Tuesday, September 21, 2010
What is the difference between 'laser' and 'optical' wireless mice?
What is the difference between 'laser' and 'optical' wireless mice?
An optical mouse uses an LED (Light Emitting Diode) to generate the restrained used to monitor mouse movement. This is, in effect, a moment or two red light bulb.
A laser mouse uses a laser diode. Lasers let off a narrow roof joist of light, a bit than just spreading it everywhere. The effect of this is that the mouse is much smaller amount to become "confused" by where the lighting it detects is coming from, because only a single spot on your mousepad is illuminate by the laser, rather than the adjectives area lower than the mouse, as is the case next to a regular LED.
The result is that movement using a laser mouse is much "smoother" than with a regular optical mouse. In authenticity though, the difference isn't noticeable to most population in day-to-day use. If two mice are otherwise one and the same, but one is "optical" and the other is "laser", I would recommend going with the cheaper one.
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Well the last guy get the technical sector right, so I can skip that. But as for practical use, I have used both, and I must speak the laser is better. The optical one had the partiality to be a little vague at times, but the laser is very precise. Also, both of mine be wireless, and the laser uses much less power than the optical. My weak optical had to use rechargeable battery and came near a charging cradle. A charge would usually last almost 3 days at the most. The laser uses plain AA batteries, which scheme no charging cradle to clutter my desk, and they last close to 2 months.
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