Chosing A Wireless Mouse

DBZ-Lover

Reputable
Apr 25, 2014
17
0
4,510
Solution
Plug & play on all Windows from XP-SP3 and later.
Just plug in the little USB receiver, let Windows auto-install the driver and away you go.

Of course, also make sure the mouse has two fresh 'AA' batteries in it, and that the little slider switch is the 'On' position.

Switch off the mouse when not in use because it's constantly communicating with the USB receiver unit, hence the batteries are being used unnecessarily. That's why it has on/off switch to save the batteries.

Hussein Bazzi

Reputable
Apr 22, 2014
27
0
4,540
http://citycenter.jo/index.php?route=product/product&pa... Definitely

ther all the same except the DPI on this one, it has the highest so go for it. im assuming all use 2.4GHz wireless frequency so they are all very close to each other. Although for looks id go with choice number 2 not 1 and it has a bit less DPI...as a gamer id go with choice number 1 i need higher DPI...so choice goes back to you. number 3 is just nonsense leave it aside has nothing special about it except for left and right handed mouse....screw that
 
Number 1 in your list has the highest DPI resolution of the three. That will give you more accurate translation of the mouse pointer on the screen relative to your movement of the mouse itself (particularly important for serious photo-editing, dragging a marquee to crop and image, even more important for accurate selection of an object you want to remove.

If none of that bothers you, I personally would buy the Microsoft one as I have two of them and they are totally reliable even after five years daily use. I do serious photo-editing in Photoshop and I've never found it lacking in accuracy.
 
Plug & play on all Windows from XP-SP3 and later.
Just plug in the little USB receiver, let Windows auto-install the driver and away you go.

Of course, also make sure the mouse has two fresh 'AA' batteries in it, and that the little slider switch is the 'On' position.

Switch off the mouse when not in use because it's constantly communicating with the USB receiver unit, hence the batteries are being used unnecessarily. That's why it has on/off switch to save the batteries.
 
Solution
It doesn't tell you how long batteries will last. I use my mouse every day (though not all day) and haven't changed batteries for a month at least.

They are just standard 'AA' alkaline batteries you can buy anywhere. Just buy a bulk pack of them so you're never short. Or just keep a wired mouse handy if you don't fancy keeping spare batteries.