Apple was the first company to popularise the mouse in the mid-1980s, but its
more recent stabs at the device have been something of a mixed bag. The
Magic
Mouse is the replacement for the bar-of-soap-style Mighty Mouse that
attracted so much ire and, while it is a clever gadget, it won't be to
everyone's taste.
First things first: the Magic Mouse is gorgeous. The sleek organic shape has
a sculpted aluminium base topped with a slice of translucent plastic, and two
long sturdy runners make for easy skimming across any surface.
It's a laser optical mouse (though not one of the new generation that works
on any surface) and, with a pair of AA batteries installed, the Magic Mouse
feels perfectly weighted. It's a real work of art.
Unfortunately, the drawbacks with the design become evident once you start to
use it, and the most obvious is that it's very thin. If you're used to wrapping
your hand around an ergonomic lump from the likes of Logitech or Microsoft, you
won't get on with it at all.
You need to claw your fingers over the Magic Mouse and grasp it between thumb
and forefinger for moving around. Smaller hands may find it less awkward to
hold, but we advise trying before buying. The shape was a deal-breaker for us.
Since there are no discrete buttons, the whole flexible front end of the
Magic Mouse sits on a mechanical switch, but this provides only a left click.
Apple's big innovation, however, is in activating the Magic Mouse's plastic
surface with the same multi-touch technology found on the iPhone screen and
MacBook trackpads.
The implementation here uses fewer gestures, though, and for good reason.
Much of the dragging and pinching needed on screens and trackpads is handled
here with the mouse itself. Right-clicks are performed with a two-finger click
(although the Magic Mouse can be set to detect an index finger-only right-click)
and moving one finger over its surface provides a 360-degree scroll in supported
applications.
Flick a finger up or down the mouse body, and the Magic Mouse provides the
momentum-loaded scroll that will be familiar to iPhone users. Less successful is
the two-finger horizontal swipe for moving back and forth in a web browser. It's
awkward to hold the mouse steady and still move forefinger and index finger
across its surface, although this may get easier with practice.
A Bluetooth connection means that the Magic Mouse doesn't need a USB receiver
to work with more recent Macs. For the moment, however, it can be used only with
new iMacs that it ships with as standard. Other Mac owners will need the
software that comes with the boxed product, or must wait for the Mac OS 10.6.2
operating system update due shortly from Apple.
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