Pro X offers millions of permutations, and to its credit, many of them feel radically different. You can change the position and height of the palm rest, or loosen or tighten the scroll wheel. The device comes with two sets of feet (ceramic for control, and teflon for speed), three kinds of scroll wheels (two metal, one rubber), three palm rests (one plastic, one matte and one aerated), two thumb rests of varying width, and three finger rests (one neutral, one with a clasp for the pinky finger and one with a rest for the ring finger and pinky).īy default, the mouse comes with one sensor (our model came with a Philips PLN2037 laser sensor), but you can buy two additional sensors (Pixart ADNS 9800 laser or Pixart PMW3310 optical) and swap them out at will. Pro X's overall design is impossible without talking about what makes it so unusual: its abundance of interchangeable parts. The layout feels sensible, but more options for button placement or number would have been nice. The mouse has only seven buttons, all told: a left button, a right button, a clickable scroll wheel, a dots-per-inch (DPI) sensitivity adjuster, two thumb buttons and a "sniper" button that lowers DPI, just below said thumb buttons.
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