Microsoft has always kept their keyboard, mouse, and webcam hardware line fresh and interesting, giving consumers more and more choices. The Explorer Touch is a great mouse for portable electronics, such as your laptop. It has a great feel to it, much better than the Arc Touch Mouse, and has precision handling for graphics designers. This mouse is about half the height of most, measuring slightly less than 1.5 inches at its tallest point and 0.5 inch at its shortest. The Explorer does fit the curve of my hand, though I am a woman with, uh, womanly hands.

Features:
1. Works exclusively with Windows 7
2.BlueTrack sensor
3.Touch capabilities… obviously
4.Nano-tranceiver slot on the mouse itself
5.Works really well on just about every surface
6.Super comfortable in the hand
7.Sleek, attractive design
8.No XP, Vista, or OS X support
9.Sloppy scrolling
Using the touch strip is not much more complicated than using a scroll wheel. You can scroll horizontally or vertically just by moving your finger across it, and when you do so haptic feedback gives you the sensation. The Explorer Touch connects to your computer via a nano USB receiver that transmits your movements on an industry-standard 2.4GHz frequency. The mouse's polling rate (the number of times per second the mouse "reports" information to your computer), as measured with our Mouse Rate test, registered between 125Hz and 130Hz.
The Explorer Touch Mouse isn’t for everyone, and Lion users should be wary of this mouse and inverse scrolling. If you’re already hooked on your Magic Mouse or Magic Trackpad’s multitouch gestures, then moving to the Explorer Touch will undoubtedly be an unpleasant experience.
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