Testseek.es han recogido 22 las revisiones expertas de el Kensington SlimBlade Trackball y el grado medio es el 64%. Enrolle abajo y vea todas las revisiones para Kensington SlimBlade Trackball.
(64%)
22 Críticas
Puntuación media de los expertos que han realizado una crítica del producto.
Usuarios
(90%)
66 Críticas
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Resumen: The venerable Kensington Expert Mouse is arguably one of the best trackball input devices for desktop computing. Among trackball enthusiasts, it practically has a cult following. Its successor, the Kensington Slimblade, was launched in 2008, but init...
A solid device that's easy to use once you get the hang of it.
The inability to customise any of the buttons is a major drawback.
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Publicación: 2009-08-25, Autor: Andrew , crítica de: techworld.com
Silky smooth cursor-racing operation, coupled with some good integration with a number of common programs, make the Kensington SlimBlade Trackball a winner. We only wish its extra View mode functionality would work with all apps, but this doesn’t stop...
Smooth ball skates the pointer across big desktops. Comfortable design with big buttons. Intuitive twist-to-scroll system. Controls iTunes in the background. View mode glides through long Web pages.
Software lacks any customization. Can’t use twists to shuttle in timelinebased software.
The lack of button customization and kludgy software is a bummer, but the trackball itself is a marvel of usability and smart design.SlimBlade Trackball ...
Trackball feels sluggish; rotating-ball feature less convenient for scrolling than a traditional scroll wheel (or the scroll ring used on Kensington’s Expert Mouse); buttons not customizable; expensive.
As a cursor-controlling device, the SlimBlade Trackball’s scrolling mechanism is a bit of a step backwards from Kensington’s previous trackball model, and the lack of customizable buttons will turn off many veteran trackball users. On the othe...
Publicación: 2009-04-14, Autor: Justin , crítica de: cnet.com
Comfortable for those physically unable to use a standard mouse; heads-up display conveniently shows the current mode.
Toggling between three modes complicates work flow; expensive; lacks Bluetooth; cant customize buttons or alter trackball sensitivity; large footprint.
Kensington resurrects a dying breed with the SlimBlade Trackball, but the potential of its unique shortcut buttons devolves into a mess of clumsy extra functions and awkward movements that restrict productivity.
Resumen: Kensington SlimBlade trackball, I jumped at the chance. Eons ago, back in the mid to late 80s, I owned and loved one of the earliest Kensington ADB trackballs. It finally was put out to pasture when Apple discontinued the Apple Desktop Bus, but I got...
Comfortable for those physically unable to use a standard mouse , Heads-up display conveniently shows the current mode
Toggling between three modes complicates work flow , Expensive , Lacks Bluetooth , Can't customise buttons or alter trackball sensitivity , Large footprint
Kensington resurrects a dying breed with the SlimBlade Trackball, but the potential of its unique shortcut buttons devolves into a mess of clumsy extra functions and awkward movements that restrict productivity....
Comfortable for those physically unable to use a standard mouse, Headsup display conveniently shows the current mode
Toggling between three modes complicates work flow, Expensive, Lacks Bluetooth, Cant customise buttons or alter trackball sensitivity, Large footprint
Kensington resurrects a dying breed with the SlimBlade Trackball, but the potential of its unique shortcut buttons devolves into a mess of clumsy extra functions and awkward movements that restrict productivity.