I used a wired mouse for several years. I wanted something to help tidy up my work desk, and this mouse is fantastic.
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I used a wired mouse for several years. I wanted something to help tidy up my work desk, and this mouse is fantastic.
Surcharges: 1.2% Card & PayPal, 2% AmEx.
Free shipping excludes WA, NT & remote areas.
Fixed thx mods
Thanks bought 10
What's special about this mouse?
Nothing much, it seems. The few reviews say the software is very basic & no one has anything much to say about the mouse. Certainly there's nothing to put it ahead of other mice in this price range.
That's what i was thinking. It's not a premium mouse spec-wise for this price point, when you can get a much better mouse for this price.
Maybe not special, but certainly very uncommon - it's ambidextrous and suited to both palm and claw grip. If it's going to be used by multiple people, this is a HUGE advantage.
It can also be used in wired mode, which a lot of bluetooth mice can't, and that's handy if your mouse goes flat, you can just plug it in and keep using it immeditely.
Maybe but for the spec of the Lenovo you could buy 2-3 Logitech wireless ambidextrous mice and simply rotate through them as each mouse's battery needs charging. Certainly easier than fumbling with a cord.
It's worth nothing the Lenovo software/firmware won't let you change the polling rate in wireless mode. The 3370 sensor is otherwise largely well-regarded but Lenovo's software nerfs it.
I hate to say it, but while the sentiment is correct, the reality sadly isn't. You can't buy a BLUETOOTH mouse for under $35. Heck, you can barely find one from a brand name much cheaper than this.
Wireless with a USB-A dongle is kinda crap in 2024 when most new computers sold are laptops or tablets that don't even have those ports any more - even desktops mostly have bluetooth now.
And yes, I intentionally ignored the higher latency with bluetooth over a 2.4GHz dongle, because if you're a hardcore gamer, you won't be buying this mouse anyway.
@Nukkels: You might need to update your reality. While MacBooks have no USB ports, very few notebooks have no ports and all desktops have USB ports, so the Bluetooth requirement you decided to impose is irrelevant.
Second, OP specifically stated this was for their work desk, making your gaming requirement also irrelevant.
Third, Logitech alone has 3-4 wireless mice under $30, with specials on Amazon dropping them to $15 on occasion, meaning the 2-3 mice for $60 more than achievable.
fyi Amazon au has 106 Bluetooth mice, including brand name versions, under $25.
I would avoid a lenovo branded mouse as the wireless one from work has issue with the scroller.
Different mice, most likely different internal components.
Maybe but I have never experienced this issue with logitech nor microsoft branded mice
Logitech is consistently double-clicking within 2 years on their G305 and G300s due to incorrect voltages ruining the switches. However, a lot of the higher end mice like the G502 and G604 do not have this issue. This is a pretty well documented issue.
Not saying that this mouse is better than logitech. Just want to say that you cannot generalize by brand, you have to look at it on a per-model basis, and sometimes even a per-batch basis.
@jpeg-jpg: G502 does have the issue, 502X doesn't because of optical switches
@twister292: G502 does not have the issue as widespread as the G300s and G305 as far as I know. You have a pretty good chance of getting a well functioning G502 for years, while on the G305 and G300s the probabilities are flipped.
You should put the item name brand and models in the title as well as the seller. The stuff currently in the title like the Bluetooth stats belong in the description