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General Computer Thread

Celluloid sounds good for playback (If at my computer, I just tend to listen to albums)

For syncing to the phone (or use in car), it's all playlist - and those tend to be not so short:)

Done a search and it also brings up Rhythmbox as a possibility. I'll have to experiment.

Been a while since I've used Foobar, then as a replacement for iTunes and while it liked my ipod, it took a dislike to my phone for some reason, hence the switch to mediamonkey.

(Also tried musicbee, but it was kind of slow for the library size - at least when I tried it)
 

I don't need this, can't justify buying it but i want it for work that is mysterious and important.
How can I write hymns to chosen one Kier without it?

That integrated trackball gives me serious ICON flashbacks. These were all-in-one units with trackballs built-into the keyboards used in Canadian schools in the 80's and 90's, and we'd endlessly spin the trackball.
 
That integrated trackball gives me serious ICON flashbacks. These were all-in-one units with trackballs built-into the keyboards used in Canadian schools in the 80's and 90's, and we'd endlessly spin the trackball.

I had a keyboard in the late 90s with a trackball built on the end of it which I used as my mouse, this was at a time when I wasn't quite sure how much of my right side I would get back as I had a CVA in that same period and when it happened was paralyzed on the right side which is also my dominant side and right is the side I write with. Anyway that was super fun and I miss that keyboard. It had real switches too not dome pads.
 
I really do think TrackBalls are one of the best pointing devices for ergonomics & reducing RSI in your wrists.

I own almost a dozen different models:


ELECOM (M-HT1URBK) HUGE
ELECOM (M-XT2URBK-G) EX-G
ELECOM (M-XT4DRBK-G) EX-G

ELECOM (M-MT1DRSBK) bitra
ELECOM (M-MT2DRSBK) bitra
ELECOM (M-RT1BRXBK) Relacon

ELECOM (M-XPT1MRXBK) EX-G Pro
ELECOM (M-DT2DRBK-G) DEFT
ELECOM (M-DPT1MRXBK) Deft Pro

Logitech Trackman Marble Wired

SANWA Wired Ergonomic Trackball Mouse


The variety of good ergonomics you can execute with a TrackBall is amazing.
You'll never get too bored or induce too much repetitive motions if you swap around between different TrackBall designs.
 
I had a keyboard in the late 90s with a trackball built on the end of it which I used as my mouse, this was at a time when I wasn't quite sure how much of my right side I would get back as I had a CVA in that same period and when it happened was paralyzed on the right side which is also my dominant side and right is the side I write with. Anyway that was super fun and I miss that keyboard. It had real switches too not dome pads.

That's interesting because outside the computers we had at school, which were designed for school use, I have never seen other keyboards with built-in trackballs.
 
That integrated trackball gives me serious ICON flashbacks. These were all-in-one units with trackballs built-into the keyboards used in Canadian schools in the 80's and 90's, and we'd endlessly spin the trackball.
I had a gateway 2000 laptop with a trackball that popped out of the side. it was really nice. way better than track pads. I like the Toshiba style eraser pointer but they do have a habit of messing up over time.
 
I had a gateway 2000 laptop with a trackball that popped out of the side. it was really nice. way better than track pads. I like the Toshiba style eraser pointer but they do have a habit of messing up over time.

I think I remember seeing those advertised! They looked really neat. For similar reasons, around that time manufacturers like Logitech had come out with trackballs for laptops with the reasoning that one could save space compared to a conventional mouse. My Dad had one, and it would clip to the side of his lunchbox computer.
 
I had a gateway 2000 laptop with a trackball that popped out of the side. it was really nice. way better than track pads. I like the Toshiba style eraser pointer but they do have a habit of messing up over time.

There was also some laptops where the trackball would click on the the side but that's going back 20+ and the some where they built into the system where the trackpad would sit on a modern laptop.

the IBM Thinkpads are probably the laptops best known for the erase (or nipple) style pointer. They were okay to use but I never really liked it cos if I you didn't hit the surrounding keys dead on you're hit the pointing device which could be an irritating.

Trackballs were good in a rack environment where you might not have enough room to drive a mouse but not the kvm units (look like a laptop) have gone trackpad.
 
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