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Microsoft Wireless Notebook Laser Mouse 7000 review

Our rating

3.5 stars out of 5

User rating

1 star out of 5

See all user reviews

What do you think?

Verdict

If it were bigger, the Microsoft Wireless Notebook Laser Mouse 7000 could be a regular desktop mouse, which makes it easy to use, but not the best for easy travelling

Good

  • USB receiver snaps into base
  • Ambidextrous design
  • Two thumb buttons
  • Four-way scroll wheel

Bad

  • Fairly big for a laptop mouse
  • USB receiver doesn't sit flush when stored in base

In this review

Not content with simply controlling the software side of your PC experience, Microsoft also wants to be your peripheral provider of choice, offering a variety of mice and keyboards. One of three new laptop mouse models, the £26 Microsoft Wireless Notebook Laser Mouse 7000 is slightly larger than your usual laptop mouse, but it also offers desktop mouse features such as a four-way scroll wheel and two thumb buttons.

Design
A hair over 100mm long and 58mm wide, this is not a mouse that's going to slide into your shirt pocket easily, like the thin Kensington Ci75m. It will have trouble fitting into many of the smaller pockets in your laptop case too, but the fuller feel makes it easy to use for extended periods of time.

Features
A typical USB transceiver provides the connection and power is supplied by one AA battery, which is included in the package. There's no on/off switch on the bottom of the mouse, but snapping the transceiver into its slot on the mouse's base automatically turns it off. Unfortunately, the transceiver doesn't sit flush with the bottom of the mouse when snapped in there, which makes it even harder to store.

Unlike many of the other laptop mice we've seen, this model includes welcome side buttons for your thumb on the left and right sides, which most Web browsers recognise as the universal command for going back a page. You also get a feature almost never found on portable mice -- a four-way scroll wheel, for zipping side-to-side in wide documents or Web pages.

Conclusion
With the extras, plus the slightly larger footprint, the Microsoft Wireless Notebook Laser Mouse 7000, available for around £26, makes for an interesting hybrid of desktop and laptop mouse features, as long as you don't mind toting it around.

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User reviews1

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Ben Williams's avatar
1 star out of 5

Ben Williams 22 September 2010

Good: fits my hand very well

Bad: conection very bad very lagy

Comment: very rubish mouse dont buy

I own it

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