Laser Mouse Kills Optical

There are 3 replies in this Thread. The last Post () by Bhaal.

  • Logitech announced the Logitech


    MXTM1000 Laser Cordless Mouse, the world's first mouse to use laser illumination and


    tracking. Combining laser with Logitech's powerful MX processing engine and Fast RFTM


    wireless technology, Logitech claims the MX 1000 Laser Cordless Mouse will improve


    responsiveness and accuracy.


    Laser is the latest in a long list of mouse firsts for


    Logitech, a roster that includes the first commercially available mouse in 1982, the first


    cordless mouse in 1984, and the first cordless optical mouse in 2001. Now, Logitech


    introduces the first mouse with laser tracking technology.


    We've turned off the red


    light on these optical mice and replaced it with an invisible laser that will change the


    industry, said David Henry, Logitech senior vice president of the Control Devices Business


    Unit. Laser will eventually make the optical mice of today obsolete. With laser technology,


    mice will see more microscopic detail. The nature of laser light gives mice the ability to


    track with amazing accuracy on more surfaces with more responsiveness than ever


    before.


    The laser tracking technology is the result of an alliance between Logitech


    and Agilent Technologies. The nearly singular wavelength of laser light is capable of


    revealing much greater surface detail than the red light-emitting diode (LED) found in


    today's optical mice. In tests conducted at Agilent, the laser mouse was found to have 20


    times more sensitivity to surface detail than LED optical mice. Hence, the laser can track


    reliably even on tricky polished or wood-grain surfaces.


    In a recent Logitech survey


    of more than 2,000 LED-based optical mice users, more than two-thirds of respondents were


    interested in the ability to use a mouse on more surfaces. Because of their ability to


    illuminate the surface in greater detail, laser mice will track on surfaces on which


    LED-based optical mice tend to falter.


    The laser light of the Logitech MX 1000 Laser


    Cordless Mouse is nearly invisible to the human eye - and very safe. The laser beam emanates


    through a polished silver ring on the base, illuminates the surface beneath the mouse, and


    then reflects back up through the same ring where the surface detail is captured by the


    sensor. The sensor has the ability to capture 5.8 megapixels of detail each second. As the


    laser mouse is moved, the sensor sees minute changes in the surface detail, which then


    translates into cursor motion on screen.


    While the laser is the key technological


    innovation that powers the Logitech MX 1000 Laser Cordless Mouse, there are several other


    features that set it apart from other mice:


    The Logitech MX 1000 Laser Cordless Mouse


    will be available on retail shelves in the U.S. and in Europe and through the official


    Logitech website beginning this month. Its suggested retail price is USD 79.95 in the


    U.S.



    Logitech ||


    P


    ic

  • but does it do my dishes?


    eeeeeeeh...no.
    also its bloody HUGE. barely fits in my hand.
    no thx. ill wait till the


    tech is common place and the hardware smaller ;)