Others
Logitech 910-001326 M505 USB Wireless Laser Mouse Logitech 910-001316 M505 Wireless Laser Mouse - Grey MINI 10M 2 4G USB Wireless Optical Mouse For PC Laptop USB OPTICAL WIRELESS CORDLESS MOUSE 4 PC MAC LAPTOP 800 New Mini 2 4GHz Wireless Keyboard with Trackball mouse Kensington Ci10 Fit Wireless Notebook Laser Mouse Silv Belkin Wireless Travel Mouse - Mouse - optical - wirele Targus Notebook Wireless Rechargeable Laser Mouse new Wireless Optical 1600dpi 2 4GHz Mouse Windows 7 OK Logitech 910-001326 M505 USB Wireless Laser Mouse NEW Logitech M305 USB Wireless Optical Mouse - Black iHome IH-M178ZP Mid-size Wireless Laser Mouse Wireless Comfort Laser Mouse Wireless Optical Mouse Verbatim Nano Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse Red 10M 2 4G USB WIRELESS OPTICAL MOUSE FOR PC Laptop 10M 2 4G USB Wireless Optical Mouse For PC Laptop YW NEW 10M 2 4G USB Wireless Optical Mouse For PC Laptop Evoluent VerticalMouse 3 Wireless Right Ergonomic Mouse Logitech 910-001419 M305 Wireless Optical Mouse
|
| |
| Rating |  |
| Brand | Apple |
| Color | White |
| Type | Electronics |
| List Price | $69.99 |
| Add to Shopping Cart |
| Our Price | Too low to display |
| See our Partners Price |
| Lowest New Price | Too low to display |
| Lowest Used Price | $44.99 |
| Lowest Refurbished Price | $49.99 |
Categories |
| Wireless Mice Accessories & Supplies Bluetooth/Hands-Free Phone Mac Computer Accessories All product Electronics & Computers Electronics |
Features |
- Laser technology brings 20 times the performance of standard optical tracking
- Miniature sensors detect even the slightest movement
- Top-shell design matches other Apple products
- Bluetooth technology and Touch-sensitive technology
|
Similar products |
|
Description |
| It began together with iPhone. Then came iPod touch. Then MacBook Pro. Intuitive, smart, dynamic. Multi-Touch technology introduced a amazingly better way to interact together with your portable devices - all utilizing gestures. Now we've reached another milestone by delivering gestures to the desktop together with a mouse this's unlike anything ever before. It's called Magic Mouse. It's the world's first Multi-Touch mouse. And while it comes standard together with each new iMac, you can in addition add it to any Bluetooth-enabled Mac for a Multi-Touch makeover. |
| Together with Magic Mouse, Apple has delivered Multi-Touch technology to the desktop mouse, giving you a new and extra intuitive way to interact together with your computer. Just as together with iPhone, iPod touch, and MacBook Pro, the Bluetooth Magic Mouse adds gestures and swipes to the usual clicks to get extra functionality and help you get extra done together with less effort.  | Apple Magic Mouse At a Glimpse: - Multi-Touch technology enables swipes and gestures.
- Laser technology for accurate tracking on nearly any surface.
- Bluetooth for neat configuration.
- Spectacular ambidextrous design.
| |  | | 
Software lets you set Magic Mouse to do exactly what you would like. View big. | 
The entire top of the mouse is a Multi-Touch surface. View big. | Stunning Design together with Seamless Multi-Touch Surface One look at Magic Mouse and you'll recognize it's something exclusive this only Apple could dream up. Together with a low-profile design and seamless top shell, you'll marvel at this stunning mouse and its smooth, buttonless look. It's not all looks, though. One time you touch it, you'll appreciate how good it feels in your hand. And the magic really begins when you begin utilizing it. The Multi-Touch surface covers the entire top of the mouse, and the mouse itself is the button. Scroll in any direction together with one finger, swipe throughout web pages and photos together with two, and click and double-click anyplace. Inside Magic Mouse is a chip this tells it exactly what you would like to do. Which means Magic Mouse won’t confuse a scroll together with a swipe. It even recognizes when you’re just resting your hand on it. Laser-Tracking Engine Magic Mouse uses great laser tracking this’s far extra sensitive and responsive on extra surfaces than traditional optical tracking. This means it tracks together with precision on nearly each surface - whether it’s a table at your favorite cafe or the desk in your home office - not including the want for a mousepad. Wireless Convenience together with Simple Bluetooth Configuration Magic Mouse connects wirelessly to your Mac via Bluetooth, so there’s no wire or separate adapter to worry concerning. Pair Magic Mouse together with your Bluetooth-enabled Mac and enjoy a dependable and secure connection up to 33 feet away. When you combine Magic Mouse together with the Apple Wireless Keyboard, you make a workspace free of annoying cables. And for the reason that Magic Mouse is wireless, it can venture beyond the confines of your desk. A fast flick of the on/off switch helps preserve battery power while Magic Mouse is tucked in your bag. Even when it’s on, Magic Mouse manages power efficiently, by detecting periods of inactivity automatically. Do One Excellent Gesture Afterwards Another Multi-Touch technology on the iPhone and iPod touch introduced a breakthrough way to interact together with your content. Magic Mouse, together with its Multi-Touch surface, does the same thing for your Mac. When you use gestures, it’s as if you’re touching what’s on your screen. For instance, swiping throughout web pages in Safari provides you the feeling of flicking throughout pages in a magazine. And scrolling together with Magic Mouse isn’t your usual scrolling. It maintains momentum scrolling (similar to iPhone and iPod touch), where the scrolling speed is dictated by how quick or slowly you perform the gesture. 
Spectacular, stunning design by Apple. View big. | Provide It Your Personal Touch Maybe you would like scrolling but don’t would like swiping. Or two-button clicking instead of one. Whatever the case, Magic Mouse works the way you would like it to work. All you do is go to the Magic Mouse preference pane in System Preferences to enable or disable features. The ambidextrous design of Magic Mouse means it fits comfortably in your right hand if you’re a righty or in your left hand if you’re a lefty. And left-handers can effortlessly swap left and right button functionality utilizing System Preferences. System Requirements - Bluetooth-enabled Mac computer
- Mac OS X v10.5.8 or later together with Wireless Mouse Software Update 1.0
- Current keyboard and mouse for configuration

Multi-Touch technology lets you use gestures and swipes directly on the mouse surface. |
|
Additional Accessories |
|
Customer Reviews |
somewhat improved over the Mighty Mouse 2010-09-01 |
| By dana |
First i should mention that i think i have somewhat unusual taste in mouses. Both Mac and Windows users have complained endlessly about Apple mouses for years and years, but my two favourite mouses are Apple-made. My first favourite is the Mighty Mouse (which was almost perfect), and my second favourite (which will probably tell you even more about me) is the hockey puck that came with the original iMacs. In general i prefer small, simple, ambidextrous mouses -- i hate those big hardcore Logitech and Microsoft ones that gamers use, for example. So, anyway, you should probably read my review with all that in mind.
When the Magic Mouse first came out, i liked where they were going, but was ultimately disappointed for two reasons: (1) no middle-click and (2) no Exposé button. Since i spend the vast majority of my computer time in a Web browser, middle-click is very important to me. It wasn't until my wired Mighty Mouse's scroll ball died (again) and third-party Magic Mouse utilities were mature that i decided to go for the Magic Mouse -- so i'm pretty late to get mine.
The first thing i did of course was install BetterTouchTool, because Apple's preference utility, whilst adequate for most basic users, is no-where near configurable enough for my liking. Using BTT i was able to add middle-click functionality (so far i'm leaning toward the 'Two Finger TipTap Middle' gesture as my preferred middle-click method, but it also lets you set a physical middle-click similar to the Mighty Mouse), as well as an Exposé gesture.
Having that in place, i was able to start using the mouse 'normally', and these are my observations:
PROS
- It's much lighter than the Mighty Mouse -- or at least it feels that way, i haven't actually weighed it or anything. This is a pretty big deal to me, because, having gone from the wired Mighty Mouse to the wireless one, i found the added weight of the latter to be very fatiguing to my hand.
- Turning the mouse on and off is far easier than it is on the wireless Mighty Mouse. On the latter, you have to move a switch that covers the laser -- this switch is mostly flush with the bottom, which makes it hard to get traction, and it's very difficult to move on top of that. As a result i've found turning the Mighty Mouse on/off to be extremely tedious. The new mouse is not like that -- the switch on the bottom is super easy to toggle.
- The tracking is fantastic. My primary complaint with the wireless Mighty Mouse was that its tracking felt wrong somehow in comparison to the wired one. A test i used to determine this was to attempt drawing a perfect circle on the screen with each mouse. On the wired mouse -- and the Magic Mouse -- drawing a round circle is no problem at all. On the wireless Mighty Mouse, the tracking just didn't work as well, which resulted in a circle that was always flattened.
- No more scroll ball to clean! I really liked having a physical scroll ball on the Mighty Mouse, but it needed constant maintenance to keep it working properly. The scrolling on the Magic Mouse is almost perfect (i do miss having full 360-degree scrolling, but it's not that bad), and there are no moving parts to deal with.
- The basic features function exactly as expected. I never have any issues with right-clicks being detected as left-clicks or vice versa, and as mentioned the scrolling works great. BetterTouchTool's added features do present a tiny bit more of a challenge, because certain gestures can be interpreted differently, but you just have to use the right ones.
CONS
- Obviously a major con is that you have fewer buttons out of the box than the Mighty Mouse had. You'll need BetterTouchTool or MagicPrefs if you want a middle-click.
- Related to the above, it takes a little bit of getting used to before you can comfortably use the added features provided by BTT. The learning curve is no-where near as easy as the Mighty Mouse's.
- As far as i can tell, it's not possible to run the Magic Mouse on only one battery, as it was with the wireless Mighty Mouse. It's too bad, because i really value lightness in a mouse.
- The profile of the Mighty Mouse, as mentioned in other reviews, is very low. It's probably the lowest mouse i've ever used. On the one hand, this helps to prevent accidental triggering of the touch gestures, but on the other hand it is very difficult to get used to, and is noticeably more fatiguing to the hand than either Mighty Mouse was. I would have been willing to accept the added weight if they had made the mouse like 5 mm taller.
- As with the Mighty Mouse, the Magic Mouse is not intended for gamers. Although it is possible to do some interesting things with BetterTouchTool, including assigning macros or hot keys to mouse gestures, i think you will have more problems overall if you're playing fast-paced games. A common complaint is accidental scrolling, which causes the weapons to change in an FPS.
- Lastly, on a related note to the above, the mouse is currently not very fun to use on Windows or Linux, since Apple don't provide full-featured drivers for those systems. Maybe someone will write their own though.
Overall i do like it; my main complaints are the height of the mouse (which is too low) and the weight of the mouse (which is still too heavy -- but this is an inherent problem with all wireless mouses). |
Fantastic! 2010-09-01 |
| By Natacha Scarpari (Sao Paulo, Brazil) |
This mouse, was love at first sight!
Just not because the look really impress, but also because it's a really confort mouse!
It's not that big, that you see just it, os that tiny, that you barelly can let your hand on it.. the size really fits and the lines makes it confortable!
As a mouse, the one button makes it really easy to use..
You can zoom in or zoom out without take your hands of it, can page up or down just moving your finger on it's surface, same for changing pictures during a view.. There's also right click and left click too! =P
All it makes is turn your life easier, faster and more enjoyable!
It's pretty, good, no wires and comes in a box you can keep, to keep your mouse always ok! =]
I have just on con: my mac doesn't find it always.. it just works if I turn the mouse while my mac is turning on.. if my mac is ready and I turn the mouse on, I have to make it find my mouse manually.. But not that big deal.. it's easy to do that, but, I'd prefer it does it itself!
Maybe is my mac/mouse problem, or its a real problem, but nevertheless, I still highly recomend it! |
Great Mouse 2010-08-30 |
| By Steve G (New Windsor Md) |
| I just got this mouse for my MacBook Pro. I had been using the Mighty Mouse for a while, but this blows the Mighty Mouse out of the water! It takes a little while to get use to the "flat" design but other then that its GREAT. Will be picking up the apple rechargeable batteries for it. |
It Does What It Says It Does 2010-08-29 |
| By goandgetmom |
| The "Apple Magic Mouse", is a useful tool. It feels good under your hand and it makes scrolling fast and fun, even if you have a few things that are placed around it that would get in the way, if using a regular mouse. About the only area it falls short on, is its ability to open a document. It is worth the compromise of having to hit the return button on your keyboard to open something. If it was not for this minor issue, the "Magic Mouse" would be perfect. Knowing this, I would still recommend this to anyone who appreciates form and function. I bought mine through Amazon and saved about 40 percent off its price in the stores. |
Nice Mice 2010-08-28 |
| By Tree |
| Fast shipping cheap price. This mice is very good for non gamers. Overall it look great but very slow compare to a 15$ laser mouse this fail at tracking. I wish they have a tap feature on it so that you don't have to click down like a giant button. Then also mine just give alot of figure prints and lint for some reason. |
|
|