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Microsoft Touch Mouse review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £50
inc VAT

Great for keyboard-free window management, but spoiled but erratic and sluggish vertical scrolling

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Once installed, the Touch Mouse has four key functions. Using a single finger on the touch area lets you scroll around content in your currently selected window. This is something you used to do with the scroll wheel, but now you can scroll in any direction (even diagonally) and at a speed of your choosing. However, you may find your software is uncooperative, for example Paint.NET on our PC would scroll up/down, but that was the limit of it.

Next is using a sweeping gesture on the side of the mouse (either side as the design is ambidextrous) to flick back and forth through web pages. Again you may be thinking – my mouse already has a pair of buttons that do that – and this time you’d be right, as we can see no advantage to the old buttons.

Things get a little more interesting with two- and three-fingered gestures. Using two fingers at once you can manage your current window, performing a range of tasks you’d usually do with Windows shortcuts. Pushing two fingers forward will maximise a window, while pulling them back minimizes it or restores it. Left and right two-fingered swipes snap windows to the left and right of your screen, just like when you press Windows + Cursor Keys.

TOuch Mouse expose
The Exposé-style window select screen

A three-fingered swipe downwards minimises all your windows, while an upward swipe puts up a black background with a tiled display of all your windows (in a Mac Exposé-style). From here you can select one window, which then comes up. This appears to be the only function that is unique to the mouse. Both of these multi-fingered swipes are really useful for those who do a lot of window management.

Touch sensitive devices live or die on their accuracy and responsiveness. We had no problem with the first, with the commands always doing what we had intended. However, some functions felt a little sluggish. Organising windows with deliberate, thoughtful gestures worked fine, but general single-fingered scrolling felt sluggish compared to using the scroll wheel, with a distinct delay between you starting a scroll and Windows delivering it. We reckon this is because the mouse has a hard time determining if you’re about to click, just resting your finger down, or actually wanting to scroll.

The Touch Mouse is only a moderate success. It’s rather expensive and we’re not that keen on its slender dimensions. Those who want easy windows management without having to resort to keyboard shortcuts will find it very useful, but that sluggish scrolling will put off most potential users, and prevents the Touch Mouse from scoring higher.

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Details

Rating ***

Mouse

Mouse type optical
Mouse buttons 2
Vertical scroll wheel no
Tilt wheel no
Clickable wheel no
Mouse battery 2x AA
Connection wireless
Connectivity USB
Extras wireless USB dongle and extension cable

Buying Information

Price £50
Details www.microsoft.co.uk

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