Like many ergonomic products, trackballs are an acquired taste—often, acquired by sheer painful necessity. It can feel strange to switch from using a mouse, which feels like an extension of your arm, ...
ITC.ua reviewed a strange and unusual device called Logitech MX Ergo S. It looks like a mouse, but unlike the latter, it does not require hand movements on the table. When using a trackball, the ...
While a traditional computer mouse is fairly simple and intuitive to use, it does have its drawbacks. For instance, if you don’t have a lot of desk space, you can repeatedly run out of room. With a ...
Let's start this by getting the name out of the way. This device is called the Kensington Expert Mouse Wireless Trackball. This is a trackball. Period. Nothing more, and nothing less. If it were ...
The Kensington SlimBlade Trackball Mouse has a number of big advantages: - It is small and light enough to be easily taken along and used when traveling (approximately the same size as the Logitech VX ...
Yeah, yeah — not a keyboard. But one keyboard-adjacent topic I’m certainly interested in is that of finding a satisfying mouse. Why settle for ticky micro-switches when you could have full-on thock in ...
Anyone who has ever suffered from wrist pain or desk clutter has wondered if there was another type of mouse. And the answer is yes! It's time to switch to a trackball! Table of Contents 5. No more ...
With its big rolypoly ball and huge hand rest, the venerable trackball mouse looks like a holdover from 1996. Or maybe 1946—that’s the first time a trackball was used as an input device in a computer.
Logitech's mice, including the TrackMan Marble and the M750, feature a trackball that enables you to navigate with your finger instead of your hand and wrist. Rolling the trackball with a finger moves ...