Magic Mouse
The Magic Mouse
is a multi-touch mouse manufactured and sold by Apple, and it was announced and sold for the first time
on October 20, 2009. The Magic Mouse is the first consumer mouse to have multi-touch capabilities. Taking after the iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and multi-touch trackpads, the Magic Mouse allows the use of gestures such as swiping and scrolling across the top
surface of the mouse to interact with desktop computers. It connects via Bluetooth and runs on two AA batteries.
The mouse requires
at least Mac OS X 10.5.8. It can be
configured as a two-buttoned left-handed or right-handed mouse, but the default
is a single button. It uses laser tracking for increased
pointer accuracy over previous generation Apple mice. Since its release, it has
been included along with a wireless keyboard with the 2009 generation of iMacs, and with a wired keyboard with the 2010 Mac Pro
workstations. It can also be purchased separately.
Initial reception to
the Magic Mouse was mixed, with positive reactions to its scrolling functions
but negative reactions to its inability to middle click (without any
additional software), or trigger Exposé, Dashboard or Spaces (features offered by its predecessor). Many of those features can be enabled on the
Magic Mouse with the use of third party tools.
In 2009, a couple of
Mac news sites reported that the Magic Mouse had issues with maintaining a
stable connection to Mac Pro workstations.[7]
Gestures
Not all gestures are
supported on all operating systems:
▪
Click
▪
Two-button click
▪
360°-scroll
▪
Screen zoom
▪
Screen pan
▪
Two-finger swipe
▪
One finger swipe
▪
Two-finger double
tap
▪
One-finger double
tap
By using third party
software, gestures can be customized and added.
Inertia scrolling is
said to be available in Snow Leopard only after installing a software update,
but it could also be enabled in Leopard with a terminal command.
Operating system
support
▪
Mac OS X v10.5.8,
v10.6.1 or later with Wireless Mouse Software Update 1.0. This update is
essential for the Magic Mouse to work.
▪
Windows 7, Windows
XP, Windows Vista using Boot Camp tools under Mac OS
X. To work with Windows 7, Mac OS X Snow Leopard is required as the latest
drivers are available only with a version of Boot Camp that is installable on
Mac OS X Snow Leopard.
▪
Extracted from Boot
Camp native Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7 drivers, 32-bit and 64-bit (not
supported by Apple).


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