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Coolest cursor
Coolest cursor





coolest cursor
  1. #COOLEST CURSOR FULL#
  2. #COOLEST CURSOR PRO#

#COOLEST CURSOR PRO#

The Razer Naga Pro is slightly on the small side for larger hands, with a more squat shape than some gaming mice. This year's Naga offers an improved battery life and works with the Razer Mouse Dock (not included, sadly). The MOBA array is the best it has six buttons laid out in two rows so that there are enough buttons to map multiple abilities, but not so many that they become an overwhelming samey blob. And this revision of the Razer Naga Pro is the best yet: a tiny, comfortable mouse with a high-quality sensor and three interchangeable thumb grips, with button arrays ideal for MOBAs, MMOs, or general use. The form and function of Razer's Naga mouse have both come a long way over the years, but it has long been the best MMO mouse for our money.

#COOLEST CURSOR FULL#

Read our full Razer DeathAdder V2 review. It also has an excellent optical mouse sensor that will work on both hard and cloth pads, and it has the ultimate body shape for a claw or hybrid claw/palm grip.Īnd if you want to ditch the tail, the DeathAdder V2 Pro takes the same shape, the same sensor, and makes it a fantastic wireless gaming mouse. Its design is simple, with two perfectly placed, generously sized thumb buttons. Razer's newest tech delivers flawless tracking, even if you move the mouse as fast as humanly possible.įor the majority of games and gamers, the DeathAdder V2 is a fantastic mouse. The DeathAdder V2 uses a 20,000 DPI Razer Focus+ optical sensor, and while big numbers don't necessarily equate to quality, here they do. Despite years of iterations, Razer never messes with the DeathAdder's shape. The insights that emerge from these more experimental projects can then be applied to our commercial work.The Razer DeathAdder has an overall fantastic shape for all sorts of grips and hand sizes, and I've spent hundreds of hours playing games, using Photoshop, and browsing the Internet with it. “We believe that to be able to innovate for our clients, we need to continuously be developing our own tools and releasing our own projects on the side. “Our work tends to focus on the social effects of technology,” Puckey adds. “We can’t really put it into words, but somehow this role reversion causes quite a primary reaction in people.” We ask you to stand still, and then we point at you,” Puckey says. It forces the visitor to stop moving their mouse and pay attention.”Īnd why are so many people used to instant gratification when clicking compelled to sit and wait for something to happen? “Normally, your cursor causes things to happen, but with Pointer Pointer you don’t really cause anything. “So we decided to build in a short delay, to force people to wait for the image. Yet the experience was totally unsatisfying. Whenever you dragged the mouse, you would directly see a photo of someone pointing there. “The first version of Pointer Pointer ran at lightning speed. In fact, you have to wait a few seconds, which feels like eons, after you move your cursor to see a photo, and the lag is intentional. “This website had to be able to run at a high frame rate, so we developed a special Voronoi-based grid system that is able to locate the ‘nearest’ flash photo in lightning speed,” Puckey explains.īut you’ll notice Pointer Pointer doesn’t move so fast. Moniker had originally developed the technology behind Pointer Pointer for, a website that allows users to make animations with photos of camera flashes. Puckey and his associates were thrilled, of course. Additionally, Google Analytics revealed that over 300,000 people had already seen it, and Pointer Pointer had amassed 4,000 Facebook Likes. We had finished it last weekend, but we were going to launch it on Wednesday,” Puckey says, noting that the trio was out of the office all day on Monday, and when they checked their Twitter feed at the end of the day, they found it was full of people talking about the project. A hidden Facebook Like button is revealed after you have seen at least five photos of people pointing.Ĭreated by Moniker, an Amsterdam-based experimental interactive design studio founded by Luna Maurer, Jonathan Puckey, and Roel Wouters, Pointer Pointer has quickly become an Internet sensation with nary any promotion on the part of its creators. There is also a guy on a boat holding a beer and pointing, a Baltimore Oriole walking onto the field pointing and a toddler sitting in his car seat pointing. A lot of the images are of young people pointing while partying. Slide your curser to another location on the screen, and, well, you get it.

coolest cursor

Move your cursor, and up pops another photo of a person pointing at your pointer.

coolest cursor

Once your cursor is still, a photo of a person pointing at your pointer appears. The site simply requires you to move your cursor–aka pointer-to a point on your computer screen.







Coolest cursor