After experimenting with a variety of "ordinary" mice (up to 5000), I came to the conclusion that I should invest in a nice, pricey, and feature-rich mouse to last for many years. Choose carefully, research options, and so forth. I consequently enrolled in MX Master 3. The type-c port is finally functional, it's easy to hold, and it appears to offer good performance in other areas. Then the dancing starts. To start, it is loud. I'd say the statistics are a little over average, but once she laid out a 10 for her, she clicks right on the nerves. And, yuck, the sound quality is awful. Secondly. Even though it has ergonomic contours, a slope, a height, a platform, etc., the hand has not yet adapted to it after two weeks. Everyone's business is here, of course, but something doesn't feel right, and it doesn't feel controlled, as if there were a steering wheel here instead of a steering wheel on a car. Is anything not right. Thirdly, dancing with tambourines started when your XPS 13 and Bluetooth were connected. Despite the fact that Windows turned out to be the cause of the issue, Logitech was able to account for it. courscours chevalcourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscourscours The mouse actually shut off after standing conditionally for a few seconds due to some kind of endless procedures and energy-saving algorithms. And the pointer goes laterally when you move it again. I was utterly enraged by the fact that there was a noticeable latency all the time. I used forums, registries, and other resources to solve the issue. But the impression is still negative. Spend 10,000 on a mouse, then another hour and a half getting it to function properly. The scroll wheel comes next. There are two of them (I could not find an adequate application for the second application in any of the Adobe programs or just in the usual Windows environment). It's difficult to define, but the primary wheel is built with some kind of sophisticated scrolling anonymity method. The experience of simply scrolling with this mouse is not the best. Overall, I wouldn't have purchased such a mouse for $3,000 for myself. Undoubtedly, it will increase to 100 for some. furthermore, clicks, scrolling, and ergonomics. But in my situation, it is a total failure.
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