Cherry Announces the MW 4500 Mouse with 45° Palm Rest, 1200 DPI Sensor
by Anton Shilov on December 18, 2017 10:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Peripherals
- Mice
- Cherry
- Cherry MW 4500
Cherry has introduced its MW 4500 mouse featuring a rather unique shape that promises to reduce, or even prevent hand fatigue, but only for right handers. The mouse is aimed at mainstream users in office or home, it has a sensor with a relatively high DPI sampling rate, is outfitted with six buttons and a scroll wheel. What is particularly noteworthy is that it is not expensive at all.
Throughout the last decade anf a half, computer mice have evolved quite greatly as manufacturers experimented with shapes and sensor technologies to provide the best ergonomics and performance for different types of users and applications. The absolute majority of today’s “ergonomic” mice features asymmetric shape along with various design elements to improve the user comfort. The Cherry MW 4500 takes some pages from today’s ergonomic mice, but looks radically different than most of them because its palm rest has an angle of 45°. Such palm rest angle is more common for trackballs rather than mice, but Cherry believes that it “relieves wrist tension and allows fatigue-free work.” Ergonomics is, of course, a very individual thing, but it should be interesting to see how such a radically high angle affects pointing precision when editing images or playing FPS games.
The extravagant shape is the key selling point of the Cherry MW 4500, but it does not mean that the manufacturer did not care about other aspects of the product. Inside the Cherry MW 4500, there is an infrared laser sensor that supports 600, 900 and 1200 DPI sampling rates, which is in line with other modern mice for the SOHO market. When it comes to buttons, there are six regular keys found on all modern mice, nothing extraordinary. The mouse is wireless, it comes with a tiny receiver that resembles Logitech’s Unify and needs two AAA batteries to operate. Cherry does not disclose how long the batteries are going to last for an average user, but says there is a status LED that warns the user about a low battery. As for dimensions and weight, the mouse measures 120×60×35 mm and weighs 120 grams.
Normally, mice with fancy ergonomics come at a hefty price. This is not the case with the Cherry MW 4500, which will retail for €30, $35, or £30, depending on the region (and at price points like these, it will be interesting to buy the MW 4500 simply out of interest — is it really comfortable to use?). The mouse will be covered by a two-year warranty.
Related Reading:
- Cherry Launches MC 4900 Mouse with Fingerprint Reader, 1375 DPI Sensor
- Logitech Boosts Precision of G203 Prodigy Mouse to 8000 DPI via Firmware Update
- Logitech Launches the MX Ergo Trackball: Bringing Trackballs into 2017
- Logitech Launches G603 ‘Lightspeed’: 12,000 DPI Hero Sensor, 1 ms Polling, 500 Hrs Battery
- Corsair Launches Glaive RGB Mouse: 16,000 DPI, Interchangeable Grips, LEDs
Source: Cherry
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Diji1 - Monday, December 18, 2017 - link
Logitech does not require an account and does not require the software to be running.Frankly lumping Razer and Logi in the same boat as far as quality and function is just disingenuous.
One of them regularly outputs garbage designed to impress 15 year olds and one of them has some of the most highly regarded peripherals in their class eg G903 (perhaps the best wireless mouse) or G920 (perhaps the best cheap wheel and pedals).
mobutu - Monday, December 18, 2017 - link
You might want to amend the article ... taken from their website:Dimensions (product):
approx. 115 x 60 x 35 mm (mouse)
approx. 42 x 18 x 8 mm (receiver)
Hurr Durr - Monday, December 18, 2017 - link
I think 30$ is pretty hefty for a mouse.cerberusss - Tuesday, December 19, 2017 - link
> it comes with a tiny receiverI'm assuming that it's USB, when actually I also would've looked forward to a USB-C version.
Dug - Tuesday, December 19, 2017 - link
I would love to see this with a base that your hand rests in, instead of resting on the table. Almost what you see on the left side of this mouse, but on the right side. It would makes clicking so much easier which is part of the problem with strain.