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If the warranty worked off of the "first use" date rather than purchase date, I probably could've returned them all for replacements. That's how quickly they all failed.
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Sales team was/is really motivated?
Definition of a burocrate; Delegate, Take Credit, shift blame.
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.3.1 JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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shrug
I like 'em enough, I suppose if they all lasted at least 2-3 years (as these have), I'd be ready to buy another bunch. If the price was reasonable. Which it currently isn't.
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My problem is I can't find a mouse that I like for under $100 and then I'm not sure I will like it.
I've had more luck with my current Logitech wired mouse than I have with wireless. This one has gone about a year without problem. Knock on wood!
Definition of a burocrate; Delegate, Take Credit, shift blame.
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.3.1 JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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Razers are nice.
They're overpriced chintzy crap, but they hold up longer than the other overpriced mice. Think I have had 3 and all lasted well past a year. It's possible someone here told me to get it (death adder).
The Logitech G3 is great, but one of the main clickers in it failed months into use.
I'm a heavy user so peripherals and the chair ... they just need to last 12 months. I'm not expecting miracles.
I feel like a quality stamp/lab could come back into vogue. UL is still around. Feel like we need a new one that doesn't represent whether your toaster may kill you but the odds it will still be toasting in a decade. Some sort of shared branding for some manufacturers to unite under that says, "we're only going to make high quality long lasting things".
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dandy72 wrote: That's how quickly they all failed.
I use a logitech trackball[^]. I have one that I purchased back in 98' and i still use it!! These were USB A wired and they worked great and cost $19.95 and then recently went to about $39.95. But now, it looks like they aren't available and th one I linked at Amazon is listed at $219.95!!!
Anyways, the buttons in that trackball have never failed. They work as good as when I first bought it in 98. Wow! Probably an accident.
More recently I purchased a trackball for on the go[^] (ala wireless).
I bought that one and the buttons failed in just a little over one year.
I needed another one but I was very afraid that I would just be buying one of these every year.
I researched it and took the old one apart and tried to fix it and all that nonsense.
I also looked up the buttons that they used and those (internal -- not the things you fingers touch) buttons are super cheap. I was going to order strong ones and replace, but it's just a pain.
Taking it apart and cleaning it did make it work again for about three months.
There is nothing worse than clicking a mouse button and having it do nothing so that you have to click it again _hard_ to make it work. So annoying.
I finally bought another one of the wireless logitech m575s and have been using this one for over 2 years now with now problem.
So, they definitely use really shoddy cheap parts and hope they last "long enough".
1 year would be really terrible but I figured maybe we were at that point with them before i got this one.
Also, I bought this one at the store and didn't order it (seems like they have newer product than warehoused online stuff).
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I have had the exact same trackball for years and love it
last year the standard left click started to be unpredictable, often double clicking which wasn't helpful
Luckily I haven't used the two small insert buttons and when I toook it apart I was able swap the two switches that were on the left side and my main left click is now working reliably again
you can buy replacement switches with similar markings but not necessarily from trusted sources I wanted a quick fix and only need the left click button to work reliably
Something to bear in mind if yours ever gives problems
Edit: if anyone wants to do this, I struggled for a while to get it apart as there is a screw in the middle of the bottom hidden under the label, you need to poke a hole in the label just above the "s" in mouse of the phrase "Marble Mouse USB"
modified 18-Apr-24 9:43am.
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Very cool that you made that replacement.
Thanks for the info
I can't believe how long those things last.
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raddevus wrote: There is nothing worse than clicking a mouse button and having it do nothing so that you have to click it again hard to make it work. So annoying.
Indeed, I have zero patience for that. That's why I went through them so quickly. Someone else might have put up with that, but not me.
At some point, I will open them up and see if I can at least clean them...
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When is the last time you've seen a doctor?
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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Are you suggesting they should have outlasted me, and I need to see a doctor to find out why I'm still alive?
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If they're supposed to outlast you, maybe they will, be afraid, be very afraid!
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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Maybe I just have higher expectations. The last one from Microsoft (before I bought this newer batch of 5) lasted probably 10 years, so...well, I don't think I have another 50 years in me.
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dandy72 wrote: mouse
The lifespan of a mouse 🐀 is generally much lesser than that of a human being.
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With this generation, Microsoft went out of its way to prove you right.
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I moved to Logitech, Logi as they are now known. After various models with more or less successful lives under my ham-fisted use I finally opted for their Signature M650 L - note the "L", this mouse comes in two sizes!
It is quiet, precise and has so far lasted 2 1/2 years with no sign of trouble. Wife & daughter have since got the same ones after using mine (Not the L version, they are not ham-fisted).
Your one with the dodgy scroll wheel might have been fixable by a simple air-blast to clean the optical system.
So old that I did my first coding in octal via switches on a DEC PDP 8
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Clumpco wrote: Your one with the dodgy scroll wheel might have been fixable by a simple air-blast to clean the optical system.
That's what I'm hoping for. I still haven't opened up a single one of them to try to fix/clean them. Hopefully I can salvage one or two when the time comes.
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My Classic Intellimouse has a blue LED that started going bad around the 2 year mark. I thought, hey, I'll just put a new LED in it. Well, I did put a new LED in it, but it was ridiculously difficult, the LED was a surface mount 1206 in a very confined recess in the optical IC itself. I used my hot air to destroy the old LED to get it out, then some solder paste and hot air again to put the new LED in. I was very worried that I had overheated the optical IC, but fortunately everything still worked afterword. If I have to do it again though, I will, the Intellimouse is also my favorite mouse, the ergonomics just fit.
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crapcoder670 wrote: If I have to do it again though, I will, the Intellimouse is also my favorite mouse, the ergonomics just fit.
Exactly. It's a rare piece of hardware that it just exactly what I want.
I never had a problem with the LED (always a button or the scrollwheel or the pointer moving randomly) - and I never took the time to try to open them/clean them/replace the button contacts and the like. So I do have a small pile that might be revived, if I only took the time to clean/fix them...
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Like you, I am very partial to certain keyboards and rodents. I fell in love with the Microsoft Trackball Optical when it first came out -- it fit my hand perfectly and it worked as it should. As a side benefit, anyone who tried to use my computer could never figure it out, so they left my machine alone.
When Microsoft discontinued them, I bought a half-dozen (I think on eBay) for dirt. They last a very long time -- I think I've only worn out one, so they'll definitely be with me for as long as computers have Type-A USB ports.
I've never been a huge fan of mice. Another nice feature of a trackball is that it takes little desk space since you don't need to move it around.
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Interesting. I had a coworker using a trackball, nearly two decades ago...I don't remember if it was from Microsoft or someone else's, or whether today's are any different or not...but there's two things I remember:
(a) I could not get the hang of it, I was always quicker using a mouse (although my experience with it amounted to a few minutes at a time here and there), and
(b) I thought in the long run that would only end up hurting my thumb. I used to believe carpal tunnel was a BS syndrome, until I experienced it myself. Even after only a few minutes of use, I felt my whole hand cramping. Although that might just be a 'getting used to' phase...
I know people who use them love them.
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You must be very hard on mice. I have a pile of working mice removed from equipment that no longer runs. I hand 'em out to my kids when they destroy one, but even they can't seem to wreck mise as fast as they accumulate. My current mouse is a very ordinary J-Tech Digital vertical mouse I've had since the pandemic. Must have cost me all of $25.
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SeattleC++ wrote: You must be very hard on mice.
Not particularly; I don't even play games with that mouse. It took probably a decade for the last of my original IntelliMouse to become unusable. It's the newer production batch (MS's "Classic IntelliMouse") that all developed problems, under 2-3 years each.
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Yeah, those older ball-less MS Intellimouse weren't bad. But I am rather "mouse tolerant", though I definitely don't like a lot of those fancy gaming mice or those round "eagle claw" ones.
Right now, here at the two computers I am daily using, I have a cheap Logitech M325 on one, and a M185 (from a wireless keyboard/mouse combo) on the other. Both are working just fine for a couple of years at last, and I have a Logitech M325c in my backpack that I take with me when I am visiting clients, so I do have a mouse to use if I run into a laptop with only touchpad (I am on war path with touchpads! ). That one is probably 7-8 years old now and gets bounced around in that bag a lot. With no ill effects. Each one probably wasn't more than $20....
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I have used the same stock HP laser mouse for about 15-20 years.
It was not tracking well at one point and careful inspection showed some fine fibers had collected in the laser port. A pair of tweezers fixed it.
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