Apple’s Magic Mouse now shipping: seeks mighty revenge

Apple’s Mighty Mouse was one of the most loved and loathed rodents of all time. When it worked, it was a magnificent productivity booster for Mac users. Unfortunately, over time, even after hours and hours of vigorous rubbing, the top-mounted trackball would become so ensnared in hand-jam that owners were left with two options: delicately splay the mouse for a bit of X-acto home surgery… or smash it with a vengeance hammer until justice is served. So maybe now you can understand all the hopeful fuss made over its successor: the Magic Mouse. It’s now shipping to those of you who ordered it separately from its iMac bundle. Snow Leopard users can even download the software update now so that all those multi-touch and gestural features will be enabled once the bluetooth mouse arrives. Then we’ll see if this is the mouse that rights all those wrongs.
Read — Wireless Mouse Software Update 1.0
Read — Magic Mouse now shipping
Apple’s Magic Mouse now shipping: seeks mighty revenge originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Oct 2009 05:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted: October 29th, 2009
at 6:34am by Thomas Ricker
Topics: Apple, MagicMouse, MightyMouse, bluetooth, gesture, magic mouse, mighty mouse, mouse, multiplayer
Apple Software Update Enables Support for Magic Mouse [Apple]
Apple just released an update for Leopard and Snow Leopard granting use of the Magic Mouse’s more advanced functionality (read: multitouch) instead of just pointing and clicking. Check out our review of the Magic Mouse here. [The Loop]
Posted: October 27th, 2009
at 10:00pm by Dan Nosowitz
Topics: Apple, Magic mouse firmware, firmware, magic mouse, software, update
Week In Review: Apple, Microsoft, Nook and More—It Was Nuts [Roundup]
What didn’t happen this week? We saw the Windows 7 release, new Apple hardware, Barnes & Noble’s ereader, the beginnings of major net neutrality legislation and more. It was so crazy, we thought we’d round up all the highlights.
Microsoft:
• Windows 7: A Weekend Install Guide and More
• You Guys Had Some Wild and Crazy Windows 7 Launch Parties
• Japan’s Windows 7 Whopper Is Real, and It’s Horrifying
• Behold! The Saddest Example of Promotional Convergence Ever!
• Microsoft’s First Retail Store Opens (Like Apple Store With More Colors)
• Windows Mobile 7 Screenshots Leak: Where’s the Start Button?
• 38 Surefire Ways (Not) to Make Windows 7 Cooler
• 7 Reasons to Stick with Windows XP
• 27 Takes on Windows 7
• Windows 7 Review: You Can Quit Complaining Now
Apple:
• Apple iMac Review: 27 Inches and Less Chin
• Unibody Apple MacBook Review
• Apple Magic Mouse Review
• Time Capsule and Airport Extreme Grow New Antennas to Get Faster and Stronger
• Mac Mini Updates: Faster Processors, More Memory, and a Dual Hard Disk Server
• 10 Things You Need to Know About Apple’s New Stuff
Barnes & Noble
• Exclusive: First Photos of Barnes & Noble’s Double Screen E-Reader
• Barnes & Noble’s Dual-Screen Nook: $260, Eats the Kindle’s Lunch
• Barnes & Noble Compares Nook to Kindle 2: Biased But Fair
• Live From Barnes & Noble’s Nook Event
• 8 Reasons You Can Finally Love Ebook Readers (Thanks to Nook)
• Barnes & Noble Nook Up Close: Yep, It’s Real Nice
The Rest:
• FCC: We’re Going to Make Net Neutrality the Law
• The Totally Predictable Cable Industry Response to the FCC’s Net Neutrality Plan
• John McCain’s “Internet Freedom Act” Seeks to Block FCC’s Net Neutrality Rules
• Motorola Droid Unexpectedly Appears on Motorola’s Site Ahead of Schedule
• 48 Stunning Photos of Fall
Posted: October 24th, 2009
at 8:00pm by Chris Jacob
Topics: Apple, EReader, Microsoft, Week in Review, Windows, barnes and noble, droid, fcc, iMac, magic mouse, nook, roundup, windows 7
Magic Mouse post-teardown loses some of its dark arts charm
Were you expecting unicorn tears or something? iFixit keeps working to finish its list of teardown to-dos, this time with Apple’s new Magic Mouse. It probably comes as no surprise, but just under the top surfaces lies a considerable number of capacitive sensors, and other than that, there really isn’t a lot to gaze upon. Then again, if you tend to fancy the ins and outs if gears and gizmos, this should be right up your alley.
Filed under: Peripherals
Magic Mouse post-teardown loses some of its dark arts charm originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Oct 2009 00:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted: October 22nd, 2009
at 1:43am by Ross Miller
Topics: Apple, MagicMouse, magic mouse, mouse, tear down, teardown
Magic Mouse Torn Apart, Nothing Magical Found Inside [Teardowns]
What a bait-and-switch, Apple. You charge a boatload for this fancy new mouse and call it “Magic,” yet iFixit’s teardown reveals nothing even close to magical—just boatloads of capacitive sensors.
Major findings (and we use the word major so loosely we might as well not have bothered): The Magic Mouse uses the Broadcom BCM2042 Bluetooth chip, it’s covered in capacitive sensors from the Apple logo on up, and it’s hard to break into. Science fails to beat magic once again. [iFixit]
Posted: October 21st, 2009
at 11:10pm by Dan Nosowitz
Topics: Apple, Magic mouse teardown, magic mouse, mouse, teardowns

