
When you move the mouse in a diagonal direction, the resolution is so poor that what you see is actually a ladder rather than a line. Very arbitrary in terms of its relationship to the surface. The tip of the little finger is where the sensor is located! The sensations are so alien to one's normal experience that they are just unsettling. You have to turn the wheel, which is the same as scrolling to the bottom of the page or the end of the map. After that, it zooms in as closely as it can, and after that, the globe appears; however, the number of lines that are displayed when scrolling has nothing to do with this process. It would appear that this is due to a proprietary software that allows for smooth scrolling. And there are instances when it works perfectly. An inebriated Chinese person designed the wheel smoothness switch; it works every other time, and then only if you turn the wheel and then press it. By the way, the wheel has a really sweet rumble. However, there was no way to subjectively try it out before making a purchase because the buttons are excessively sensitive, as if someone had been cheating in shooting games with a mouse for the last three years. My first experience with a Logitech mouse was less than satisfying.

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