News
The mouse has a wireless range up to 32.8 feet in an open area and up to 16.4 feet in an office environment, Microsoft says. It’s also nice and compact at 5.17-by-2.17-by-0.56 inches.
The Arc Mouse will be available in both black and red this month for $59.95. The Wireless Mobile Mouse 3000 on the other hand is really just an update to an older version of the mouse.
No, Microsoft doesn’t support Arc Touch Mouse on Mac, but Parallels Desktop came to the rescue. The installation was simple and straightforward.
Well, the Arc Touch Mouse is a series of serious strengths and weaknesses, all proceeding from key design decisions. They knew what they were getting into here, so there aren’t design flaws ...
There's BlueTrack tech that allows it to be used on almost any surface, it features Bluetooth 4.0 Low-Energy, and will be joined the Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 Limited Edition upon launch.
A recently published patent shows a mouse that can fold to be easier to carry around (via WindowsUnited). This may sound familiar, as Microsoft also makes an Arc Mouse that folds.
Microsoft is also bringing its love of clicks and snaps to the Arc Mouse. One of the features touted in Microsoft’s promotional video for the Surface Arc is a “better snap.” ...
It's not all BlueTrack hysteria for Microsoft today -- the company's hardware division also took the wraps off that Arc Mouse we spotted back in July and the new Wireless Mobile Mouse 3000.
So it seems that Microsoft has a patent in process for a folding mouse. It looks a whole lot like their Arc mouse, which is quite thin and already goes from curved to flat. But that’s appare… ...
Microsoft has had its share hits and misses as far as product design goes, but this Arc Mouse due this winter looks to be a slick little input device. Wireless and collapsible, the Arc Mouse ...
The Arc Touch includes Microsoft's usual mouse features such as a magnetic 2.4GHz wireless Nano transceiver that snaps into the bottom of the mouse and BlueTrack technology to let users use the ...
Microsoft's patent was published on Thursday and filed in March. It describes a mouse that looks similar to today's Microsoft Arc wireless mouse but with the ability to become flatter and easy to ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results