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Logitech or Microsoft

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  • S Sean Cundiff

    Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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    Roger Wright new
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    Puddles of Jolt cola and stray bits of pizza cheese on the desktop will take a toll on any mouse, but at least the MS Intellimouse seems to thrive on Mozzarella. Logitech's products have always failed to operate properly for me, but that was back in the days before they learned to write a proper driver. I assume they've overcome that problem by now, but I'm sticking to my trusty MS mouse. I did try, many years ago, a Cirque Touchpad device. It was very cool to use, but the ninnies designed it with the buttons below the pad, rather than the far more functional mousy tradition of placing them in the general region of the actual button-pushing fingers. Last Comdex I attended they still had not corrected this moronic layout, so I am again committed to using my MS rodent.

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    • R Roger Wright new

      Puddles of Jolt cola and stray bits of pizza cheese on the desktop will take a toll on any mouse, but at least the MS Intellimouse seems to thrive on Mozzarella. Logitech's products have always failed to operate properly for me, but that was back in the days before they learned to write a proper driver. I assume they've overcome that problem by now, but I'm sticking to my trusty MS mouse. I did try, many years ago, a Cirque Touchpad device. It was very cool to use, but the ninnies designed it with the buttons below the pad, rather than the far more functional mousy tradition of placing them in the general region of the actual button-pushing fingers. Last Comdex I attended they still had not corrected this moronic layout, so I am again committed to using my MS rodent.

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      Tim Lesher
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      I did try, many years ago, a Cirque Touchpad device. I bought one from Ebay to try as well; however, I found that I developed sever pain on the top of my hands right at the first knuckle after using one for eight hours. Anyone else have such a problem? Tim Lesher http://www.lesher.ws

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      • S Simon Walton

        I had a Microsoft Wheelmouse that lasted me three years before the buttons started playing up. I purchased a Logitech iFeel Mouseman this year and i'm not that pleased with it. It's lovely and comfortable, but the vibration function is far from useful - it's just a loud clicking noise. I only bought it to play Black & White :) Also, the wheel is horrible. It feels really weak and flimsey when you move it. Simon Hey, it looks like you're writing a letter! Sonork ID 100.10024

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        Tim Lesher
        wrote on last edited by
        #15

        Just for the record, I proposed such a thing roughly a year before the first one was announced, thank you very much... :| Anyway, has anyone found a fource-feedback mouse or mouse-like device that they really liked? Tim Lesher http://www.lesher.ws

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        • S Sean Cundiff

          Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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          Matt Newman
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          I have to agree with Logitech mice being really reliable. I have a Logitech scroll mouse that has survived longer than most of my computers. Any product you buy may have a few bad ones. Some people seem to always get lemons. I wouldn't really say all MS mice are bad just because some didn't last. I say if it works for you stick with it. Sean Cundiff wrote: The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. I agree the seem cheaper and last longer. -:suss:Matt Newman:suss: -:suss:Matt Newman:suss: -Sonork ID: 100.11179:BestSnowman

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          • S Sean Cundiff

            Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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            Erik Funkenbusch
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            MS mice seem to be a little more sensitive to power fluctuations than Logitech mice. On a computer with a very even power source, your mouse will probably last forever. If your power supply is flaky though, you could damage the MS mouse. This is why some people have so much trouble with mice, because they keep plugging the same kind of mouse into the same problem computer. -- Where are we going? And why am I in this handbasket?

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            • S Sean Cundiff

              Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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              Christian Graus
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              I have a Logitech cordless optical mouse and it is heaven. My old M$ mouse (the optical Explorer) had died, so I took it to work, cut a few inches out of the cord ( near the end ) and it still works fine after about a year or so. Logitech were notorious for their driver issues, but I've had none with this mouse, even SOlaris found it without needing a driver !!! Christian After all, there's nothing wrong with an elite as long as I'm allowed to be part of it!! - Mike Burston Oct 23, 2001

              Sonork ID 100.10002:MeanManOz

              I live in Bob's HungOut now

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              • C Chris Maunder

                I've got a Logitech cordless (not optical) and it's been a dream. Nice weight, good tracking, and the cordless-ness is a Godsend. I've also got a MS optical and I find that very light (but still nice too) cheers, Chris Maunder

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                Christian Graus
                wrote on last edited by
                #19

                Chris Maunder wrote: I've got a Logitech cordless (not optical) and it's been a dream. Chris, you need to get the one that's optical too - it's AMAZING. Christian After all, there's nothing wrong with an elite as long as I'm allowed to be part of it!! - Mike Burston Oct 23, 2001

                Sonork ID 100.10002:MeanManOz

                I live in Bob's HungOut now

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                • S Sean Cundiff

                  Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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                  Bart
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  DEFINATELY MICROSOFT I have a couple which are about 4 yrs old. I have NEVER had a problem with MS Mouse. They are the most stable thing to come out of the microsoft camp! My small network of 15 computers is missing about 4 MS mouse. Original products tend to be expensive but i will surely get the last 4 very soon! The moral is: NEVER USE ANY OTHER MOUSE. ps. moust of my old ones walked out of the door. I have NEVER had one fail! bart

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                  • B Bart

                    DEFINATELY MICROSOFT I have a couple which are about 4 yrs old. I have NEVER had a problem with MS Mouse. They are the most stable thing to come out of the microsoft camp! My small network of 15 computers is missing about 4 MS mouse. Original products tend to be expensive but i will surely get the last 4 very soon! The moral is: NEVER USE ANY OTHER MOUSE. ps. moust of my old ones walked out of the door. I have NEVER had one fail! bart

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                    Roger Wright new
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    It seems fairly clear from the small sample set here that the MS mouse is excellent - perhaps the only thing Micro$oft does well. Now if they would only pull their heads out and get on the 'real' Java wagon, I might be able to get a web-enabled mouse that is reliable, and knows in advance which way I want to move it next! Does anybody else remember Prolog? Whatever happenned to AI, and why aren't we seeing more applications that utilize it? I'd love to see a Java package that implements some basic AI classes!

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                    • S Sean Cundiff

                      Mice that is. Every Microsoft mouse I have ever owned (ok there might be one or two that don't fit this description) has broken/become unusable within a matter of months. (Average seems to be about 6 months) Every Logitech mouse I have ever owned (without exception) has worked divinely :) I even have a Logitech Mouseman 3-button that I bought in 1988 (yes, 1988) that finally went kaput a few months ago. That's 13 years of use from a US$25 mouse :-D The moral of the story: I will always choose a Logitech mouse when given the choice. -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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                      Tibor Blazko
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      here they recommend MS one: http://www.metku.net/hardware/rottaflekti/index\_eng.html t!

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                      • C Chris Maunder

                        I've got a Logitech cordless (not optical) and it's been a dream. Nice weight, good tracking, and the cordless-ness is a Godsend. I've also got a MS optical and I find that very light (but still nice too) cheers, Chris Maunder

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                        Sean Cundiff
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #23

                        At work I'm using a Logitech 4-button MouseMan Wheel Optical. It's very nicely weighted and has been perfect. It's even a sexy two-tone navy blue with a cool blue light for the Logitech logo. I haven't tried the Intellimouse, maybe I'll talk a co-worker into buying it and test driving it for me :) However, my next mouse purchase will be the Logitech wireless/optical :-D -Sean ---- "Vigilance With Pride"

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