There are many positives, yet there is only one negative marked off. There was a problem with the default settings, and the scroll began to fail. The first mouse became buggy after a week. I needed to replace the mouse, so I went to the store. After seven months, the second mouse began to experience issues, so I contacted customer service. Without making any superfluous movements, they promptly provided a new mouse with delivery right to my door (excellent work!). I used an old mouse for a period of four months, opening it by cleaning the scroll; the manipulations I performed were sufficient for a period of two months. After going through two cleanings and opening the encoder that Kailh provided, it broke apart (at the point where the antennas needed to be bent). I took a new mouse - there is a better encoder from TTC. It has a more distinctive tone, making it obvious that they encountered an issue and made the decision to replace it. I thought to myself, "Well, here it is! Decided!" And now, six months later. The same issue persists! My newfound knowledge enlightens me to the fact that the encoder is not the source of the issue, but rather the design of the mouse. The mouse will begin to read inaccurate signals from the encoder as soon as it is exposed to even a trace amount of contamination, which is unavoidable. They attempted to resolve the issue with updated firmware, but all it did was put off the inevitable. A straightforward wheel was what ultimately doomed an otherwise nearly ideal mouse. Where exactly can one locate the Logitech model with the optical scrolls? Where can I find him? Ay! Your product is not inexpensive; I paid sixty dollars for this mouse. Do you seriously believe that consumers would be deterred from purchasing a nice optical scroll at a price of, for example, sixty-five to seventy dollars? Alas. Simply one negative mark erased thousands of positive ones! I did not experience the same difficulties with scrolling when using a single mouse manufactured by another vendor. There are bugs with the scrolling on all three Logitech 603 mouse. Logitech was synonymous with "quality" for me. The sensor that you used to put in some mice was not very good in the past, but now you have an excellent HERO sensor that is cheap, energy efficient, and does not break - the perfect combination! Tin is everything that makes up the scroll. My relationship with logitech will remain nonexistent until you have returned the optical scroll. When the G603 finally gives up the ghost in the third year (in two years), I will be compelled to start looking for products made by another business. What a shame it is! My go-to brand was Logitech, and some of my favorite models are the MX500, G5, G500, and others. I don't remember if optical scrolls were available on the MX500, but I know they were on the G5 and the 500; they're amazing! In general, there is no optical scrolling = no populets of Logitech products.
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