View Single Post
  #286   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.crafts.metalworking
Vic Smith Vic Smith is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,405
Default Sears, I'll miss the tools

On Sun, 1 Jan 2012 10:19:05 -0500, "J. Clarke"
wrote:

In article , says...

On 01/01/2012 01:39 AM, Michael A. Terrell wrote:

" wrote:

I had a couple of those. The receiver kept falling off the bottom when in the
case, and the batteries were always dead. I like the newer ones (M205/M505)
much better. They have a "nano receiver" (never have to take it out of the
USB port) and a switch to turn them off. There is a carrying slot for the
receiver, if you don't want to keep it in the system. OfficeMax just had the
M205 on sale for $15 and the M505 for $20.


This Logitech M215 has a "nano receiver", and is a full sized mouse.
it has held up the longest of any mouse I've ever tried. The worst was
a Phillips. It failed within five minutes of opening the package. It
was a sample I bought, when I owned a computer store. I had bought
about a dozen mice of various brands and models to test, before adding
them to the inventory. About half were unacceptable, but it was the
only one that fell apart.


I wish more retailers were like you... seems like so much stuff on the
shelves is garbage.


FWIW, the big problem with the Logitechs seems to be the microswitches.
They tend to die young with the result being unintended double-clicks.
If you read the Amazon reviews you'll find numerous accounts of this
problem, and it affects more than one model, from the high to the low
end of the range. It's not correctable by cleaning. It's bad enough
that you can buy kits of two third-party replacement microswitches off
of Amazon or ebay.

Worse, it's an intermittent. Mine's been behaving for the last week or
so. Before that it was doubling regularly on me.


I've been using the Logitech wireless since about 1994 or so.
I had a mouse that did that some years ago. It had seen a lot of use.
But I always wondered how those switches last as long as they do with
all that clicking.
Also had some keys stop working.
Always got a lot of use out of them first though.
My son has taken a few keyboards apart and fixed them, but I just move
on to new ones. I tried it once, and it was too much hassle.
I liked the EX 110 combos, and when the last one had a bad key I
thought I bought 2 more, but actually got the EX 100.
http://www.amazon.com/Logitech-Cordl...pr_product_top

Still using the first one after 2 years and the other is still boxed
on a nearby shelf. Good bang for the buck.
They discontinued the EX 110.
It's all personal taste.
I used to like the IBM clicking keyboards.
Quickly got over that with the first Logitech.
I've tried trackball mice and expensive gaming mice.
Didn't like them.
Always end up using the mouse like in the above link.
Medium size, basic "teardrop shape."
My hand covers it with heel of hand on desk.
Just a tiny bit of wrist movement covers the screen.

--Vic