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Smart Mouse with E-Mail and IM Alerts

lilrock writes "CoolTechZone.com takes a look at the world's first smart mouse from Logitech, the MX610, that has e-mail and IM alert buttons. It also has auto turn on/off functionality as well. According to the article, 'All these standard features aside, what has us impressed are the e-mail and IM notification buttons. Though the idea behind them is simple, it's interesting how Logitech comes up with such exclusive features. Basically, you will have to configure the indicators to alert you when you receive an e-mail and/or an IM message from the person of your choice. The buttons will alert you by lighting up, and lead you directly to the message once you press them.' " Because I for one am constantly staring at my mouse when I have a gigantic monitor right in front of me. Cough.

15 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Handy with a screen-saver by the_unknown_soldier · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A good idea, especially with IM. When you have 20 windows, and you have an msn/whatever window blinking at you annoyingly, having a button that will immediately go to that message sounds handy. It will stop the blinking very quickly! I like it.

  2. Re:Handy with a screen-saver by garcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Or are at work and are doing something elsewhere and aren't constantly looking at their screen. Perhaps they hide their taskbar alerts for AIM because they aren't supposed to be using IM clients at work. Their boss might know that a flashing taskbar item is an IM but a flashing mouse button might not be known yet?

    Other than that, I really don't see a use for it myself.

  3. Useful if it has a long range by Tango42 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Because I for one am constantly staring at my mouse when I have a gigantic monitor right in front of me.

    As long as it has a long enough range, it could be useful to just take your mouse with you when you go away from the computer - to work on some paper based thing, prehaps.

  4. I'll bite by markdavis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OK, I'll bite to be the first: "But does it work in Linux?" :)

    It does sound like a great idea, especially if the LED is very bright. Right now, I wrote some scripts to play sounds at intervals when important Email messages come in. But sometimes it can be much more annoying than a nice LED.

    Every time you think the mouse is a dead deal, somehow Logitech does come up with something new and useful. And I will admit that I was one of those "what the hell is with this scroll wheel crap" people. And after a few months of using it, you would have to rip it from my cold, dying, RSI hands to get it away from me!

  5. Screen Savers? by Voltageaav · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Who cares about the people who still use screen savers? They probably still have those prnters where the paper has the holes on the side and the actual "floppy" disc drives too.

    --
    Someone save me from this sanity.
  6. Could Use the buttons for other stuff, if only by putko · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Although the article makes fun of the output LEDs/buttons, that isn't such a bad thing; if you could make them do what you want, it would be really neat. Especially for someone who does system administration, who needs to somehow prioritize various distractions.

    However, I went to logitech's site and discovered the following:

    They don't provide (at least I can't find it) details on how to talk to the mouse to use the buttons/LEDs for input/output. You have to use their "SetPoint" software, which only works under Windows. And maybe it doesn't work the way you want it to.

    So the mouse can't be used for other systems, and you can't program the mouse to work the way that you want it to work. Which is too bad.

    Even if Logitech provided "open source" software, that wouldn't help folks who want to really use the hardware for neat things -- they need the technical specs that the "SetPoint" authors used to make the software work in the first place.

    --
    http://www.thebricktestament.com/the_law/when_to_s tone_your_children/dt21_18a.html
  7. Where is RSS button? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How about RSS?

  8. Useless, for the most part. by rspress · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My mouse could be neon green with 60 flashing lights on it and I would never notice it. I just went to the AT&T natural voice site and created a few female voice messages with the text I typed in to alert me of mail from certain people or business. Since she has an English accent it is different from my regular computer voice. I am using OS X so I just create a mail rule that will color the background of the message and then play the sound file for that person. Since I leave mail running in the background most of the day I will always know when I get an email from a person that I know, even if I am not looking at the computer.

  9. Less buttons and a bigger mouse please by foldedspace · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hey, Logitech! I'm a big guy with big paws. How about making a wired optical mouse with two buttons and one wheel that's about 50% larger than every mouse you currently make? These little buttons all over the sides and top just get in the way. I have the MX310 and it would be great if it was bigger and had 3 less buttons. You could make two or three sizes of the same thing and sell more mice that way. You know, instead of tacking on more garb... er um... features.

    Also, opaque plastic please. The old optical mice with the translucent plastic were annoying. Loud colors are wasted on me too.

  10. Mac OS X... by VaticDart · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Does it work with Mac OS X?

    Oh wait, I don't care. Because both the email (Mail) and IM program (Adium) I use have nicely unobtrusive but conspicuous alerts in the Dock when a new message comes in. Adium also uses Growl notifications, if you want them.

    I'm a big fan of Logitech devices, but this sounds like a really bad idea. Between the fact that most people generally cover most of the mouse with their hand, and the simple fact that a mouse is not there to be looked at, I seriously think Logitech engineers may have been smoking something leafy when they came up with this one... lights man...

  11. Not so handy when playing games by Oldsmobile · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would not really apreaceate my mouse blinking (or vibrating for that matter) while I'm playing a game. And if I accidentally touched the IM button and it were to tab out of the game (which often crashes certain games btw) I would be really annoyed.

    --
    Some say he is made with ascii, others that he is eyeballed daily by millions. All we know is, he is known as the Sig
  12. Total lack of Linux support from Logitech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you run Linux, you can forget this.

    Logitech refuse to support using Linux with their products - just ask anyone with a DiNovo mediapad keyboard. All they have to do is tell us the protocol, which won't cost them a penny, but they won't. Asshats.

  13. HP Keyboards do the same by rjforster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When I worked at HP (the part that became Agilent) we had HP PCs with keyboards that included an email LED (next to the Caps, Scroll and Num lock LEDs). It also had some quicklaunch buttons but they aren't so interesting.

    It was really useful to not have to unlock the computer just to check if you had been sent that email yet.

  14. worthwhile underlying concepts, bad implementation by mungojelly · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First off I'll second all the objections to this ridiculous product: It's unnecessarily limited, proprietary, non-compatible, and probably-- anyone know for sure?-- absurdly patented. That said, there are two underlying concepts embodied here which I think are worthwhile as we look towards future interface design.

    One: More I/O is almost always good. The human brain is in large part a pattern recognizing machine; put meaningful information anywhere in someone's environment and they'll adapt to make use of it. If this product was aimed at slashdotters, the ad copy could have read: "Mouse that displays two bits of information!" It's not much, but it's more than your mouse used to be telling you.

    Two: Input and output work well in connected loops. It's much more intuitive that if somewhere lights up to tell you about something that needs your attention, you respond by touching there. If properly implemented, this kind of integrity to a mini I/O situation could help us in making meaningful connections and associations. For instance, if there is a button somewhere that lights up when we get an IM from a particular person, and brings up an IM window to that person when pressed (whether it's lit or not), then that button represents that person on multiple levels.

    We are primed and ready to make emotional connections with the things around us. One might have thought that having a light that shows HD or network activity would be silly-- in fact it's often practical-- but more than practical, it's often reassuring. For decades now, when a computer looks like it might be hung, I look to the HD light to reassure me that it really is doing something. That light has an emotional meaning for me.

    So, yes, this particular product is a ridiculous implementation, but the ideas which are being ridiculously implemented are themselves worthwhile. There's something missing in all of the vibrating mice and email buttons they've come up with so far, but that doesn't mean that we should never explore I/O that goes beyond 101 keys and one big glowing square.

    <3

    --
    If you were my sig, you'd be reading yourself right now.
  15. Not so interesting... by woolio · · Score: 2, Interesting
    interesting how Logitech comes up with such exclusive features.
    Ahem! I have a feeling there are a few *cough* patents that are the root of such evil^H^H^H^Hexclusivity... In many senses, computer mice are like toilet paper... There really much left in terms of *useful* innovation, but that's where marketing depts take over... For example, the 3rd button/scrollwheel has its uses, but most things work quite well without. (I'd bet that most Linux users don't even realize that their scrollwheel may not work by default). And Mac users will probably be the first to say that even two buttons are overrated...