🖱️ Elevate your workflow—comfort and control in every click!
The PenPoint Ergonomic Mouse features a patented pen-grip design that promotes natural hand alignment to reduce muscle strain and repetitive injury risks. It connects wirelessly via Bluetooth 4.0 to multiple devices, charges rapidly in 30 seconds for an hour of use, and offers up to two weeks of battery life. Weighing just 24 grams, it’s ultra-portable and ideal for professionals seeking ergonomic comfort without compromise.
T**G
Best laptop mouse
This the only mouse you should be using for any work laptop, right lower corner is more than enough space specially when travelling.
C**E
possible battery issue but good
4 stars cuz I don't think it's holding charge like it says it should be. I might contact customer service. Otherwise, I think it's good! Not much space on my desk and I have wrist issues and hypermobile fingers so i'm hoping it'll help over time. I used a vertical mouse before but it broke so i invested in this pricier thing.
S**S
A Must Try - Especially if You Have Wrist Pain
I absolutely love this mouse. I tried every type of ergonomic mouse on the market and none of them seemed to help my wrist pain until I stumbled across this brand and this mouse!! Instant relief and now I am pain free after using my mouse over 6 hours a day. Strongly recommend this product!!!
F**E
Ultimately disappointing
My wife has incipient carpal tunnel, and I had hoped this might alleviate some of her symptoms. To some extent it did (she had previously been using a "vertical" style mouse for years), but here the hassles eventually outweighed the benefits. I in turn used it for a few weeks with the same impressions.Installation (Bluetooth connectivity in Win10) went fairly well; however, the documentation says to press the "front button", when in fact it's the "right click" (there is no "front button"). A minor nuisance. It took Win two tries to connect (BT 5).At that point... well, we've both been using some version of a standard mouse since they were created, Win 3.1. After that long you just get used to holding a mouse, intuitively knowing where the various buttons are -- back in the day, the scroll wheel and center button were usability godsends -- especially the right/left buttons, putting my middle finger to use (I do a lot of Context Menu selections). Moving, too, is a matter of letting my little finger and thumb drag on the mouse pad, to slow things down and give me some smoothness. I hope you know what I mean.But I simply could not get the hang of this tiny gizmo. Shifting my index finger forward, backward, sideways for all three functions -- left / right / scroll -- was especially tedious. (I have big hands.) And I could never master the precision I could get with any given standard mouse, despite modifying the mouse's sensitivity. Maybe I'm just too old to learn to play a new instrument. Especially when the advantages are merely claimed. (NB : I did not use any of their software.)The final straw was this device's tendency to lose the BT connection. Win 10, both BT 4 and 5 masters. Roughly every three days or so, my wife would yell for me to come fix the SwiftPoint. (I think she could do it herself, just wanted me to know how the test was going.) She didn't mind learning the new operations as much as I -- she plays piano, so it's probably easier. But its instability got to her, and she abandoned it. Same thing happened to me.Anyway, for $89, a thing that is otherwise sold prolifically and inexpensively really has to jump out and say, "You need this style and will love it!". Arguable here on both counts, sadly.
N**L
Surprisingly great
I recently was diagnosed with mild/moderate carpal tunnel, and that has involved me changing a lot of my computing habits. This mouse seemed absolutely ridiculous, but I though it would be worth trying. I am incredibly impressed! It really is as natural as they say! You just rest your fingers on the mouse. It's about halfway between using a mouse and holding a pen.This mouse is incredibly light, which puts less stress on your hands. Going between this and my old mouse is night and day; my old mouse was about average weight, maybe a little heavier, but now it feels like an absolute brick compared to this!The biggest drawback is the lack of features. I'm not expecting a built-in numberpad on a mouse the size of a golf ball, but I though a middle mouse button would be standard by now. There's also no way to adjust the DPI within the mouse itself, so you'll have to tweak it on all your machines. It's definitely zippier than I'd like, but the fact that it's small means most of your movement is microadjustments anyway so it's something you get used to pretty quickly.The multi-pairing works, but I wish there were an easy way to change the pair order. Also annoying is that the charging dongle isn't also a wireless receiver: you need to buy that separately. I get that pretty much everyone uses Bluetooth these days but still. Speaking of Bluetooth, the sleep/wake-up time is a little annoying, but usually only a few seconds to wake up at the most after a few minutes of inactivity. I noticed the lag maybe one out of every ten times.The travel case is amazing. Solid hardshell, plenty of foam padding.All in all, I recommend it, but I really hope they release an improved version.
K**Y
GREAT mouse for travel and non-travel!
A beautifully engineered compact mouse. Relieves my tennis elbow because it doesn't require the extreme forearm pronation of the trackpads on my laptop. Crazily compact. Very convenient charging adaptor.Only drawback - it took a little bit to acclimatize myself to the right button being behind the left mouse button. But that was a temporary set-back.
M**N
Does not put your hand in the most neutral position
It actually caused my carpal tunnel issue to flare up when I tried the mouse with in a few minutes of use. Your wrist is not in a truly neutral position and if you are very sensitive to that - this mouse may aggravate. The software was great and it has built in breaks to remind you not to overwork.It doesn't require a lot of space and that would have worked out great for my WFH setup. It would take some practice to get used to the different tilt feature for moving the mouse and I found the scroll button problematic for me to use easily (it may be because I have long fingers.Anyway - it would probably work better for someone who doesn't have as high a sensitivity for carpal tunnel as I do. It seemed well-built, the software seemed to work well, but the design is not a true neutral hand position.
TrustPilot
2 个月前
5天前