I try out two wireless mice and have a clear winner.
One of the things I don’t like about using a laptop is the trackpad. While I’ll take a trackpad over a trackball any day, neither of them come close to the pointing precision I can achieve with a regular mouse.
A lot of the work I do on my desktop Mac (which is fully recovered now; thanks for asking) is layout work where I commonly drag objects with pixel precision. If I had to do that with a trackpad, I’d go nuts. And while I don’t often do any kind of layout work on my laptops, I really prefer a mouse.
My Microsoft Wireless Mouse
A while back, as a test, I bought a Microsoft Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse 3000. That’s a big name for a little pointing device. I liked the mouse’s ergonomic design and the way it fit into my hand so nicely. It tracked well, pointed well, clicked well. And the roller ball between the two buttons was soon something I began using regularly. And that’s a lot to say from someone who has been using single-button Apple mice for the past 18 years with no complaints. Best of all, the darn thing retails for only $30.
The only thing I didn’t like about the Microsoft mouse was that it wasn’t Bluetooth. Yes, it was wireless, but to use it I had to stick a small receiver/transmitter do-dad into one of my USB ports. Not a big deal, since I don’t usually have anything connected to my laptop anyway. But the USB thing is also the on/off switch for the mouse. When you’re finished using it, you’re supposed to pull out the USB thing and fit it into a specially-designed slot on the bottom of the mouse. That triggers the off switch, thus cutting power to the device and stopping any drain on the battery. My problem — or perhaps I should say one of my problems — is that I have a mind like a sieve sometimes and simply can’t remember to go through this procedure when I’m finished working.
To be fair, there hasn’t been any penalty yet. I’ve been using the mouse on and off for over a year, forget to turn it off about half the time I use it, and it’s still on its original battery. It has some kind of standby mode that sense when you’ve stopped working and reduces battery drain. So it’s not like I’m going through batteries at an alarming rate. I’m not.
So, in summary, I liked everything about the Microsoft mouse except for this silly USB thing.
My Logitech Mouse
In an effort to improve the situation, I bought a Logitech v270 Cordless Optical Bluetooth mouse. Now I don’t want you to think I was going to just throw away the Microsoft Mouse. I wasn’t. I happen to have more than one laptop and I also thought that I might start using a wireless mouse with my desktop machine. In fact, that’s what I originally bought it for. I have lots of USB devices and didn’t want to use up one of the ports on my hub. Besides, I’m trying hard to reduce the rat’s nest of wires behind my desk and figured a wireless mouse for everyday use would remove one wire.
Logitech is a company that has been around for a while. They’ve been making input devices perhaps as long as I’ve been using Macs. Their products are usually very good. But this particular mouse — which, at $50, cost almost twice as much as the Microsoft mouse — pretty much sucks.
Okay, so it doesn’t have the same perfect ergonomic shape that fits my hand so well. I wasn’t going to hold that against it. I figured that Microsoft got lucky with that design, or maybe that I got lucky that Microsoft’s design was so perfect for me. I couldn’t expect every mouse to fit so well. So that’s not what drove me to my decision.
It’s the tracking. The mouse is terrible. I can’t put my finger on it (no pun intended), but it just doesn’t seem as smooth. I can’t get the same precision. It’s frustrating and distracting and makes it difficult to get my work done without a lot of extra thought and effort.
To be fair, I tried both mice on several different computers, including my Dual G5 production machine, my 12″ PowerBook G4, my Dell Latitude 820D laptop, and my new 15″ MacBook Pro. The results were the same on every single machine. The only difference is that I had some difficulty pairing up the Logitech Bluetooth mouse on one or two of the machines. The Microsoft mouse worked perfectly on every machine — Mac and PC — as soon as I plugged in the silly USB do-dad. And it tracked perfectly, just like a wired mouse.
Mighty Mouse
Apple sells a wireless mouse called Mighty Mouse. (It’s amazing to me how Apple comes up with these names.) It’s been discussed in comments elsewhere on this site. I got a chance to work a wired version of this mouse at the Chandler Apple Store a few weeks ago. It’s a two-button mouse without physical buttons. It seems to work well. I’ll be checking out the wireless version soon enough, since I need to write about it for my Leopard book.
The reviews on the Apple Store Web site are pretty much split. Some people absolutely love Mighty Mouse while others absolutely hate it. An Apple person I spoke to admitted in a whisper that he hated it. It’s certainly the most expensive of the bunch, retailing for $70.
I didn’t think there would be a reason to “hate” a wireless mouse until I bought the Logitech mouse. I assumed they all worked as well as the Microsoft Mouse when it came to tracking. But the Logitech mouse proved that they don’t. I don’t know how Mighty Mouse will perform yet for me, but I’ll be writing about it here sometime in the future.
My Ratings
The bottom line is this: I tried two wireless mice. I very much like one (love is too strong a word) and really don’t like the other (hate is also too strong a word). If I had to rate them on a scale of 1 to 5 stars, here’s how I would do it:
Microsoft Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse 3000
[rate 4.5]
Logitech v270 Cordless Optical Bluetooth mouse
[rate 1.5]
Any thoughts? Use the Comments link to share them.













6 responses so far ↓
1 Retired Products Reveiw Site! Boldly Going // Feb 24, 2007 at 1:01 pm
[...] Maria Langer has a war happening on her desktop! I started to post a comment, and then it just took off and got a life of its own, so with respect to her blog, I figured I post here and trackback to her column. You’ll definitely want to read through her reviewing experience with a couple of mouses she is using on the (seemingly ) 40 computers she must own (I jest, really!) [...]
2 Miraz Jordan // Feb 24, 2007 at 1:27 pm
Quite a few years ago, when I was supporting Mac users, I visited a graphic artist of some kind and tried to use her graphics tablet for pulling down menus and selecting buttons. It was hopeless and I was glad to switch to a mouse she had handy.
Then a few years later I was curious and bought a graphics tablet myself to experiment with. It was hard to use, because it was totally unfamiliar, but I persisted and it’s now what I use all the time.
Well, not that original one: it died after a while. Then I replaced it and after a considerable time the cord broke (and I hadn’t so much liked the hard surface anyway).
Last year I upgraded to a Wacom Intuos 3 (4×5) and bought a $10 USB extension cable. I love my graphics tablet and now find it far easier to use than a mouse.
The $10 cable is the one that will suffer any damage next time (it’s all to do with how I sit in a chair with the computer on my lap, and the cord being affected by heat and a sharpish bend). It’s simple and cheap to replace an extension cable.
I love that using the tablet is just like holding a pen or pencil - my wrist’s flat, and my arm’s at rest on the arm of the chair.
The 4 corners of the active area are aligned to the 4 corners of my screen (that’s a setting in the extensive preferences). That means that unlike a mouse, where you scroll from one place to another, you just put the cursor in any spot on screen.
The stylus has a switch on the side, with settings for how stuff behaves. I choose to have the lower part of the switch act as a double-click, and the top part generally acts as a Control Click. You can set that per-application.
There’s an ‘eraser’ on the top that I never use, but that can also be set to various actions.
When I want to type I either put the stylus down or kind of swivel it round and hold it between my thumb and palm. It helps that never having learned to type ‘properly’, I don’t require or use all my fingers for typing.
A tablet’s a costly investment and may not suit everyone, but if you have the chance to try one out for a week or two then it may be worth it. Because it’s very different from a mouse a couple of hours use wouldn’t give you a good idea of its value to you. It’s also worth payng a bit extra to get a decent one - I regretted the ‘cheaper’ oneI had for ages and really noticed how much better my current one is.
3 Phil B // Feb 24, 2007 at 1:30 pm
My logitech mouse broke after a year, Microsoft mouse now two years and going strong.
4 James D Kirk // Feb 24, 2007 at 1:55 pm
Hey Miraz I have a friend that had one of those Wacom’s years ago and I did the same thing as you. When you did start using it regularly, how long did it take to really “get it”?
I know some people are the same way with the split ergo keyboards, and now I find it very difficult to use a straight one!
By the way, what’s the rough selling price for one of those tables now days?
Thanks!
~James
Always Go Boldly!
5 Thuy // Feb 25, 2007 at 6:16 am
I’m very much a keyboard and touchpad person. Although I’m not as quick with them as I would like to be when I am using Excel. And I use Excel a lot for all of my finance classes. My solution to my problem was getting a mouse for my laptop.
After evaluating several mice, I ended up buying the Logitech V450 Laser mouse for notebook. I love everything about this mouse. I love the grip and feel of it, and how it fits nicely and comfortably in my hand. It has the smallest USB receiver than any other mice out there, and it tucks nicely inside the mouse when not in use. There is also a battery indicator on the mouse letting you know when battery is low. I think that if Logitech had made this a Bluetooth mouse, then I would have nothing to complain!
One other note, I am a right-handed person, but on occasion I do switch the mouse to use with the left hand after long use of it on the right hand. This mouse is perfect for that.
http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/products/details/US/EN,CRID=2146,CONTENTID=12004
6 Miraz Jordan // Mar 1, 2007 at 11:55 pm
Hey, James. I’ve been using the tablet for so long now I don’t recall how long it took me to really get the hang of it. It may have been several days to a week.
As for price, you’d be best to check the channels available to you. I’m in New Zealand, and our prices aren’t at all in line with prices in the US. You can get much better deals than we can.
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