It used to be that when you wanted to
navigate a computer screen, you
had to use keyboard arrow keys or
complex text commands. That is
until the revolutionary
computer mouse squeaked
into popular consciousness
in 1984.
The first movable
mice were mechanical.
Invented in 1972
at Xerox’s Palo Alto
Research Center
(PARC) by a
researcher called
Bill English, the
mouse’s main
feature was a rubbercovered
tracking ball
that was able to move in all
directions. It rolled around underneath
the device’s body as users moved the
mouse across a flat surface.
Two rollers inside rubbed against the
side of the ball and picked up the speed and
direction of the movements. These were
connected to tiny perforated discs, lit by
light-emitting diodes (LEDs). The resulting
flashes of light gave direct feedback on the
rotation direction and speed, and were sent
to a tiny onboard integrated circuit (IC).
This converted the information into binary
data the computer could understand that
was zapped down the connecting wire. A
software-driven cursor moved exactly to
the desired position on the screen. Simple
yet efficient – as long as you cleaned it
regularly to keep all the moving parts
rolling smoothly.
Today, the mechanical mouse has almost
died out. Most people use an optical mouse
with no moving bits inside. So it doesn’t
need cleaning or maintenance.
Instead of a tracking ball, the optical
mouse uses a small LED, most often red,
and a tiny complementary metal-oxide
semiconductor sensor – a sort of microcamera.
The images captured are passed on
to a digital signal processor (DSP) which
compares the images and detects changing
patterns of movement. Then, as before, an
on-board IC turns the information into
binary data to be sent to the computer, with
updates hundreds of times every second.
This gives fast, smooth cursor movement
on the screen.
The latest laser mice – using an infrared
laser diode instead of LED – work much the
same way but deliver up to 20 times the
performance of an optical mouse, and use
less power too. There’s one major drawback,
though. They sometimes have trouble
tracking on reflective surfaces, which
confuse the sensors.
But can you imagine going back to the
bad old days of scraping stuff from your
tracking ball?
History of the Computer Mouse
It’s a mouse by name but a vital human interface
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