Reviewers Liked
- A solid device that's easy to use once you get the hang of it
- Smooth ball skates the pointer across big desktops. Comfortable design with big buttons. Intuitive twist-to-scroll system. Controls iTunes in the background. View mode glides through long Web pages
- Quality design & aesthetics, Smooth scrolling, Some media / application support
- Large, comfortable trackball; stationary design; large, easy-to-press buttons; unique rotating-ball feature; Cursor, Media, and View modes
- Comfortable for those physically unable to use a standard mouse; heads-up display conveniently shows the current mode
Reviewers Didn't Like
- The inability to customise any of the buttons is a major drawback
- Software lacks any customization. Can’t use twists to shuttle in timelinebased software
- Noncustomizable button programming, Larger footprint than other trackballs, Relatively expensive
- Trackball feels sluggish; rotating-ball feature less convenient for scrolling than a traditional scroll wheel (or the scroll ring used on Kensington’s Expert Mouse); buttons not customizable; expensive
- Toggling between three modes complicates work flow; expensive; lacks Bluetooth; cant customize buttons or alter trackball sensitivity; large footprint
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