Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Input Devices

Mouse or Trackball? 627

Loconut1389 writes "I've been an avid mouse user for years, but lately all of the wrist movements have added up and combined with a desire for some added precision when not using my tablet in photoshop, I decided to purchase a large trackball. Logitech makes a few with a small, thumb controlled ball, but it looked like you'd get a tired thumb and have no added precision. After searching around, it seems that the only large one really available is a Kensington for about $90. Only CompUSA seemed to even carry the kensington in-store (and had none in stock). After ordering one online and using it for a few days now, I don't know how I ever lived with a mouse. The trackball has better precision, less wrist movement, and even gaming is pretty cool/easy with it (can spin it to whip around real quick, etc). All that said, it seems like trackballs have all but vanished except in medical fields (sonograms, etc) and perhaps graphic arts. I'm left insanely curious why trackballs haven't resurfaced now that optical technologies have fixed the main problems of old trackballs (and mice). Do you use a trackball? If so, are you in graphic design?"

Comment Re:Lies, not Truth, Appeal to the American Voter (Score 1) 431

Many people that were paying attention (people that I knew) realized that the CIA data was fabricated. From: http://www.slate.com/id/2087735/ "One U.S. intelligence official said analysts may have been too eager to find evidence to support the White House's claims. As a result, he said, defectors "were just telling us what we wanted to hear." Check here: http://www.slate.com/id/2077558/, or here: http://www.slate.com/id/2078196/ for articles written before the war that dispute the intellegence. The CIA was in shambles and needed some bolstering, so when the data didn't support the WMD theory, it was pressured into manufacturing it. There are similar articles in Atlantic monthly and other places stating the same.

Slashdot Top Deals

"Mr. Spock succumbs to a powerful mating urge and nearly kills Captain Kirk." -- TV Guide, describing the Star Trek episode _Amok_Time_

Working...