Posts Tagged logitech

Logitech G9 vs. Microsoft Sidewinder (vs. the G5 a little) Mouse Review

note: I started this review before the holidays, shortly after I bought these two mice. I put it on hold due to the sad fact that the Logitech G9 laser died on me. So, you lucky readers get a bonus anecdotal review of the Logitech support and RMA process near the end of the article.

I’ve been meaning to do formal reviews on drzy for awhile. But I get too lazybusy and usually just do a three-sentence blurb in a semi-related post. But after my Logitech G5’s middle button finally annoyed me enough to seek a replacement, I decided to upgrade. That, and the fact that there are some amazing deals on mice right now. Well, amazing deals compared to their suggested retail price, anyhow.

About 4 or so months ago, I started having problems with the middle mouse wheel/button on my Logitech G5. It became increasingly difficult to click the button without having the wheel register a move. This was compounded by the fact that the wheel also seemed to be “misaligned”. As in, the wheel doesn’t register a move just on the little wheel “clicks”, but also between them sometimes, which makes for a frustrating experience not just in gaming, but even in normal browsing. I put up with this for a few months, sometimes searching the web for quick fixes or at least people to commiserate with who have the same problems. I found the latter, but none of the former. I paid good money for this mouse when it came out, yet it was out of warranty, so I had no options to get the new “improved” G5 mouse except to buy it, again. I really hate buying the same thing twice. I am convinced the design problems with the G5’s mouse wheel have to do with over-engineering. They made it not just click down, but also click to either side as well. From the moment of buying one of these, you can feel the little wiggle in the wheel due to these “enhanced” buttons. As much as I tried to make them useful, these extra buttons are completely dead weight to me, as most games don’t even recognize them.

I won’t knock the performance of the mouse, although I wished they had made a better design than the old MX5xx series, the mouse was very accurate, and I had no laser-mouse-lag problems. (Keep in mind I game at low sensitivity normally, and am definitely in the “wrist-flicking” camp).

I heard about the Logitech G9 when they first announced it a year or so ago. It sounded boring, and the shape was… er, interesting. I had no intention of upgrading. I liked some of the other Logitech mice coming out, but I definitely didn’t want a cordless. I don’t care how many Mythbuster-esque tests people have run to refute it, I can definitely feel a response difference between wired and un-wired mice. Enough to make me uncomfortable with wireless mice, and therefore, never use them for gaming.

Logitech G9 Mouse

I had not heard of the new Microsoft Sidewinder or the new Razer line until I stumbled on both of them at an infrequent visit to Best Buy. I rarely retail shop nowadays for obvious price/availability reasons. But I will go if there’s a rare occurrence of a good sale, or if I’m buying something that never drops much in price, such as console-related merchandise. So, while I’m there I may as well browse. I went through the computer section and the first thing I saw was an endcap dedicated to Razer. They had three mice out on display: a Lachesis, a DeathAdder, (neither of which I had ever heard of) and a Copperhead. When the Copperhead came out was around the time I had bought the G5. I liked the Copperhead, but I didn’t like the gel feeling middle mouse and I had heard lots of bad things about Razer drivers (although Logitech has issues with theirs, as well). So I tried my hand on all of them, and while comfortable I wasn’t impressed. I have smallish hands and the Lachesis felt way too big. The other two were just too smooth. I like hard edges to hold on to. Still they were stylish and had impressive technical specs. Keep in mind, I wasn’t really looking to replace my G5 just yet.

So I wandered further and saw the Microsoft Sidewinder. People who have been computing awhile should recognize the Sidewinder name, as Microsoft used it for their high-end mice many years ago. I owned the first Sidewinder Optical. So, I guess they decided to relaunch the name with a high-end corded gaming mouse. The first thing that grabs you is the look of it. It has very unconventional shape and buttons. They didn’t have one out of the package, but you can reasonably see/grip the thing over the clear plastic container. I sat there pawing it a bit, and deciding if I liked it or not. The strange looks appealed to me as a sort of steampunk mouse. It had two round steel over-and-under thumb buttons, a sleek design broken up by sharp overhangs, and it looked like a mutated jellyfish.

Microsoft Sidewinder Laser Mouse

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Purty blue lights : the Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard

Most people who come here know I am an avid gamer, especially first-person shooters, and have been for the majority of my life. And I am not alone, gaming has been a phenomenon for at least 2 decades on personal computers.

Why, then, has it taken until the last couple years that keyboards geared for gamers have come from the depths of the abyss? I mean, to me, it’s a no-brainer and a hole in the market. Except for a few horrible cheap tries, the ZBoard was the first decent attempt I saw. And then the Saitek gaming keyboard. Both have enticed me, but not quite enought to buy.

Leave it to Logitech. As soon as it was announced, I knew I would be purchasing the G15 Gaming Keyboard. After a few months of wait, I thought it would be released in October… but the Logitech site, even at the time of this post, still says it’s “coming soon”. Luckily I heard a tip that some had been spotted in Best Buys, and I found the keyboard at one of my local stores. It appears they may have some kind of limited-time exclusivity on the keyboard like the have had on other Logitech products like the MX510 mouse an dthe new G5 mouse.

So, I get the box home and plug the keyboard in. The drivers installed flawlessly, and don’t have much of a memory footprint. The LCD screen on the top displays time, CPU and RAM status, volume controls, and even songs I play with Winamp. The blue glow is great and comes through each key very nicely. The little switch to turn off the windows keys is a perfect touch, and the 18 macro buttons are just waiting to be programmed.

The keyboard has nice keys that are not mushy or overly rattley (is rattley a word?). They keys are smaller (in width) than the keys on my Logitech Internet Navigator keyboard, but they also travel further and are more responsive. The volume wheel I love, as I had one in a previous keyboard and wheels are much better than buttons to control volume.

Like all Logitech keyboards I have used, the wristrest is flimsy, but it does its job so far. The keyboard itself is extremely solid and pretty heavy. The keys and black plastic have a flat satin finish on them that gives the appearance of hard rubber.

So far the keyboard has proved pretty useful in games. The lighting is the main thing. I honestly haven’t used the macro keys much, but I tested the on-the-fly macro making and it works very well. Or you can use the macro maker in the profile program, which allows more fine tuning and editing.

A little pricey at $80, but it’s the best gaming keyboard out there.

On to the pics!

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