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SETI@HOME Team
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Review by Jim Noonan Agg gave me the Mouse Bungee. "Review this" he said. "What the hell is that?" I replied. "I don't know, it's meant to keep your mouse cable out of the way or something, I don't know how it works." Umm, righteo. Yeah. My immediate thought was "They'll invent any old crap to make a buck these days" as I casually tossed it into my bag. Less than an hour later, I thought to myself "Hang on, I've been *waiting* for someone to invent this!" What is it? ![]() click for larger images How do you use
it?
I think it was designed mostly with a flat desk in mind to keep the mouse cable elevated thus reducing drag - those instructions indicate this and it's been reviewed on a few other sites being used in a similar fashion. However, I found it works just as well UNDER a normal home computer desk: ![]() click for larger image As you can see, my mouse cable runs down under my keyboard shelf and past my motorcycle boot. When I come home and throw my boots under the desk as shown, they typically hit my mouse cable and pin it back against the lower desk shelf. The mouse cable always falls down into such a vulnerable position through normal use and I end up having to yank it out of the boot's stranglehold. ![]() click for larger image This is what it looks like under my desk with the Bungee installed. Everything is now nice and neat and out of the way. This is the kind of thing I've needed since way back, even before I had my boots. Reason being it also stops the weight of the mouse cable dragging my mouse forwards. At one point I got a cordless mouse to get rid of this "cable yank", but now with the bungee I don't need such drastic measures. The best cordless mouse doesn't have the resolution of the best corded mouse and typically less buttons, so for someone experiencing problems similar to mine the Mouse Bungee is probably the best solution. On a "normal" single
tiered desk (most office-style desks) you'd be putting the Bungee
about 30cm behind the mouse. In this position it will directly
lift the cable off the desk and keep it out of the way. On my
keyboard shelf the mouse cable is still hitting the edge of the
shelf but because the amount of cable between mouse and edge is
so small there's no noticeable drag. There's no other way to use
it on a desk like mine unless you run the mouse on the top (main)
level of your desk, in which case you'll end up with RSI from
elevated wrists. |
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