it was great. Never once had to pop the ball out for cleaning, smooth action.
Since then, whenever I have been setting up a new desktop I check them out. Never been willing to personally shell out almost $200 for a mouse. I feel like enough of a tool at less than half the price of one of those.
Re:Logitech MX1000 Laser Mouse (Score:3)