Razer's New Viper 8K Promises the Fastest Performance of Any Gaming Mouse (theverge.com) 59
Razer's Viper 8K is a refresh of the 2019 true ambidextrous Viper. For the most part, it's identical and is now available at the same $79 asking price, but it has some key upgrades for competitive gamers who are hoping that tech might help them get the edge over their opponents. From a report: First off, Razer now includes the Focus Plus 20,000DPI sensor used in many of its other 2020 mice, along with the latest generation of optical switches that have a more tactile click feel, according to the company (although it didn't stand out as noticeable to me when I tested the mouse). The biggest news is that, according to Razer, the newly revised Viper can achieve the fastest polling rate of any mouse currently available: up to 8,000Hz -- far higher than the industry standard of 1,000Hz. The polling rate measures how often per second the mouse tells your computer where it's located on-screen. The more frequent the polling is, the smoother your mouse tracking can be. In the case of Razer's new Viper 8K, an 8,000Hz polling rate can deliver a whopping 8,000 pings to your PC per second, while reducing the response time of those pings from one millisecond to just an eighth of one millisecond. On paper, it seems really impressive.
Ha (Score:1)
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I would think so. Polling rate beyond your FPS won't matter in most cases because games don't typically update the mouse position more than once per frame. If you're using a hardware-drawn mouse cursor along with a monitor that supports a high refresh rate then you might get a tiny boost? But even that would only matter if your game FPS couldn't match the monitor refresh rate.
The DPI doesn't even matter than much IMO. Accuracy and consistency are far more important - but I suppose that's harder to write mar
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It looks like you need their software to make the high polling rate work. USB HID specifies the maximum polling rate in milliseconds so the lowest you can go is 1. They must be using some other USB mode and injecting mouse updates at the OS level. Windows only, presumably.
TFA mentions that they told reviewers to test on high spec PCs and that they couldn't get it over 5000 updates per second when they tried. Seems like any benefit you would get from this would be more than offset by the extra load it puts o
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USB HID specifies the maximum polling rate in milliseconds so the lowest you can go is 1.
it's a bit off-topic but this 1ms polling rate is a real pain in the donkey. From real-time audio interfaces to serial ports.
It may have been fine in the 1990's, but somehow somewhere someone forgot to have the foresight that 1ms is not small. It's ironic that a 1980's PC with soundblaster had better real-time audio capabilities (and serial port, for that matter) than a 2021 PC.
So, i find it interesting to read that apparently with the right drivers and hardware this can be boosted to 125ns.
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It only applies to HID devices, audio and CDC devices can go lower. Audio uses isochronous transfers (guaranteed bandwidth) and I think CDC is bulk from memory.
The main issue with CDC is crap drivers.
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it's a bit off-topic but this 1ms polling rate is a real pain in the donkey. From real-time audio interfaces to serial ports.
It may have been fine in the 1990's, but somehow somewhere someone forgot to have the foresight that 1ms is not small. It's ironic that a 1980's PC with soundblaster had better real-time audio capabilities (and serial port, for that matter) than a 2021 PC.
So, i find it interesting to read that apparently with the right drivers and hardware this can be boosted to 125ns.
For audio latency, I guess we have thunderbolt for that nowadays? They have Direct Memory Access so they should be able to make it as fast as on-board analog ports.
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Re: Ha (Score:2)
Pretty sure PS2 polling interval is 125ms, so it's crap.
Re: Ha (Score:1)
Re: Ha (Score:2)
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To add to that, many of the older games, you have to slow down the mouse, else all sorts of buggy crashes can occur. You do it so often, that you end up never speeding it back up again, set it to slowest, so as to avoid some really quite bad crashes.
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"Is this the gold-plated Monster Cable version of a mouse?"
No, it's for hyperactive 12 year-old game-players with ADD on Adderall
Both of them.
Re: Ha (Score:1)
Luckily you avoided saying "humans". Because even those kids got a reaction lag that is orders of magnitude higher than this. Even if their ability to predict hides most of it.
Re: Is horrible manufacture quality still included (Score:2)
It's not actually glued, but overmolded. Common for soft plastics on top of hard plastics. And yes, it is complete shit. It gets dissolved by fats, and then just slowly peels off, leaving nasty fringes for ALL of its product life.
I'm more interested in the button technology used (Score:3)
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my experience is similar. about 10 years ago I asked a friend to help me get better at League of Legends, and one of the first things he said was ditch your mouse, you can't aim accurately because of it. I was fairly sure I couldn't aim accurately because I suck at reflex based games in general :) but I did what he said and got a Razer mouse for a little under a hundred bucks. eventually I got better at the game, certainly owing to good coaching from said friend, and I suspect changing the mouse didn't actu
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I'm a heavy computer user and I get my wireless mice from Staples for $14, I usually wear the pads off the bottom in about a year. At that point, the scroll wheel is starting to get gummed up and they're hard to take apart to clean. So I just throw it away and get a new one.
I see no reason to pay a fortune for something that works fine as-is, and is basically a disposable accessory.
It's like the argument for super-high-res displays. I'm sure there's a very small percentage of the population that can actua
What do you call a "super-high-res display"? (Score:2)
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I'm a heavy computer user and I get my wireless mice from Staples for $14, I usually wear the pads off the bottom in about a year.
I assume you're not using a mouse pad?
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Nope my workspace is bit too limited for a mouse pad, I need the space and often have to work the mouse in s crowded spot.
To the person with the new display - getting a new display certainly can improve things, depending on how bad you had it before. I've got a pair of displays from 2016 that I doubt I will ever need to replace until they finally die of old age. (27" thunderbolt displays, 2560x1440) Oldies but goodies. That's the other possibility of buying good - when you can get something that's goin
Step up from crap (Score:2)
Had I bought a cheapie Office Depot $14 mouse ten years ago as a one-year consumable, I'd be in for $98 and would have suffered lack of features and battery recharging hassle, etc.
I make my living pushing that mouse. It makes sense to pay a premium price for a tool that is in my hand all day long. Go to a construction site
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I've heard this complaint about Razer mice before and of course I have no reason to doubt them, although it's difficult to tell if it makes up a representative sample.
However I'm currently happily using the Diamondback. No, not rebooted one from 2014. The original one, from 2004. There's a slight difference in sound of left and right clicks, but in terms of physical feedback, they both feel like new. The weel is nice and notchy, but in a smooth way if that makes sense. I'm sure any new mouse is technically
Programmable. (Score:3)
It has the cool freewheeling option, but that means that the middle click is done with another tiny button that you have to curve your finger to press,
Small tip: button assignment are actually programmable.
(And if I remember correctly it's stored in hardware: once you have programmed it in one computer, the mouse should be able to remember the mapping when plugged into another).
On Linux you can use logiops [github.com], on Windows you should have recieved something official with your mouse (a download, on some CD or whatever haven't been using that crap OS for decades).
Thus you can assign the wheel click to middle click and that ackward button that's hard to reach can
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After looking into it a bit more for some reason, it seem that there is a real benefit, even if it's tiny. Basically even if the game samples only once per frame, since the mouse position is updated more frequently, the position is more likely to be slightly accurate. Basically it's a bit more consistent:
https://youtu.be/gOQNRvJbpmk?t... [youtu.be]
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Funny thing is Amazon has their basic gaming mouse. Usually I buy Logitech which last about four years but went with a G. Wolves Skoll this time since finding a large hand mouse is harder. Most mice are made for medium/small hands with a palm grip.
https://gaminggem.com/best-pal... [gaminggem.com]
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Re: I'm more interested in the button technology u (Score:2)
Logi uses cheapass Omron microswitches that don't hold up, even in their expensive pointing devices.
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Same experience here.
Have had 2 Razer mice, both died on the left button. Though I guess I am heavy handed as that's how my mice usually die! However with the Razer's it was within 2 months.
I've moved onto Corsair. Seems better so far. At least on the button. I liked that on the Razer the software did not need to be loaded in order to impliment my custom dpi's and buttons. (I like a clean install now and then and it was not a priority, now I will have to be!).
Do note though, I will (rarely) pay over £
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What's wrong with coding with the keyboard?
Keyboard for coding? What century are you in? (Score:2)
I use a thought-to-text headset like all the cool kids.
Keyboard? Phut.
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My main ball mouse is about 20 years old. I occasionally have to fix broken wires and replace worn out switches in mice. Admittedly, they seemed to be made better, the older they are. And I don't repair (nor buy) mice that don't have screws on their bottoms.
Pointless. (Score:2)
Until they sell faster humans.
Hell, this would be too fast for any industrial robots!
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How often do you have to clean the ball?
At least once a day, or they get kinda smelly.
Never again Razer (Score:5, Informative)
I bought a Razor keyboard once with the RGB LED backlit keys. It doesn't work unless the Razor applet is logged into an online user account. Will never touch another product of there's ever again.
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For what it's worth, they must've learned their lesson. I bought one for my daughter this year for Christmas and it has no such limitation.
Unless you mean the RGB lighting doesn't work, hers does but she cannot customize it without the synapse app.
The funniest thing I found about her keyboard is that it uses 2x USB plugs.
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So does my Corsair. One for the keyboard, one for the built-in USB port.
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I bought two Razer mice ("DEATHADDER Elites") last year. They both developed sticky buttons within a few months, which is a common problem according to the forums. After getting both of them replaced, one developed the same problem again. At that point, Razer refused to do anything, instead offering to sell me the switch so I could replace it on my own.
I will not buy another Razer product after that. Which is too bad, since when it was working, the mouse was pretty nice.
Re: Never again Razer (Score:2)
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That sounds pretty awesome actually. Hadn't heard of Redragon before, will have to check them out.
I have a Razor MMO mouse, which I think I said. But I actually use a pretty basic Rosewill mechanical keyboard, the cherry mx red one. Pretty lame on features, but does exactly what I need it to... work. =) I guess if you could call it a feature, the cable is module, just a standard USB cable, which I suppose is nice, not sure I'll ever have to replace it since I never really move the keyboard, but it's a t
Not bad (Score:2)
A better purchase (Score:5, Funny)
A Pet Rock purchase would be a better purchase.
You could throw it forcefully at anyone that tries to sell you an '8000hz gaming mouse.'
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Can you honestly tell the difference? (Score:2)
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No, but you get to boast that you can afford to spend $80 for a mouse!
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Does it move the gun around better in an FPS? Is there any actual perceptible difference?
In my experience, yes it does. The cheaper mice are not as precise, which makes a difference in trigger/reaction games. (Note: I haven't bought a mouse in 5 years so the market may have changed.)
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More controls comes in handy when programmed in some kinds of games. There's even a mouse that comes with a thumb-joystick control.
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Emperors new clothes. (Score:2)
It never cease to amuse me when I hear of these super fast "mice" for your computers.
"A whopping 8000 polls per second" is a transfer rate of 8KHz (or add 8 times to that, for 8 bit data values 0-255) which is roughly 64KHz speed to transfer that amount of polling inkl. 8-bit data to the computer, oh whoop dee doo - what amazing tech (sarcasm might have been applied here).
We have WiFi cards that transfer gigabits today, 64KHz is a drop in the ocean, and absolutely zero to brag about, just pure marketing blu
Does this matter? (Score:1)
Seismometer (Score:2)
Hmm .. it can probably be used as a seismometer. It'll probably do that even if it's not stuck on a pole in the ground.
Online registration (Score:2)
Does Razer still require online registration to use their hardware product? If yes, they still don't exist for me.
Never trust an article that doesn't know ... (Score:2)
Never trust an article that doesn't know what a mouse does.
The polling rate measures how often per second the mouse tells your computer where it’s located on-screen.
The mouse doesn't know anything about the pointer on the screen, or if there's a pointer on the screen at all. It could be controlling the paddle in a game of Breakout or doing something else. All the mouse is doing is transferring data about motion and the clicking of buttons to the computer so that it may interpret them.
I would have *won* that match... (Score:2)
...except my shitty mouse was only 19000 dpi.
Fucking trash.