What mouse do you use?

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Speaking of light mice and such, who will be the first person to get the brain/PC interface? Won't have to move your hand at all?

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I don't want a weird shaped mouse, which is one reason I tend to stay away from Logitech.

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I bought 4 new mouses/mices during Amazon Prime Day. They were all about 75 percent off, so it was like buying one mouse. The new Sensei that I got previously, one for both laptops, are complete trash, so I thought I would try some different ones to see if I could find something I liked. The Sensei really went down hill. The one downstairs constantly registers double-clicks when I only click once, and the one upstairs that I try to do art with, has terrible jitter. I'll be carefully making a shape or a line, and suddenly it jerks all over the place, and I have to start over.
 
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mice is plural.

what drivers are you running on Sensai? Have you updated firmware?
Steelseries normally have drivers for their mice that help with functions. and accuracy.
Speaking of light mice and such, who will be the first person to get the brain/PC interface? Won't have to move your hand at all?
well, its in windows

 
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mice is plural.

what drivers are you running on Sensai? Have you updated firmware?
Steelseries normally have drivers for their mice that help with functions. and accuracy.

well, its in windows

Downloaded new drivers right after I plugged in the mice using their software. And, yes, I know mice is plural. I was just goofing around.

I don't think eye control is as good as the brain control they are working on, but I've never actually tried it or have any interest in trying it, but it sounds like you would still have an intermediary between thought and action (moving your eyes).
 
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how are we going to interface with pc? I don't want to plug something into back of head to play a game... not that I will be alive by this stage. PC may need to speed up too, we not sure how fast we think... Or what part of brain to interface with.

Eyes are still faster than hands, even if only by a little. Seems they can change direction at .42mph
we can see images that were only presented for 13 mili seconds.
You weren't imagining that Flying purple elephant no one else saw, it was just going really fast
 
how are we going to interface with pc? I don't want to plug something into back of head to play a game... not that I will be alive by this stage. PC may need to speed up too, we not sure how fast we think... Or what part of brain to interface with.

Eyes are still faster than hands, even if only by a little. Seems they can change direction at .42mph
we can see images that were only presented for 13 mili seconds.
You weren't imagining that Flying purple elephant no one else saw, it was just going really fast
I don't know the answers to these questions. Ask Elon Musk. He's the one who has monkeys playing Pong with their brain/PC connections. https://neuralink.com/
 
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Brian Boru

King of Munster
Moderator
brain/PC interface

Maybe not PC exactly, but it exists, especially with prosthetics controlled by thought… and maybe head movement, dunno it's a while since I read about it.

They've been researching it for ~50 years via DARPA etc and first practical implementations ~30 years ago.

I can't remember was it fiction or in development or in testing that US fighter pilots were 'wired'.
 
Maybe not PC exactly, but it exists, especially with prosthetics controlled by thought… and maybe head movement, dunno it's a while since I read about it.

They've been researching it for ~50 years via DARPA etc and first practical implementations ~30 years ago.

I can't remember was it fiction or in development or in testing that US fighter pilots were 'wired'.
Yes, every tech has a long history, but those early applications were very primitive and many of them, particularly with prosthetics, actually required you to move a muscle, not just think about it. What they are developing now is lightyears ahead of any of those. It's like the difference between a 1985 chatbot and ChatGPT.
 
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May 1, 2023
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Rule # 1 - Always buy your mouse and keyboard in a store where you can open the box and try on the fit. A mouse that looks cool on Amazon may not feel good in your hand.

I am using a Logitech G502x ATM. I like its fit in my large hands. I wish I got the wireless model.
 
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Rule # 1 - Always buy your mouse and keyboard in a store where you can open the box and try on the fit.
That limits choice if you can't find all the mice in your city. Some of us just don't get a lot of available options. Most of the things I have to buy for my PC come from outside of my city, its almost as if no one here makes their own PC or want different thing.

keyboards are also something that can take a while to work out if its a good fit. There was no way to test my keyboard before I bought it as no one here stocks them. Cheaper online too.. stores here exploit their positions.

I am using a Logitech G502x ATM. I like its fit in my large hands. I wish I got the wireless model.
I did get the wireless one, needs a charge again soon
f4cTA9D.jpg
 
Sensai since past 4 years. One of the finest and reliable gaming mouse. Heard about this here in one of forum post and detailed version on Gadinsider.
mine worked for about 8 years until I had to replace it as it was conflicting with Windows.
I used it so long its silver case was starting to go see through.

I might still have it... kept as a spare and never thrown away after I replaced my last mouse.
 
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For the last few years I've used the SteelSeries Sensai Ten ambidextrous mouse, but this morning it's going out on me, and when I went to order a new one, it was going to be $70, whereas I could get the Razer Viper ambidextrous, which I've used before, for $39. It was an easy choice, even though I like the SteelSeries software quite a bit. Razer's will ask me to log in every time I open it, which is a huge pain.

So, what's your mouse?
HyperX Pulsefire, very responsive, cheap and light as a feather.
Edit: Also worth noting I've had two for over a year and on two custom built PCs and never had an issue once. Never even needed to check software or driver support just automatically worked perfectly once plugged in. Which I feel is not as common these days.
 
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I got a Steel Series Aerox 9 MMO mouse for using upstairs. It has 12 extra buttons on the side and 180 hours of battery life, but can also be used plugged in.

The reason I got this is I like to fiddle with my computer at night in bed, but I lay down and set the laptop on my chest, which makes it hard to use the keyboard. This way I can bind my most used keys and macros to the side buttons. I could even put WASD on them. Also, as I've said repeatedly, I love their software, which you never have to log into unlike Razer's software.
 

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