sorry but thats a bit expensive for a mouse (I have a wired intellimouse - though I had a logitec wireless sometime back which was nicer but the battery deal even with hot swap was to much)
and this is from someone with a steelseries 7 (which wasn't that expensive compared to other mechanical keyboards)
Originally Posted by Tyinsar The Razer Boomslang 2007 Collector's Edition had plastic & titanium - if you could find one in your area, get past the price, & like the really low shape.
Thanks for the link, I remember when Razer launched that one (not the original, I'm not that old :p) but never knew what it was made of.
Originally Posted by Hustler Pffft.....any decent laser mouse will do the job these days...
All the rest is just marketing gimmicks and a 'placebo' effect on the user.
No.
Needs to be over 4000dpi, have on the fly dpi adjustment (useful for sniping and Photoshop) with at least two thumb buttons (one mapped to toggle the mic.) I have six mice wired up here, Razer Mamba, Logitech G7, wired and wireless Microsot mice and a couple of bog standard Genius mice. You can tell the difference between them.
I tried buying one of these recently (wanting to replace my faithful but ageing Razer Copperhead) and had an interesting enough experience with it that I figured I'd comment :)
As far as I can tell, this mouse is no good without a super-expensive, scrupulously clean mouse mat. Now I don't use a mat at all, because they're all too gigantic -- the desk arrangement I find comfortable leaves me with only about 15 cm x 15 cm within which to move the mouse, and that's cool, because I like to use max sensitivity and mouse on an area the size of a couple of postage stamps. However, when set to anything above about 1500 dpi, the Xai gave me unusable amounts of jitter when mousing on the tabletop, which only went away when I dragged all the predictive cleverness settings in the driver all the way to the right (at which point the pointer was just blatantly not going to the places I was trying to put it in because the mouse was "correcting" for me so much).
I tried a couple of the random mats I have lying around (cheap ones) and it tracked better, but there was still way too much jitter. Maybe I have shaky hands; I'm not exactly an FPS pro, I play RPGs and MMOs, although I can hit a headshot in UT3 once in a while...
But I never noticed any of those problems with the Copperhead, so back went the Xai and I bought a Razer Imperator instead, which, lo and behold, turns out to track perfectly on the same tabletop even at 5600dpi. It's blingier and more comfortable, too.
So in case anyone else here is a tabletop mouser and is considering a Xai -- don't.
Comments 26 to 31 of 31
Replyand this is from someone with a steelseries 7 (which wasn't that expensive compared to other mechanical keyboards)
Thanks for the link, I remember when Razer launched that one (not the original, I'm not that old :p) but never knew what it was made of.
No.
Needs to be over 4000dpi, have on the fly dpi adjustment (useful for sniping and Photoshop) with at least two thumb buttons (one mapped to toggle the mic.) I have six mice wired up here, Razer Mamba, Logitech G7, wired and wireless Microsot mice and a couple of bog standard Genius mice. You can tell the difference between them.
As far as I can tell, this mouse is no good without a super-expensive, scrupulously clean mouse mat. Now I don't use a mat at all, because they're all too gigantic -- the desk arrangement I find comfortable leaves me with only about 15 cm x 15 cm within which to move the mouse, and that's cool, because I like to use max sensitivity and mouse on an area the size of a couple of postage stamps. However, when set to anything above about 1500 dpi, the Xai gave me unusable amounts of jitter when mousing on the tabletop, which only went away when I dragged all the predictive cleverness settings in the driver all the way to the right (at which point the pointer was just blatantly not going to the places I was trying to put it in because the mouse was "correcting" for me so much).
I tried a couple of the random mats I have lying around (cheap ones) and it tracked better, but there was still way too much jitter. Maybe I have shaky hands; I'm not exactly an FPS pro, I play RPGs and MMOs, although I can hit a headshot in UT3 once in a while...
But I never noticed any of those problems with the Copperhead, so back went the Xai and I bought a Razer Imperator instead, which, lo and behold, turns out to track perfectly on the same tabletop even at 5600dpi. It's blingier and more comfortable, too.
So in case anyone else here is a tabletop mouser and is considering a Xai -- don't.
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