4/3/2025 at 4:52:20 AM
I personally like trackballs with a large central ball where I can use all my fingers. I am aware Ploopy offers one. This style however has fallen out of popularity, but I've been using them since the mid-90s.Just using your thumb for all navigation seems like an RSI waiting to happen.
Also I don't know who in the last couple years decided it's a "Trackball Mouse" it's just a Trackball in the same way it's just a "Trackpad" and not a "Trackpad Mouse"
by donatj
4/3/2025 at 2:52:38 PM
I have purchased a bunch of trackballs, trying to find the best one for me. The Kensington Expert is as you describe, but maybe not quite to my liking. If I did graphic design work, it'd be the one I want for sure - the level of granularity is great.For my money (clicking with thumb/pinky, using ball and scroll wheel with index and middle fingers) the Kensington Orbit is my daily driver. I even use it for shooter games, since I'm much more accustomed to trackballs these days than mice. As an added bonus, it seems a lot easier on my tendons than a mouse.
by RajT88
4/3/2025 at 12:23:35 PM
I bought a Logitech MX Ergo a couple of years back and genuinely love it for many of the reasons other trackballs users cite in this thread - but I have noticed in the last few months that my thumb joint will get 'stuck' and makes a click when I unstick it. Definitely related to the MX Ergo and the thumb navigation like you say. I'm an older gentleman which likely contributes.So might be tempted by an all finger alternative - at the moment I'm attempting to up my use of a terminal window manager to minimise pointer use
by eddie_catflap
4/3/2025 at 11:38:06 AM
I'm prone to RSI, and I started using a logitech trackman in '99 or '00. I've occasionally had periods of using mice or trackpads, and extended use of either causes flareups. I've never had flareups with a thumb ball, even with pointer-intensive use like CAD, FPS and graphics. So I keep returning to them -- I've been using them more or less continually for around 25 years. So for my body, it's a clear win on ergonomics; ymmv.by boothby
4/3/2025 at 2:41:37 PM
I can second this. Same story, been thumbing it for 25 years or so. I've also used it through some fairly painful ligament injury ('gamekeeper's thumb'), and if anything I think it helped with the recovery.I remember someone telling me 20ish years ago that, as opposable thumbers, we have more nerves/muscles dedicated to each thumb than we do for the other 4 fingers combined. Not sure how true that is, but it stuck with me.
by boomskats
4/3/2025 at 1:55:01 PM
This is the only “Trackball Mouse” I know of: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Apple_Mighty_Mouse_W...It's a pretty small trackball.
by kps
4/3/2025 at 8:31:34 AM
> Just using your thumb for all navigation seems like an RSI waiting to happen.I have a thumb trackball. It's been a blessing to my RSI. I can fully rest my hand and fingers on it. With a central ball, I need to keep tension on my fingers otherwise they roll on the ball and move the cursor. That seems like an RSI waiting to happen.
by cassianoleal
4/3/2025 at 2:32:21 PM
Indeed I have a ploopy 1 on the drawer because it gives me strong RSI on the thumb.by dgrabla
4/3/2025 at 9:32:27 AM
I agree. I actually almost bought a trackball, thinking it was a mouse that also had a trackball in it, because of this misleading naming.by DecentShoes
4/3/2025 at 10:12:26 AM
L-Trac is still in production, made by P.I. Engineering, "The No Slogan Company"by i_am_proteus
4/3/2025 at 2:57:36 PM
I wanted to try one of those, but I was put off by the scroll bar being above the ball. It seems unnatural to have to reach over to scroll. What as your experience been, if you (or anyone else) has one?by RajT88
4/3/2025 at 9:16:37 AM
I'm working on an open source one for myself: https://github.com/ginkgo/trackballNext step is adding QMK support.
by ginko
4/3/2025 at 2:16:18 PM
Oh super cool! Pico powered and everythingby donatj