Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Input Devices

Ask Slashdot: Where Can You Get a Good 3-Button Mouse Today? 431

guises writes Ever since mouse wheels were introduced the middle mouse button has been sidelined to an inadequate click-wheel function, or in some cases ditched altogether. This has never sat well with me, a proper middle button is invaluable for pasting, games, and navigation. More than that, my hand categorically rejects two button mice — the dangling ring finger causes me genuine physical discomfort. I have begged Logitech on multiple occasions to make just one, among their many screwy specialty mice, to replace the Mouseman which I loved so dearly. I thought for a moment that I had been answered with the g600, only to find that they had put the right mouse button in the middle.

So my question to Slashdot is: where does a person turn for a three button mouse these days? I've only found two, both ergonomic and priced accordingly. I use the Contour and like the shape and wheel position, but would love to find something wireless and with a higher DPI sensor.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Ask Slashdot: Where Can You Get a Good 3-Button Mouse Today?

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:52PM (#48894911)

    Just glue three Apple Mice together.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Congratulations, you've managed to make a reference even more obsolete than 'LOL BSOD'.

    • Re:Simple solution (Score:4, Interesting)

      by frisket ( 149522 ) <peter@ s i l m a r i l . ie> on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:12PM (#48895005) Homepage

      where does a person turn for a three button mouse these days?

      The one on my desk you may have only when you pry it from my cold, dead fingers.

      • I don't get this question at all. What's the big deal? Are there any valuable functions mapped to a middle button anyway, that make it so important? What's wrong with a click wheel? Who puts three fingers on the surface of a mouse? the whole thing is weird.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 )

          Are there any valuable functions mapped to a middle button anyway, that make it so important?

          Yes. For people who use real computers, middle button = "paste selected text".

          Who puts three fingers on the surface of a mouse?

          People who use real computers but have not yet found the one true pointing device, the 4-button Logitech Marble Mouse Trackball.

          • why get excited for having a button for ctrl-v? do you also have a button for ctrl-c and ctrl-x? you make no sense.

        • on a lot of the mouses the click wheel makes for a crappy third button.

          Some of the worst are when they thought they'd be clever and made the click wheel TILTABLE and CLICKABLE.

          Ends up doing neither well.

          What I've found is that the cheap mouses the click wheel works ok. The MS and Logitech ones, of course.

          Got me the middle button gets used most for opening a link in a new tab, and also has it's uses in CAD apps.

      • or you can just buy it from oracle. they have 2 types of kit. one has a wheelmouse, the other has a 3 button mouse:

        https://shop.oracle.com/pls/os... [oracle.com]

    • Just glue three Apple Mice together.

      1995 called and said you were living in the past.

      But let's talk about Windows 1.0 now.

  • by Pope Hagbard ( 3897945 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:52PM (#48894913) Journal

    $69 for a mouse, especially a specialty one like you're wanting, is not that much. The only alternative is going to be buying a good used one from eBay.

    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      The Contour used to be ~$120, I hadn't noticed that the price had changed. None the less, it's still a wired mouse with low DPI. I know people say that DPI doesn't matter that much, but it's definitely evident with one of these in fast games.
      • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:10PM (#48894997)

        Chances are you can re-map that logitech g600's buttons to do whatever you want. You can probably do it driverless as well, which means the changes survive across plugging the mouse into a different PC. Pick one up on Amazon and if it doesn't work the way you want, they let you return it.

        • You might be able to: my Logitech Mx518 (at least with the software I have installed) doesn't seem to allow rebinding the two primary buttons, though, so it's not a sure thing. The OP can do what you suggest, or just ask around (on Reddit, user reviews, even send a message to Logitech).

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by majormer ( 313356 )

          I have a G600. It is trivial to remap the buttons to perform like you want.

  • by dandaman32 ( 1056054 ) <dan@enanocm[ ]rg ['s.o' in gap]> on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:52PM (#48894915)

    Can't recommend enough the Performance Mouse MX [amazon.com] enough.

    While it does have the middle button integrated into the scroll wheel, once used to it you will find it completely intuitive. I middle click hundreds of times a day and only found it difficult during the first two weeks of owning the mouse. 5 years later I still prefer the Performance MX over anything else.

    To middle click I typically shift my index finger over a centimeter or two. My hands are slightly above average size and ergonomically the PerfMX is perfect for me.

    • I love the Performance MX. Using one right now, and about to order another for when this one eventually dies.
      love the discontinued Revolution MX more. That extra side wheel was the killer.
    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      I have an MX Revolution. When I realized that I'd finally have to give up my Mouseman I first got myself a Creative Fatal1ty Gaming Mouse (because it was the only one I could find with three buttons) and after my third one of those died in short order (because they were shit) I got the MX Revolution. This was when I learned that not only did I have a preference for three button mice, but that it was physically painful for me to use a two button one for extended periods.

      Also the Revolution didn't have a mi
  • The g600 certainly looks programmable - is there no option to reassign the primary buttons? Hell, it seems like even the buttons on my normal Logitech office mouse can be reassigned, certainly the click-wheel can be. (on Linux at the moment, so I can't double check)

    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      I haven't used the g600, but Creative used to make something similar - the Fatal1ty Gaming Mouse. The biggest problem with those was the faulty microswitches, which made them basically unusable, but they had the same layout as the g600 with the right mouse button in the middle. Using those in Windows the answer was no, there was no way to remap the primary buttons aside from swapping right and left (for lefties). I say this baring any special utilities which may have added that functionality, and I was only
      • Re:Not programmable? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Cinder6 ( 894572 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:25PM (#48895103)

        I have a G600. I just checked, and you can reprogram the primary buttons to anything you like.

        • by guises ( 2423402 )
          Another commenter suggested [slashdot.org] that this might be driverless, in other words your configuration is stored on the mouse and is OS independent. That's pretty appealing if that's true, I don't suppose you could confirm that?
          • Re:Not programmable? (Score:5, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @08:06PM (#48895867)

            Yes, I can confirm that.

            I have used the G600 for a long time now and the way it works is that you need a computer with the logitech software installed, reprogram all the buttons any way you want (you can move the right click button to the side shift-function button and then program the middle button however you want) then save the profile into the mouse memory which will let it remember those settings on any other computer without the drivers installed (with the exception of some game-specific macros).

            Most of the recent logitech mice are capable of this.

  • That sounds like something pretty basic that either Logitech or Microsoft would provide.

    • by Briareos ( 21163 )

      You can - I've done that exact thing.

      It doesn't work without driver software, though, so you might have a problem with any OS that isn't Windows...

      • by rnturn ( 11092 )
        Why wouldn't xmodmap work for the OP? It's not portable but, if you're the type that carries their personal mouse around with them, the configuration commands could easily be stashed on a USB drive and loaded onto any (UNIX/Linux) computer you're going to attach your mouse to.
        • by Briareos ( 21163 )

          Because the mouse in it's default hardware profile (without the driver) mostly plays a USB keyboard and sends keystrokes for the other buttons; and without the driver's software profile support you can't even freely map the middle mouse button to where the right mouse button is by default...

      • You save to the on-board memory it's a basic function, and everything works the same in linux etc. http://support.logitech.com/en... [logitech.com] if ya need instructions. Works fine for me when I multi boot.

  • Not sure why a scroll wheel will not work for you, but check out the Logitech Couch Mouse M515. The wheel is not a middle, the button below the wheel is the third mouse button.

    • "why a scroll wheel will not work for you"

      With a clickable scroll wheel it takes effort to avoid scrolling when trying to click

      "check out the Logitech Couch Mouse M515"

      'This product is no longer available. Continue shopping at Logitech.' http://reviews.logitech.com/70... [logitech.com]

      • With a clickable scroll wheel it takes effort to avoid scrolling when trying to click

        Never had such a problem. Maybe you have no fine motor skills?

      • by bsolar ( 1176767 )
        This is usually not a problem at all unless you have a model like the Logitec M500 which has a small button to enable "free-spinning mode" and forget to set it to click mode.
      • by willy_me ( 212994 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @07:23PM (#48895711)

        Usability of the scroll wheel as a center button varies greatly from mouse to mouse. With some mice it is impossible to use without scrolling and with others it is ok. My current mouse, the M525, is poor - but tolerable once you get used to it. My previous mouse, some generic Dell mouse, was much better.

        One should go to a computer shop and try them out. Do not assume they are all horrible just because some are.

    • I've been disappointed with most of the click-wheel mice I've used. I guess it's hard to balance the stiffness of the wheel and the button - either the button is too easy to click by mistake when scrolling, or too stiff so it's hard to click without moving the scroll wheel. I've had problems with brands like Microsoft and Logitech.

      My favourite mouse currently is a Razer Taipan. I got it for gaming, but I love it for general desktop use. It's got the best button feel of any mouse I've used, including the scr

      • by fnj ( 64210 )

        If there was a Razer Taipan that wasn't wired, I might attach some credibility to your recommendation. Wired mice SUCK. It will be a cold day in hell that I ever again lower myself to dragging that goddam weight around on the end of a mouse.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:55PM (#48894935)

    xmodmap -e "pointer = 1 3 2"

  • by dbrueck ( 1872018 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:56PM (#48894937)

    Can you share details on what the problems are with the clickable middle wheel? You mentioned it's "inadequate", but what makes it so? Just wondering because I use the middle-button/wheel all the time and it seems to work as well as the other buttons - no discomfort, no extra thought, etc.

    • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:00PM (#48894951)

      Not trying to flamebait, but this looks more like a "me, oldtimer, can't adapt" thing.
      Indeed, some mice have a harder to press mid-button/scroll wheel, but there are some which are easier to press. I have a G700S and the middle click requires greater finger pressure than I'd like, however I bought it because it features both step-by step scrolling and continuous, which is the feature I was looking for. At any rate, I remapped middle click to a side button too and retrained my muscle memory.

      • Got nothin' to do with bein' an old timer. My gaming mouse has a clickable scroll wheel and a set of twelve side buttons. It's simply a can't adapt thing.
    • by Nemosoft Unv. ( 16776 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:04PM (#48894967)
      It's harder to push and often inadvertently invokes a scroll event. Plus, you need to bend your middle finger to push it in properly, otherwise you may perhaps click the left or right button as well. To be honest, I think a mouse with side buttons is a better choice; and I don't really buy the 'dangling ring finger' argument; mine is always holding the mouse with the ring finger; my pinky is just below that, holding the mouse too. Unless you have really Rachmaninovian [wikipedia.org] hands, there's no need for fingers to dangle.
      • I use the index finger for both the left button and the middle button / wheel, and the middle finger for right-click. It's a lot easier than using one finger per button. This way, the thumb is on one side, the ring finger on the other (both touching the desk) and the pinky just lies there. Less strain on the hand, more accuracy because you're not using your pinky for anything ...
    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      Less ergonomic: the middle "button" isn't shaped right and it can be hard to position a finger to be in the correct position.

      Less exact: the button mechanism works different than the other buttons, partially because it tend to use a different kind of micro switch (often actually a collapsing dome switch for the middle button) and partially because of the mechanical design required for the scroll wheel.

      Less reliable: a middle-click can be translated to scrolling or tilting unless pressed exactly right.

      • by Misagon ( 1135 )

        I use the middle mouse button mostly to open new tabs/windows in web browsing where invoking the scroll wheel inadvertently causes the page to scroll away from where I'm clicking. That is very annoying.

        Most mice I have used use the same type of microswitch for the "middle button" as for the left and right buttons, but in most mice the buttons are levers with a rod on the microswitch.
        These levers are usually the same on the left and right buttons, but very different on the middle press so the sensation is ve

  • The Logitech Anywhere Mouse MX [logitech.com] is a wireless mouse, so may not suit. It does nonetheless have a middle button distinct from the scroll wheel, and is not a weird 'ergonomic' shape.

    I use it with the laptop, but at work I'm on the sadly long-discontinued Logitech Marble Mouse, with middle-button emulation. (I see that there is now the Trackman Marble [logitech.com], so perhaps I will still have somewhere to go if my venerable trackball ever dies!)

    • The only problem with Logitech mice is the Logitech software. I hate, hate, hate it.

      I've got a big, heavy, Gigabyte Aivia Krypton Ghost mouse.You can modify the internal weighting to your liking. It's got the scroll wheel but it's big and grippy. You could also map away the scroll entirely, or map a side button for that dangling ring finger. One caveat is their software too. If you're on OS X, you need to set the mouse up the first time in Windows. It's an annoyance but it's a really good mouse. Maybe y
  • hp 3 button mouse (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:07PM (#48894985)
    • I second the HP DY651A. It was apparently unavailable for a while: all the online stores I looked for it in were listing it as out of stock or unavailable for the last few months of 2014, and it was something like $50 on eBay and the like. However, recently it became available again. I ordered mine three weeks ago and got it a few days later, for under $20 Canadian. Multiple online stores (newegg, NCIX, etc) are listing it for under $20, some as low as $12.
      • Whoo hoo!

        You know, pretty much the only reason why HP makes these (or orders them from actual manufacturers and brands them) is because there is obscene demand for them for CAD/CAM workstations. Many CAM suites use combinations of button clicks to maneuver in the 3D design space, including the use of the middle button.

        Dassault Systemes CATIA and Siemens Unigraphics come instantly to mind.

        HP has an industrial workstation lineup that they offer to small and midsize companies that need fairly high end enginee

  • The middle mouse button is certainly useful, but I find the scroll wheel being a button is sufficient for me. I don't like Apple's multitouch mouse at all. Real buttons for me, thanks.

    But I guess paradigms are changing. In Linux, as we move forward to Wayland, policies regarding the middle click are pushed into the toolkits. I hope they see fit to allow the enabling of select and middle-click paste. I can understand that not all users want it (some actually like the middle-click to start a page scroll)

    • by HalfFlat ( 121672 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:27PM (#48895111)

      The erosion of middle-button paste functionality is a continual frustration.

      There are cultural differences between the Windows and Macintosh personal computing worlds, and that of X11 on Unix workstations. While always allowing customisability, we should hold on to the good ideas of the past, rather than dismiss them as being unfamiliar to the personal computer user.

      What irks me especially is that the same forces that are driving us towards a Windows-like experience on the Linux desktop are also removing the ability to easily customise our environment, if only to retain the functionality that is being deprecated or dismissed. (I'm looking at you, GNOME.)

  • Mice are so mass-market these days that it is hard to find one that actually performs properly. I've gone through a lot of mice over the years, always preferring the hardwired mice over the wireless (dead battery == unhappy), but in the last round I simply couldn't find a wired mouse that worked well. Everything being sold was wireless.

    Of late, many of the mice I've tried have simply been too big and bulky, stretching my fingers and generally uncomfortable.

    I wound up going with a Microsoft Sculpt 1569 wir

  • Vertical mouse best mouse. Yeah it takes a week or so to really get used to the new hand position and buttons but after the learning period it's everything a regular mouse is but without the wrist/forearm pain I used to have after long gaming sessions.
  • Get a used mouseman from ebay ($10 and free shipping [ebay.com]), throw away the top cover, and 3-d print your own.

    Don't own a 3-d printer? Probably one of your friends does, or the local university, or the local hackerspace, or as a last resort you can use shapeways [shapeways.com].

    Grab some modeling clay in your hand, make a 3-d scan of the resulting "handle", add fasteners for the buttons and ball (or IR chip), then 3-d print a custom-grip top cover. You can get IR mouse elements and ball elements from old mice, usually for free o

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      3D-printing is overkill.

      When I buy a new mouse, I remove the mousewheel. Then I build a middle mouse button that fits in its place. I cut pieces of styrene and put them together with plastic cement ("model glue").

  • Bluetooth, comfortable mouse with a wheel, but a split 3rd button. Instead of a 3rd button integrated with the will, it's a smaller button closer to the palm.

    • You must use additional software, that button does not natively produce button2 events.

      • by joaommp ( 685612 )

        Actually it does produce the button2 events natively. I had to use no additional software to use it. It's my everyday mouse.

  • Reprogram the G600 (Score:5, Informative)

    by Cinder6 ( 894572 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:27PM (#48895117)

    A lot of people are suggesting that the G600 might be reprogrammable, but they all note that they don't have the mouse, so they don't know for sure.

    I do.

    I just checked it, and you can reprogram the primary mouse buttons to anything you want. You can also set that as the mouse's built-in configuration, so you don't need to use the drivers and the settings will be persistent across computers. Have fun.

  • The six button gaming mice encourage you to retrain your hand position. Mouse wheels are big and made to be clicked easily without disturbing the scroll wheel. You should just learn to adapt to this new stuff imo.

  • They have an excellent selection of 3-button mice at Circuit City. What, don't you have a time machine?

  • HP DY651A (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    USB 3-button optical mouse for $12. Problem solved.

  • I bought a logitech mx dark field mouse because i've got a glass-topped desk.
    But it turns out it's got a little button in the middle behind the wheel; that's the third button.

  • The Logitech Anywhere MX has a physical middle-click button underneath the scroll wheel ("clicking" the wheel itself just toggles a friction gear on the scroll wheel). If it weren't for your additional complaint about needing a massive mouse (this thing is tiny), it would be perfect for you.

    Interestingly, while it really can run perfectly on surfaces as weird as glass, I have found one surface it does not work on: my old mousepad.

  • I don't have an answer, but I'm reading this with keen interest as I feel similarly about input devices. I recently wrote up some of my ongoing keyboard rants [iki.fi] where scrollwheels are also discussed. One general issue seems to be that those who don't learn to use keyboards properly, will reinvent similar functionality in mice (arrow keys and pgup/pgdn -> scrollwheels).
  • Why don't you design one and get your project funded on kickstarter? You would get the exact mouse you want, plus money.

  • I am a HUGE believer in the G600. You see all those 12 buttons on the side? You see the two buttons at the top? You can configure them however you want, and you'll never need to do the clicky-wheel.

    So, what's the problem? I really don't see it. Oh, there's a button on the far right that your pinky or ring finger can get to.

    You DO realize you can map the G600 buttons... right?

  • Make sure the configuration is stored in the mouse itself. Most mice do it in the driver and that does not work with other OSes. For example, the Sharkoon Fireglider and Darkglider mice store config in the mouse and hence work the same under Windows, Linux, etc. I have put the middle button on the thumb button permanently this way.

  • I guess I didn't emphasize this.

    1)- Map your left button (button 1) to left button.
    2)- Map the button to the right of that (button 2) to middle button [normally this is right button]
    3)- Map the far right button (the "g-shift" button normally, but it can do ANYTHING AT ALL including typing letters) to right button.

    Problem solved. With nothing but the mouse and the software that comes with it. Which you can run yourself, go to a friends house and run it there, get a VM and run it there, run it on a lapto

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

Working...