Developer | Apple Computer Inc. |
---|---|
Type | Mouse |
Release date | August 15, 1998 |
Discontinued | July 2000 |
Predecessor | Apple Desktop Bus Mouse 2 |
Successor | Apple Pro Mouse (Black) |
Website | apple.com |
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The Apple USB Mouse, commonly called the 'Hockey puck'[1] because of its unusual shape, is a mouse released by Apple Inc. It was first released with the Bondi Blue iMac G3 in 1998 and included with all successive desktop Macs for the next two years. It was the first commercially released Apple mouse to use the USB connection format and not the Apple Desktop Bus (ADB). It is widely considered to be one of Apple's worst mistakes.[1]
It's called Magic Mouse. It's the world's first Multi-Touch mouse. And while it comes standard with every new iMac, you can also add it to any Bluetooth-enabled Mac for a Multi-Touch makeover.What's in the box: Apple Magic Mouse. It's called Magic Mouse. It's the world's first Multi-Touch mouse. And while it comes standard with every new iMac, you can also add it to any Bluetooth-enabled Mac for a Multi-Touch makeover.What's in the box: Apple Magic Mouse. Winrar windows 7 x64.
Design and criticism[edit]
Unlike the Mouse II that preceded it, the 'hockey puck' mouse has a circular shape; it has a single mouse button located at the top, like previous Apple mice. The mouse's round shape is widely considered clumsy, due to its small size and tendency to rotate in use. The graphite mouse has an indentation on its button showing where to press. This was a major cause for the success of the Griffin iMate ADB to USB adapters, as they allowed the older, more comfortable ADB Mouse II to be used with those iMacs. There were some products like the iCatch, a shell that attached to the USB mouse to give it the ADB mouse's elliptical shape.[2]
Google chrome taking forever to install. Another flaw introduced in the Apple USB Mouse, shared across all of Apple's USB offerings, is the atypically short cord. Though intended for use through the integrated hub in Apple's keyboards, Apple's transition to USB coincided with the relocation of ports on their notebooks from the center to the left edge.
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Legacy[edit]
In 2000, the Apple USB Mouse was replaced with the Apple Pro Mouse.
Available colors[edit]
Color | Released with |
---|---|
Bondi Blue | iMac G3 |
Blueberry | iMac G3 and Power Mac G3 Blue and White |
Strawberry | iMac G3 |
Grape | iMac G3 |
Lime | iMac G3 |
Tangerine | iMac G3 |
Graphite | iMac G3 DV Special Edition (slot loading) and Power Mac G4 Yikes and Sawtooth |
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References[edit]
- ^ abGardiner, Bryan (January 24, 2008). 'Learning From Failure: Apple's Most Notorious Flops'. Wired News. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
- ^Gravley, Nancy Carroll (August 23, 2000). 'Review - Still Have An iPuck? iCatch Makes The Round Mouse Usable'. MacObserver.com. The Mac Observer. Retrieved January 1, 2016.
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https://st-download.mystrikingly.com/blog/the-sims-2-super-collection. In 1980, Apple asked IDEO to develop a mouse for their radical new computer, the Lisa. Previous attempts at mouse design, by Douglas Englebart and Xerox PARC, yielded results that were too expensive and hard to make. The Apple mouse needed to be more reliable and less than 10 percent of the cost of the earlier versions.
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To start, the design team created a cheaper, much-improved mechanism that would operate the mouse, and found that a complex, plastic 'ribcage' would hold the pieces together. The team similarly tested and refined the mouse's other key components, from the audible and tactile click of the button to the rubberized coating on the ball. A record turntable spun for days, logging 'mouse miles' to check the reliability of the electromechanical assembly.
The resulting mouse proved mechanically and economically sound and was changed only slightly when adapted for use with the first Macintosh computer. The basic mechanism design is used in virtually all mechanical mouses produced to date.