I quit looking for a better mouse since ....
- J888www
- Main keyboard: SIIG MiniTouch-Monterey Blue Switches.
- Main mouse: MS Standard Optical
- Favorite switch: Monterey Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
I have minimal preferences/requirements, within the Week, I may be using a Logitech M310 (Blue), Razer DeathAdder (Decepticon), MS Standard Wireless Optical, Logitech M505 (Grey) and ThinkPad Pointing stick, on different Systems. I'm happy to use them all. Generally, I like a simple 3 button mouse, so if I have more buttons, I just deactivate what I consider superfluous for my usage. Having binned my SteelSeries Kinzu (tracking issues) and Limited Edition Boomslang (flakey rubber casing), I still have, for spares, Logitceh M518, Logitech M310 (Aces), Razer DeathAdder (BumbleBee), all NIB as I don't have any valid reason to make use of my whimsy purchases.
Just saw itlnstln's MS Natural Mouse 6k and am now tempted, even though my RSI/CTS have healed/vanished, I can still remember the pain in my paw and would not relish the symptoms to reoccur.
Just saw itlnstln's MS Natural Mouse 6k and am now tempted, even though my RSI/CTS have healed/vanished, I can still remember the pain in my paw and would not relish the symptoms to reoccur.
- Moogle Stiltzkin
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1295 HAU NKRO Cherry Mx Black
- Main mouse: Logitech G500
- Favorite switch: Cherry Mx Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
I haven't used the G9 before mrinterface.
I'm more of a fan of the mx518 mouse design.
They made a G5, and later a G500, both based on the MX518 but with an improved design You should give the G500 a try which i'm using. Easy to keep clean and very comfortable.
What i also liked about the G500 was the fast scroller. You can alternate between slow and fast scrolling
I'm more of a fan of the mx518 mouse design.
They made a G5, and later a G500, both based on the MX518 but with an improved design You should give the G500 a try which i'm using. Easy to keep clean and very comfortable.
What i also liked about the G500 was the fast scroller. You can alternate between slow and fast scrolling
- Mrinterface
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: UHK
- Main mouse: G203
- Favorite switch: Monterey blues
- DT Pro Member: 0012
Welcome Moogle!Moogle Stiltzkin wrote:I haven't used the G9 before mrinterface.
- Moogle Stiltzkin
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1295 HAU NKRO Cherry Mx Black
- Main mouse: Logitech G500
- Favorite switch: Cherry Mx Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
Thx
- turbocharged
- Main keyboard: Deck Legend Fire
- Main mouse: Mionix Naos 5000
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Black
- DT Pro Member: -
Had a G9x for about a year, but my pink started to hurt after long gaming sessions. I sold it and got a Mionix Naos 5000...3 months strong and problem solved. G9x was a great mouse and I feel the Naos 5000 performs just as well (same laser if I recall)...it just feels better in my hand.
- Lamaboi
- Location: Thorunia, Poland
- Main keyboard: FC200RT/AB
- Main mouse: Logitech G500
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
Have a Logitech G500 which obviously has the same sensor as the G9x, Avago ADNS-9500.
Build/quality wise it's a step up to to the good ol' optical MX518. The rough plastic on the sides feels alot better then the rubber coating of the MX518, same goes for the top mat plastic portion which is an ease for my sweaty hands compared to the shiny plastic finish on some mice.
The first major gripe I have with this mouse is the scroll wheel. While the fluid speed scrolling switch(MX Performance style) is quite handy for browsing long document sheets and websites, it's just too loose on most out of box models and makes a soft rattling sound - people who will use this mouse in office specific applications probably won't notice it but most gamers will, and that's a bad thing, especially you consider that this mouse supposed to be a gaming accessoire. That's unfortunately a construction flaw of the wheel tilting mechanism which imho is obsolete, at least for me since I haven't used that particular function at all, neither in games nor in desktop environment.
The second major gripe is the sensor, or laser sensors in general. Accuracy/feeling wise it's just not the same as an optical mouse, atleast not straight out of the box. The biggest problem for me was to find the perfect surface cause normal cloth mats didn't work correctly and produced skipping and acceleration during fast movements(except for tightly woven cloths with synthetics mixed in for better light reflection). For now I'm stuck with a Lian-Li aluminum pad which offers great tracking and accuracy... until I get a Zowie Swift mat in my hands : D
Build/quality wise it's a step up to to the good ol' optical MX518. The rough plastic on the sides feels alot better then the rubber coating of the MX518, same goes for the top mat plastic portion which is an ease for my sweaty hands compared to the shiny plastic finish on some mice.
The first major gripe I have with this mouse is the scroll wheel. While the fluid speed scrolling switch(MX Performance style) is quite handy for browsing long document sheets and websites, it's just too loose on most out of box models and makes a soft rattling sound - people who will use this mouse in office specific applications probably won't notice it but most gamers will, and that's a bad thing, especially you consider that this mouse supposed to be a gaming accessoire. That's unfortunately a construction flaw of the wheel tilting mechanism which imho is obsolete, at least for me since I haven't used that particular function at all, neither in games nor in desktop environment.
The second major gripe is the sensor, or laser sensors in general. Accuracy/feeling wise it's just not the same as an optical mouse, atleast not straight out of the box. The biggest problem for me was to find the perfect surface cause normal cloth mats didn't work correctly and produced skipping and acceleration during fast movements(except for tightly woven cloths with synthetics mixed in for better light reflection). For now I'm stuck with a Lian-Li aluminum pad which offers great tracking and accuracy... until I get a Zowie Swift mat in my hands : D
- Mrinterface
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: UHK
- Main mouse: G203
- Favorite switch: Monterey blues
- DT Pro Member: 0012
Ah, the mouse mat dilemma : I now only use cloth mousepads since I found out that any other material( glass, alu, metal, plastic ... ) doesn't work well for me. The cloth absorbs moisture which is a very handy thing to have when having a fierce gaming match.Lamaboi wrote: The second major gripe is the sensor, or laser sensors in general. Accuracy/feeling wise it's just not the same as an optical mouse, atleast not straight out of the box. The biggest problem for me was to find the perfect surface cause normal cloth mats didn't work correctly and produced skipping and acceleration during fast movements(except for tightly woven cloths with synthetics mixed in for better light reflection). For now I'm stuck with a Lian-Li aluminum pad which offers great tracking and accuracy... until I get a Zowie Swift mat in my hands : D
- Lamaboi
- Location: Thorunia, Poland
- Main keyboard: FC200RT/AB
- Main mouse: Logitech G500
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
Indeed, cloth mats are wonderful thing, especially in combination with an optical sensor. The only cloth pad I've found useful with a laser sensor was the Razer Goliathus Speed, though with higher polling rates the sensor produced alot of jittering on cloth surface. Plastic and aluminum on the other hand give fluid response on all DPI and pooling settings. I'm also thinking about trying out one of them old IceMat 2nd glass pads, saw an auction of a whole batch of untouched ones on ebay.
- microsoft windows
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Main mouse: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
This is my favorite mouse.
These Dell mice work great and never wear out. I've got so much use out of mine that the silver's worn off the buttons on some.
These Dell mice work great and never wear out. I've got so much use out of mine that the silver's worn off the buttons on some.
- microsoft windows
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Main mouse: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
That's funny. I work at a school (in the computer department of course) and that's where I got my Dell optical mice.
- Minskleip
- Location: Norway
- Main keyboard: HHKB Pro 2
- Main mouse: CM Sentinel Storm
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
The college I attended had a deal with Dell. Only Dell computers. And then they ran VNC on all the computers. Nice to monitor the students. I don't mind, as long as they don't look at me
- webwit
- Wild Duck
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: Model F62
- Favorite switch: IBM beam spring
- DT Pro Member: 0000
- Contact:
I stopped using mouse mats since they got rid of the mouse balls and never looked back. Desk surface works fine.Lamaboi wrote:Indeed, cloth mats are wonderful thing, especially in combination with an optical sensor. The only cloth pad I've found useful with a laser sensor was the Razer Goliathus Speed, though with higher polling rates the sensor produced alot of jittering on cloth surface. Plastic and aluminum on the other hand give fluid response on all DPI and pooling settings. I'm also thinking about trying out one of them old IceMat 2nd glass pads, saw an auction of a whole batch of untouched ones on ebay.
- microsoft windows
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Main mouse: IBM Model M5-2 Trackball Keyboard
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
The thing about optical mice is every once in a while, there's a surface they can't track on. I've been pretty hesitant to use mouse pads at work (I work at a school) ever since one of the handicapped kids took a bite out of one a year ago. I still have to use mouse pads with the metal fold-out computer desks we got though, as the optical mice there won't track well on the painted metal surface at all. But they track great on almost all other surfaces I've found.
- yellowFreak
- Main keyboard: Filco Majestic v2 mx Blue
- Main mouse: Razer Deathadder
- Favorite switch: mx BLue
- DT Pro Member: -
Razer Deathadder fits nicely into your hands!
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- Main keyboard: Majestouch Tenkeyless "Ghetto Reds"
- Main mouse: SteelSeries Xai
- Favorite switch: Cherry Red
- DT Pro Member: -
I considered trying a G9x since I claw grip, but I've gotten used to gaming on the Xai and I don't want to mess with that for now. Both have the same sensor, which I find is pretty accurate on hard pads. If you have a G9, I would consider upgrading to the x just for the sensor accuracy difference.
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- Main keyboard: 10€ microsoft crap
- Main mouse: Razer DeathAdder
- Favorite switch: mx brown
- DT Pro Member: -
razer deathadder is propably the best thing you can get. well it also depends on what kinds of shape you like but for me its the perfect shape the deathadder will last forever.. also pretty much the best mouse you can get for fps games. plus its not too expensive.
- Mrinterface
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: UHK
- Main mouse: G203
- Favorite switch: Monterey blues
- DT Pro Member: 0012
Once I had a wireless Apple mouse -> while it worked pretty well I absolutely HATED the battery consumption. Every 2 weeks I needed to put in new batteries which made me decide to have a non wireless cheap apple mouse which works rather well with OSX.
- gorb
- Location: Fort Worth, TX
- Main keyboard: Filco Majestouch Tenkeyless
- Main mouse: Zowie EC2
- DT Pro Member: -
Zowie EC2 is my current favorite mouse although I'd like to buy another MS Intellimouse Optical 1.1 and see if I still like it as much as I did several years ago.
I've gone through several logitech mice after the intellimouse - mx510, mx518, g5 v2, g500, alienware tactx (g9x clone). the g500 was my favorite of the bunch, but I'm more comfortable with the zowie now.
I've gone through several logitech mice after the intellimouse - mx510, mx518, g5 v2, g500, alienware tactx (g9x clone). the g500 was my favorite of the bunch, but I'm more comfortable with the zowie now.
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- Location: Ugly American
- Main keyboard: As Long As It is Helvetica
- Main mouse: Mickey
- Favorite switch: Wanna Switch? Well, I Certainly Did!
- DT Pro Member: -
MsKeyboard wrote:My personal favorite "at the moment" is the Evoluent, and still working on the CST trackball. Updated to the V4, but not sure I am all that happy with the modifications, still getting used to them, but otherwise really like it.
Later.........MsKeyboard
PS....Webwit, it is great to see you again! Glad I found this forum.
Please ask Robert Rolling, director of Marketing at CST, if has trouble going uphill?
P.S. Yeah, old joke but there's no escaping me.
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- Main keyboard: Filco
- Main mouse: Xai
- Favorite switch: Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
Xai also has the same laser. Picked it over the G9X due to the shape. I really love the basic shape. The mouse also has pretty much no problems (only slight negative accel at 50cm+/360)turbocharged wrote:Had a G9x for about a year, but my pink started to hurt after long gaming sessions. I sold it and got a Mionix Naos 5000...3 months strong and problem solved. G9x was a great mouse and I feel the Naos 5000 performs just as well (same laser if I recall)...it just feels better in my hand.
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- Main keyboard: Filco
- Main mouse: Xai
- Favorite switch: Brown
- DT Pro Member: -
G9 is old laser, not as good. G9X, G500, Xai, etc are the only decent laser mice out there.TechwonV wrote:steelseries kinzu vs g9 anyone?
Kinzu is really bad, it has really bad acceleration issues. It has both positive and negative acceleration. Also a very low tracking speed, which means you'll hit negative acceleration really quick. I tried it for 15min and put it away because it was so bad.
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- Main keyboard: Das Ultimate
- Main mouse: Logitech
- DT Pro Member: -
I like logitech mice, they just seem to last the longest and feel great for me (although I haven't tried a deathadder yet which quite a few people seem to be recommending).
My mom has one that's 10+ years old and works perfectly, I'm not sure if I should give her one of my spare mice or see if it can take another 10 years of daily usage...
My mom has one that's 10+ years old and works perfectly, I'm not sure if I should give her one of my spare mice or see if it can take another 10 years of daily usage...
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- Location: UK
- Main keyboard: FKBN87MC/EB2
- Main mouse: Sensei [RAW] (Rubber)
- Favorite switch: MX Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
I have got the Logitech G9x -- as a RMA replacement for a Logitech G5. I was surprised when they sent this as a replacement, thought I'd get a G500 max but I got imo a much better mouse.