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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!geraldo.cc.utexas.edu!slcs.slb.com!BRYDON@128.58.42.3
- From: brydon@asl.slb.com (Harvey Brydon (918)250-4312)
- Subject: Re: End-user on-line Motif tutorial
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.090645.18068@slcs.slb.com>
- Sender: news@slcs.slb.com (News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: 129.87.186.2
- Reply-To: brydon@dsn.SINet.slb.com
- Organization: Dowell Schlumberger, Tulsa, Oklahoma
- References: <01GTRC5F4HTS9JD28H@kbs.msu.edu>,<23JAN199309331004@cvdv99.mayo.edu> <1993Jan25.093440.25311@slcs.slb.com>,<25JAN199315503555@erich.triumf.ca>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 93 09:06:45 GMT
- Lines: 52
-
- In article <25JAN199315503555@erich.triumf.ca>, music@erich.triumf.ca (FRED W.
- BACH) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan25.093440.25311@slcs.slb.com>, brydon@dsn.SINet.slb.com
- writes...
- >#Just curious, but what kind of mouse are you and your lady friends using?
- >#Every mouse I have ever seen would not work upside down because gravity pulls
- >#the ball "down" ("up" to the mouse) so that no contact is made on the internal
- >#rollers. ...And how do you click on the button(s) if it/they are on the
- >#bottom?
- >#_______________________________________________________________
- >#Harvey Brydon | Internet: brydon@dsn.SINet.slb.com
- >#Dowell Schlumberger | P.O.T.S.: (918)250-4312
- >#1. Politics 2. Religion 3. Women's (a) ages (b) weights (c) rights
- >
- > Now Harvey, they mean that the mouse's head is where its tail should be
- > and so its connecting cable is under the wrist not beyond the index
- > finger, (don't they?).
-
- Hmmm. I guess that's what was meant. (Duh, I get it)
-
- > Anyway, I heard that a trackball was just an upside-down mouse
- > (in the sense to which you were referring). I would very much like
- > to start a discussion on this group on the use of the mouse vs the
- > trackball. I have my serious biases. (I hate the mouse because of
- > the real-estate it needs to run and because it is never in the same
- > place twice. I am a fairly good pianist, and if the piano got up and
- > changed co-ordinates the way a mouse does, it would drive me crazy.)
- > I'm pretty darned hot with a trackball, but correspondingly bad with
- > the mouse. Are there more like me out there?
- >
- > Comments please, boys and girls.
-
- I am in a situation where I am evaluating hardware and software for our field
- organization, including input device(s). On my mac and PC, I have a
- trackball. By a longshot, I much prefer the mouse. I know that it can be
- used on a large area, but in a previous job I learned how to use it quite
- comfortably in a small workspace by using it in three dimensions (drag, click,
- drag, lift, drag, ...). No problems. I find that with the mouse, I can make
- large controlled movements more easily, direction is easier to control, and
- very small movements are easier as well. After doing some serious "heads
- down" word processing for a couple of weeks a few months back (with trackball
- and mouse), I discovered that I was getting a repetitive stress injury (carpal
- tunnel, whatever it's called) from the trackball, but not the mouse. I have
- used light pen, tablet, mouse, trackball, keyboard for many years and never
- had RSI before. It is quite definitely related to the trackball. I'll take a
- mouse any day. One thing that is interesting is that I find I can use the
- trackball on either side of the keyboard (either hand) but I almost have to
- use the mouse with my right hand.
- _______________________________________________________________
- Harvey Brydon | Internet: brydon@dsn.SINet.slb.com
- Dowell Schlumberger | P.O.T.S.: (918)250-4312
- There are no rats in Alberta. There are no snakes in Hawaii.
-