A good mouse
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Matt Bond wrote:
Why can't they create a ergonomic design for lefties?
When I check for 'Hand preference: Left' on the Logitech web site, I am presented with two alternatives ('Lift Left' and 'Signature M650 Left'. 'Ambidextrous' adds another nine - from the pictures, they seem to be perfectly symmetrical. I'd be surprised if other mouse breeders do not have similar offerings. I've stuck to Logitech for I-don't-know-how-many years, mostly because I have been mistreating my mice so badly that it is a great wonder why PETA hasn't come after me; the rodents are still obedient and well behaving.
In my experience Ambidextrous <==> not ergonomic Thank you for looking, but I'm very good with my mice and they live long health lives in my house. I won't need another for at least a decade if all goes well.
Bond Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere
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Why don't you buy a wireless mouse charged from a USB socket? My mouse warns well in advance that it needs charging, giving me ample time to dig out a standard USB cable running from the USB socked in the screen to the mouse. I can continue using the mouse while it is charging; no interrupting of my work except for (finding and) plugging in the cable.
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
I use G502 for gaming for many years. The wheel kinda broke first. It does not scrolls up well. Maybe I should clean it. Everything else works fine.
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
The Logitech Hero G502 is the only mouse I'll use at this point. I have the same wired necessity, the weights are nice, but more love it because of the weighted, free-spinning scroll wheel. Ripping up and down huge pages is simple now. I can't live without it and will always have a secondary, just in case this one dies, or traveling or ???, etc. (it's about a year old and no problems). I learned about it from The Tech Lead on youtube. He did a mouse shootout a while back, in case you need more food for thought. If anyone else knows of a different free-spinning scroll wheel mouse, I'm all ears. I look every once in a while and so far haven't found any more (other than the wireless cousins of the Hero G502).
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
How many here use a trackball mouse? I use the Logitech MX Ergo trackball, which is wireless, Bluetooth, and a battery that lasts an easy 6 months between charges. My wrist thanks me very much for this... And it's got a neat angle bracket too. No one likes it other than me so I'm safe from family members running off with it. 😁
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honey the codewitch wrote:
- Is wired, which I insist on
But, why? Why you need this cable?!
Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
I have been using the entry level Microsoft optical mouse for over 20 years now. For a while they got hard to find among the horrid multi-button gimmicky devices so I bought a batch from Goodwill for a few bucks each and worked through these weary warriors until I could get new again. The only decent product the company ever made. And now they're discontinuing them.
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I have been using the entry level Microsoft optical mouse for over 20 years now. For a while they got hard to find among the horrid multi-button gimmicky devices so I bought a batch from Goodwill for a few bucks each and worked through these weary warriors until I could get new again. The only decent product the company ever made. And now they're discontinuing them.
resuna wrote:
The only decent product the company ever made.
Not so! I can think of two others: Visual Studio, and Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2[^] - I bought one recently,. and it is really superb. Expensive, yes. But "decent" is way too low a bar for this thing! :laugh:
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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resuna wrote:
The only decent product the company ever made.
Not so! I can think of two others: Visual Studio, and Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2[^] - I bought one recently,. and it is really superb. Expensive, yes. But "decent" is way too low a bar for this thing! :laugh:
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
Presumably you’ve already purchased and received your new mouse. I hope it’s all you want it to be. I’ve been using a gaming mouse for the past several years. Not that I do any gaming, but the resolution and longevity seem to be on the upper end of the spectrum. It’s a Roccat mouse. It’s programmable, but again, my needs are simple, so I don’t use much of that. Many years ago I used a regular mouse, but my shoulder started getting twingey so I switched to a roller-ball style for a decade or so. Later I switched to using a Wacom tablet/pad. I know: “those are for graphic artists”. Oh no. Best pointing device ever. Point-to-point mapping so you don’t have to drag the mouse to move the pointer, multi-functional stylus, etc. After I retired I downsized my workspace and so moved back to a standard (gaming) mouse. I think one should explore all the options since you spend so much time with it. Cheers and good times! :)
Time is the differentiation of eternity devised by man to measure the passage of human events. - Manly P. Hall Mark Just another cog in the wheel
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Developing software on Windows is too great a burden for anything associated with it to rise to the level of "decent". I can not comment on gaming hardware. The last time I did much gaming was when I was developing Tracers on the Amiga 1000.
resuna wrote:
Developing software on Windows is too great a burden for anything associated with it to rise to the level of "decent".
Now, you know that's untrue. Many, many of us just on this site do it every day, and find the process easy and comfortable - and VS goes a long way to help with that! Perhaps, you should invest a small amount of time learning how to use it instead of just ignoring it because "it's microsoft"? And I bet the Amiga was fun to develop on and not at all frustrating ... :laugh: Back in those days I was writing Z80 code for embedded devices using EDLIN under DOS, which was ... an experience I do not wish to repeat.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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resuna wrote:
Developing software on Windows is too great a burden for anything associated with it to rise to the level of "decent".
Now, you know that's untrue. Many, many of us just on this site do it every day, and find the process easy and comfortable - and VS goes a long way to help with that! Perhaps, you should invest a small amount of time learning how to use it instead of just ignoring it because "it's microsoft"? And I bet the Amiga was fun to develop on and not at all frustrating ... :laugh: Back in those days I was writing Z80 code for embedded devices using EDLIN under DOS, which was ... an experience I do not wish to repeat.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
To be fair I've never liked Microsoft's C++ compiler offerings. For a long time they were not standard enough to implement a canonical version of the STL. After they fixed that, they made their compiler very persnickety in terms of its interpretation of the standard. GCC and Clang seem to allow for the broadest interpretation in my experience. Basically, if you can interpret the spec a certain way, GCC supports that. The same does not seem to be true of MSVC++ - it is very strict, and you almost have to relearn things - particularly the subset of the *interpretations* of the standard that MS supports. Sorry, it's a bit hard to explain. If anything MSVC++ is correct, it's just finicky in its correctness. You can write code in GCC that will not compile under MSVC++ even though they are both to C++ spec, technically.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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To be fair I've never liked Microsoft's C++ compiler offerings. For a long time they were not standard enough to implement a canonical version of the STL. After they fixed that, they made their compiler very persnickety in terms of its interpretation of the standard. GCC and Clang seem to allow for the broadest interpretation in my experience. Basically, if you can interpret the spec a certain way, GCC supports that. The same does not seem to be true of MSVC++ - it is very strict, and you almost have to relearn things - particularly the subset of the *interpretations* of the standard that MS supports. Sorry, it's a bit hard to explain. If anything MSVC++ is correct, it's just finicky in its correctness. You can write code in GCC that will not compile under MSVC++ even though they are both to C++ spec, technically.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
Microsoft tends to implement standards reluctantly and using every possible misinterpretation to encourage people to use their proprietary APIs instead. Their POSIX subsystem was a perfect example. They deliberately crippled it and defended their misfeatures as "we're just following the standard as we see it". When a company implemented an actually useful UNIX API on top of it, they bought them and took it off the market for several years... finally exposing it as part of their Windows Services for UNIX which at first was only available on NT Server. You exactly nailed it. The passive-aggressive standards conformance is a "feature".
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Microsoft tends to implement standards reluctantly and using every possible misinterpretation to encourage people to use their proprietary APIs instead. Their POSIX subsystem was a perfect example. They deliberately crippled it and defended their misfeatures as "we're just following the standard as we see it". When a company implemented an actually useful UNIX API on top of it, they bought them and took it off the market for several years... finally exposing it as part of their Windows Services for UNIX which at first was only available on NT Server. You exactly nailed it. The passive-aggressive standards conformance is a "feature".
I don't think this behavior is unique to Microsoft. Apple is almost worse about it in some respects, except where it applies to their hardware. I think it's a biproduct of A) A large company's tendency toward inertia which interferes with its responsiveness to users B) A closed loop system And a lot of companies have historically done similar. IBM is a great example of that. And to be completely fair to Microsoft, they've gotten better about all this in recent years, but still have a long way to go. Open sourcing a .NET reference implementation is a good example of the improvement I'm talking about.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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resuna wrote:
Developing software on Windows is too great a burden for anything associated with it to rise to the level of "decent".
Now, you know that's untrue. Many, many of us just on this site do it every day, and find the process easy and comfortable - and VS goes a long way to help with that! Perhaps, you should invest a small amount of time learning how to use it instead of just ignoring it because "it's microsoft"? And I bet the Amiga was fun to develop on and not at all frustrating ... :laugh: Back in those days I was writing Z80 code for embedded devices using EDLIN under DOS, which was ... an experience I do not wish to repeat.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
Oh dear. Yes, I know how to use it. I have written code on both DOS and Windows for over 40 years now, and even when I was doing it every day it was at best annoying, the API is hodge-podge and the scripting environment fragmented worse then '80s UNIX. I would rather code for 6th Edition from 1976 (even with the funky 6th edition shell). The Amiga was amazing. The message-passing real-time OS underlying AmigaDOS was really intuitive: even for low level work - you could write device drivers just by having a program post a message port and respond to appropriate messages - and the API was the best I have ever used "live fire" for low-level concurrent programming. It's a pity the business-feud-turned-personal between Tramiel and Gould doomed it from the start.
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I don't think this behavior is unique to Microsoft. Apple is almost worse about it in some respects, except where it applies to their hardware. I think it's a biproduct of A) A large company's tendency toward inertia which interferes with its responsiveness to users B) A closed loop system And a lot of companies have historically done similar. IBM is a great example of that. And to be completely fair to Microsoft, they've gotten better about all this in recent years, but still have a long way to go. Open sourcing a .NET reference implementation is a good example of the improvement I'm talking about.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
I'm not sure what you're getting at here. Apple and Microsoft both have serious problems, but I don't see how Apple's problems are related to Microsoft's passive-aggressive implementations of standards. Apple's standard interfaces are generally quite good as open standards (open systems, open source, standard interfaces and APIs) practices go. Their issues are mostly not providing open interfaces on their mobile devices at all (something that Microsoft started doing as well as Pocket PC phone edition turned into Windows Powered and Windows Phone), and of course their restriction of their OS to their somewhat anemic and siloed hardware.
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Is hard to find! I spent a week and a half on and off looking for a mouse that I knew I'd like. Nada. I dropped it. Today, my mouse wheel starts making an awful clicking noise. Time to order a new mouse. To heck with it, I'll just order something on Amazon. First thing that comes up is a Logitech Hero G502. 1) Is wired, which I insist on 2) Has ADJUSTABLE WEIGHTS. I like my mice heavy. This was a major selling point. 3) Looks like I can use it as a southpaw. The feel of my mouse is everything. I care about it more than other features. I almost settled on a wireless because of the weight of the batteries but I'll take this. And it gets delivered same day. Woo!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
I know a mouse, and he hasn't got a house I don't know why I call him Gerald He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse
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Shmoken99 wrote:
Because the batteries always die at the worst possible time.
I used to say that about any battery-operated device. Until I thought about it and realized, is there ever a time where you find out the battery died, and you thought to yourself, oh, goodie, perfect timing...
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I'm not sure what you're getting at here. Apple and Microsoft both have serious problems, but I don't see how Apple's problems are related to Microsoft's passive-aggressive implementations of standards. Apple's standard interfaces are generally quite good as open standards (open systems, open source, standard interfaces and APIs) practices go. Their issues are mostly not providing open interfaces on their mobile devices at all (something that Microsoft started doing as well as Pocket PC phone edition turned into Windows Powered and Windows Phone), and of course their restriction of their OS to their somewhat anemic and siloed hardware.
I think we're going to have to agree to disagree on Apple's hardware ecosystem. Once you buy into Apple if you want things to work together smoothly it better all be Apple. Also try running their OS on anything other than Apple hardware. It's all closed-loop. Anyway, whatever. I won't buy anything from them for other reasons. Namely they screwed me over in 1986, and screwed over an orphan teenage kid I know out of his summer earnings and then treated him like a criminal. They'll never see a dime from me.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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I think we're going to have to agree to disagree on Apple's hardware ecosystem. Once you buy into Apple if you want things to work together smoothly it better all be Apple. Also try running their OS on anything other than Apple hardware. It's all closed-loop. Anyway, whatever. I won't buy anything from them for other reasons. Namely they screwed me over in 1986, and screwed over an orphan teenage kid I know out of his summer earnings and then treated him like a criminal. They'll never see a dime from me.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
I don't think we disagree on Apple's hardware ecosystem, which is the bit that confuses me. Their hardware is anemic and restricted and overpriced, and it's part of the cost of the OS. The OS, on the other hand, plays very nice with the other children. I do UNIX, and my Mac makes a pretty good and pretty standards-compliant UNIX that happens to have a pretty good local app ecosystem on top of that. Remember, my original point was about Microsoft *advertising* a standards compliant platform (C++, the POSIX subsystem) but locking you into their proprietary environment if you actually tried to make use of it. Apple is exactly the opposite. Right now I have my Mac mini, a Linux laptop, a Linux firewall, and a handful of FreeBSD- and Linux-based servers. They all work together and I can run the same programs and scripts on any of them. I can even ssh -X to a server and run Firefox or whatever natively on my Mac without having to use a screen-scraper like VNC or Remote Desktop. My Windows laptop, on the other hand, is basically a game machine with a web browser. Apple in the '80s and '90s, before the switch to UNIX, was a whole different company. It's been 20 years since they abandoned their funky and exclusively proprietary desktop.