Hard to believe that's what a computer mouse used to look like on the inside. I still remember having to scrape the accumulated lint off that ball with an X-acto knife so I could smoothly work my 72-dpi Photoshop renderings.
The photo is part of Flickr user raneko's excellent "25 Years of Apple Mouse Evolution" series, which ranges from the 1984 brick to the 2009 Magic Mouse.
via cult of mac
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Comments
You lost me at "Apple Mac's" and "Achilles heals"! ! ! !
I still use the puck mouse after getting the first one with the original iMac 10 years ago. It requires a very light touch and minimal effort to use. With just the right pad (thank you Kevin Kubota) the ball stays clean for months and the pixel-level accuracy I get is a joy.
While all my designer friends bought their nice ergo-expensive mice I stuck with the puck - and avoided the carpal ailments that many of them succumbed to.
If you are a puck hater, just do this: Pick up a single CD in your hand. See how much effort that requires? That's how much stress on the wrist the puck puts.
I don't care what they say. It's a work of art and I love it.
I've always wondered about this anomaly; Apple are so scrupulous with design, so why make such a flaw time and time again? I think it is a way of letting young designers cut their teeth on a rather insignificant piece of technology. A user can always find a simple replacement, no one really complains as a replacement is always inexpensive. Young designers love nothing better than reinventing the wheel and it is always charming to see what crap they come up with.
I recently found an unused PC mouse in a box, it has two solid click buttons, a robust click wheel and a tacky red glowing bottom. My PC mouse still works, it's a dream.
not a fan of the brick though, can't even begin to understand how anyone might have thought it was even remotely attractive!