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Ferris Bueller's mouse
12/14/2022 at 00:29 • 0 commentsThe general plan is a microsoft mouse clone with 3 physical buttons & a wheel. The wheel goes above a small button & has no button of its own. To be sure, this must have been tried 30 years ago.
Sizing would be done with playdough models. Prototypes would be 2 part enclosures with no support. The top would glue on the sides & all the panels would be curved. A final enclosure would be a single piece with support. All the electronicals would come from other mice.
TechLead liked the $100 logitech & hence caused it to become the internet's favorite mouse. It's the same shape as the $9 Logitech M100 from hell. It has a button below the wheel which can be mapped to the middle button. The most a lion ever paid for a mouse was $30 for the Logitech M-CQ38.
Suspect all mice now have the buttons down low & are the same shape because it uses less material.
Who wants a quiet click if they spend so much on clicky keyboards?
Ferris Bueller frame #22210 showed a grey eyed Mcrosoft mouse. Not as boxy as remembered.
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Another junk mouse refurbishment
12/13/2022 at 20:19 • 0 commentsThe discrete buttons felt better but the hourglass case was a pain. The crosstalk between wheel & button was terrible. This one doesn't have enough scrolling resistance. There's definitely a difference between having discrete buttons & buttons formed from part of the case. Lions just want a simple box with buttons.
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x
12/07/2022 at 19:42 • 0 commentsThe lion kingdom has gotten by with the cheapest mice for the last 20 years. They last about 6 months & then become difficult. Tests have shown the mane difficulties being cable management for the corded ones, battery management for the cordless ones, the tact buttons wearing out, the case getting crunchy, the teflon sliders wearing down, the optical sensor getting dusty.
High points in the history of mice were the Logitech M-CQ38.
It was kind of an art piece more than ergonomic, but it was durable & popular enough for Compact to license it.
The best of the best was the grey eyed Microsoft mouse.
Note, the scroll wheel has never been a very satisfying interface for lions. The tendency of middle mouse button presses to cross talk with scrolling has always annoyed. The lack of tactile feedback when scrolling has annoyed.
Note, the best buttons are separate from the enclosure. The modern single piece case buttons are annoying. The case eventually starts crunching with every button press & the action is slower than discrete buttons.
The tact buttons on modern mice get soft & stop clicking after a while. It's impossible to feel when you're pressing a button without the tactile click. Combined with the crunchy case, every button press ends up being like crumpling paper & slow.
Cordless mice are a non starter by this time. The battery management is too much.
Experiments have shown the best cable position to be coming out of the right rear. The form factor should be a grey eyed microsoft mouse, but lions have no artifact to measure.
Tests have shown the teflon sliders to be essential for keeping the optical sensor clean, in addition to achieving the right friction. They kick up dust farther away from the sensor than the case would if it slid directly on the case.
A mouse prototype would reuse the teflon sliders, the scroll wheel, & the electronicals from a commercial mouse. The switches & case would be replaced. Lions aren't convinced mechanical buttons would be an improvement because the large deflection might be too slow.
The biggest problem is improving the scroll wheel. Maybe the answer is a middle mouse button & scroll wheel side by side. Maybe it should be a bigger wheel. Generally, the more clicky & rigid the wheel is, the better it does at resisting crosstalk & the more assertive the scrolling is. Lions have improved this by manually bending the springs.