The HeadMouse Extreme is a small and compact unit which attaches to the front of a desktop or laptop computer screen, and may also be used with many communication devices. It replaces a standard computer mouse for people who cannot use their hands. It translates the movements of a user's head into directly proportional movements of the computer mouse pointer.
A large, symmetrical, optical trackball mounted in a wedge shaped base. Four large buttons can be programmed to perform latched click and drag, single click, double click functions or to launch applications. A ring surrounding the ball moves in a horizontal plane, allowing control of scrolling. Connection to PC or Macintosh is via USB.
The Kensington Orbit Trackball is a trackball type device that can be used in place of the standard mouse with IBM compatible and Macintosh computer systems. It features a smaller trackball placed in the midline at the top of the device and two buttons in a contoured casing suitable for use with either hand. Can be customised.
A combined keyboard and trackball designed specifically for children's smaller hands. It features smaller keycaps and key spacing, along with lower case letter on keycaps. The simultaneous use of a normal sized keyboard is also supported. The single unit works with both Windows and Macintosh systems. Also available without a trackball.
A trackball with a large centrally placed trackball, four buttons and a moulded case. Suitable for use with either hand. Uses optical tracking.
The naturalpoint trackIR is an infrared handsfree ergonomic mouse. It provides precise cursor control through simple head movement allowing the computer user's hands to remain on the keyboard, or at their side.
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