Thingy Ma Jig is the blog of Nicholas Thompson and contains any useful tips, sites and general blog-stuff which are considered interesting or handy!
Posted on 21 November 2006 in
review
hardware
Well I got my new keyboard and mouse to replace the very poor Bluetooth MX5000 Laser combo I had before and I'm pleased to say that the first 30 minutes of using it have been an absolute pleasure!
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My first thought of this keyboard when I opened the box was "Frick that's big!". Using it right now, I feel very in-control - feels like a command control panel on a space ship. Its nice!
I plugged it in and windows instantly recognised it (without even installing a driver). This MIGHT be because I'd left the Set Point 3.1 drivers on from the MX5000, but in any case, installation was easy!
Installing the driver I found on the Logitech Site was easy (the one on the CD was a couple of revisions (not versions) out of date). It even found my Battlefield 2 install for me. Seems this keyboard has the option for configuring it differently for different games! Should be cool to play with…
As the day draws to an end my room gets darker and the blue glowing keys become very visible. This should make those late night coding sessions much easier! No more hunting down keys in the dark…
Bearing in mind I already had the Set Point 3.1 driver installed from the MX5000, the mouse was even easier to install! Firstly I plugged in the base unit which is a small box with an approximate 6cm squared footprint. This is also the charger unit for the "other" battery. You load/unload the batteries by slotting them in the front (there is a small eject button on it).
There is also a USB socket in the top of it. As I understand it, this is a general purpose USB socket, but its intended for the USB wireless dongle. In it went and away Widnows went installing it. A few seconds later I could move the mouse. Easy!
Another thing that is easy is the mouse movement on the pad! Its almost frictionless. This should make precision sniping and details image editing easier. The mouse itself is pretty comfortable to use, although its possibly a little long for my small hands (but I suppose this does stop my wrist dragging on the mousemat!).
I'm not going to do a Pro's and Con's list as above - mainly because I dont think there are any con's to this mouse (yet)! Its comfortable, easy to install and easy to use.
Well this is where it falls down a little… Neither of these two are cheap peripherals. Obviously the price varies based on where you get it and when you get it (inevitably it will be cheaper next month, and again the month after).
I did about 20 minutes shopping around and ended up finding that the cheapest place was one of my two favourite places - Scan.co.uk and Aria.co.uk
I ended up using Aria (they were about £0.20 more expensive overall (including tax and P&P)) - however they also do loyalty points.
This was the cost including VAT at 17.5% (purchased on Sunday 19th November 2006):
Item | Price | |
---|---|---|
Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard | £46.82 | |
Logitech G7 Laser Cordless Mouse | £49.35 | |
Postage | £8.17 | |
total | £104.34 |
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