Microsoft Sculpt Comfort Mouse.
Windows 7/RT/8 or Mac OS X v.10.6. Microsoft. $39.95.
Microsoft Sculpt Mobile Mouse.
Windows 7/RT/8 or Mac OS X v.10.6. Microsoft. $29.95.
Surface-level similarities
are often just that: on the surface. When searching for the best mouse for your
particular needs, it helps to delve below names, marketing strategies and even
apparent shapes of mice to determine what you really need and what can best
give it to you. When dealing with a company that produces as many high-quality
mice as Microsoft does through its hardware division, it can be particularly
important to consider each mouse’s features very carefully in order to
determine which will be the best possible fit.
On the surface, the Microsoft Sculpt Comfort Mouse and Microsoft Sculpt Mobile Mouse appear
very similar, with the same sculpted look (as indicated in their near-identical
names) and even the same packaging. Differences seem superficial – slightly
different sizes and prices, for instance, and the fact that Sculpt Comfort has a “Windows touch tab”
while Sculpt Mobile has a “Windows
button.” But the disparities between these input devices are far more
significant than they appear at first – different enough so that choosing the
right one for your individual needs will have a big impact on your satisfaction
level.
Sculpt Comfort is a Bluetooth mouse, which is great if you are
using it with a computer or tablet that has Bluetooth capability but (of
course) makes it completely useless in other cases. The absence of a
transceiver – one of those small things that it can be all too easy to lose –
is a positive aspect here, providing you can use the Bluetooth connectivity.
This is a right-handed mouse that is optimized for Windows 8 (or 8.1): that
touch tab, a blue section on the left side of the mouse, where a right-hander’s
thumb can reach it conveniently, takes you from an app to the Start screen when
pressed. It lets you cycle through all open apps (when you swipe the touch tab
up) or reveal all open apps so you can pick whichever one you want (when you
swipe the touch tab down). This is therefore a mouse optimized for touchscreen
computers and for tablets – indeed, it works with many Android tablets and
offers full functionality only to hardware with touchscreen capability. This
does not mean the mouse fails to work in Windows 7: in that operating system,
pressing the touch tab takes you to the Start menu, while swiping up or down
moves you forward or back in a Web browser. But these moves are less intuitive
and less convenient than the ones that this mouse provides for Windows 8. Furthermore,
although Sculpt Comfort does work on
Macs, its use there seems like an afterthought: it is fine but certainly
nothing feature-rich or special. The four-way scroll wheel does work well
anywhere, allowing left, right, front and back motion. And the mouse’s design
is quite comfortable for right-handers – it is sculpted in such a way that its
ergonomics allow lengthy use without discomfort. So this mouse is definitely
worth considering if you are right-handed and using a touchscreen device,
especially one running Windows 8. Oh – and it helps if you like the color
black, which is the only one in which Sculpt
Comfort is available.
Sculpt Mobile is really a different design – and not just because
it comes in no fewer than four colors
(black, blue, red and pink). This mouse is symmetrical – it looks little
different from Sculpt Comfort, but
feels quite different even to right-handers, and is entirely suitable for
left-handers as well. Sculpt Mobile
uses a USB mini-transceiver, which may seem an odd decision for a
mobile-oriented mouse, since the tiny plug-in would seem to be easy to lose.
However, the transceiver stores neatly in the mouse and can also be left
plugged into a USB port, so concerns about losing it may be more apparent than
real. On the other hand, if you are
prone to losing small items (computer-related or otherwise), be aware of the
need for this transceiver before you opt for this mouse. The Windows button on Sculpt Mobile is centrally placed, which
makes sense for an ambidextrous product, and is less tightly integrated with
Windows 8 than is the touch tab on Sculpt
Comfort. Pressing the Sculpt Mobile
Windows button takes Win 8 users to the Start screen and pulls up the Start
menu for users of Win 7. This mouse is not significantly smaller than Sculpt Comfort, at least if you measure
its dimensions, but it feels
considerably smaller, in part because of the symmetrical design – which,
however, is less ergonomically supportive than the shape of Sculpt Comfort. The four-way scroll
wheel works the same way for Sculpt
Mobile users as for users of Sculpt
Comfort, allowing left, right, front and back motion.
Looking at these mice
side-by-side tends to emphasize their similarities, and it is clear that they
both belong in Microsoft’s Sculpt
series. But in everyday use, their differences are far more pronounced than you
might expect from simply viewing them. Both are very fine products, durable and
offering good battery life; both look good, with that sculpted Sculpt appearance, and both use
Microsoft’s “BlueTrack Technology,” thanks to which they are usable on almost
any surface except glass or mirrors. The price difference between them is
insignificant in the long run – and it does make sense to look at either of
these mice for long-term use, since they are so well-built that they can last
through multiple upgrade cycles (including an upgrade from a computer to a
tablet). Sculpt Mobile is a
more-conservative design because of its use of a mini-transceiver and its easy
adaptability to multiple operating systems. Sculpt
Comfort points more clearly in the direction that Microsoft has gone with
Windows 8 (and 8.1), toward a world in which touchscreen use is more common and
tablets are increasingly taking market share from desktop and laptop computers.
Depending on where you and your company stand in the upgrade cycle and in the
use to which you tend to put a mouse – for instance, whether you commonly
travel with one – you will find one or the other of these products a better fit
for your needs. In a sense, you cannot go wrong with either one: both work very
well and will do everything you want a mouse to do, and you can expect both to
be long-lasting and sturdy. But in another sense, choosing the mouse that is
more in accord with your input-device usage is important, because the niggling
little irritations of an ill-matched mouse with your everyday requirements can
build over time to a point of high frustration that can make you discard an
otherwise perfectly good piece of equipment – simply because you did not choose
the one best-suited for your needs in the first place.
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