Pros: Sensor allows for use on glass, fabric, or anything, and is very responsive. Mouse is reasonably ergonomic and of substantial weight that feels right Friction free scrolling is enabled/ disabled by clicking the scroll wheel, and allows for fast scrolling on long pages Special button for a... Read the full review →
Pros: - Sensor allows for use on glass, fabric, or anything, and is very responsive. - Mouse is reasonably ergonomic and of substantial weight that feels right - Friction free scrolling is enabled/ disabled by clicking the scroll wheel, and allows for fast scrolling on long pages - Special button... Read the full review →
great!
Ergonomics / comfort
great!
Design and form factor
great!
Configurability
great!
Accuracy
great!
Portability
Absolutely hands down the very best mouse money can buy. I've had two of these in the past year (I have different laptops), and I've also recommended this mouse to friends and coworkers. All agree. It simply works very accurately on just about any surface including most glass. The only surfaces I... Read the full review →
great!
Ergonomics / comfort
great!
Design and form factor
great!
Accuracy
great!
Portability
This is, far and away, my favorite mouse. I own two - one that I travel with, and one that's permanently at my desk at work. The mouse feels solid. Particularly the heavy-feeling scroll wheel, that lets you switch between scrolling with tactile click feedback and smooth scrolling with just a press... Read the full review →
reviewed on May 26, 2011
purchased on May 16, 2011
great!
Configurability
great!
Portability
good
Ergonomics / comfort
good
Design and form factor
good
Accuracy
Pretty impressive overall, but I miss the old-fashioned scroll-wheel clickability. These new fancy pants mice are more concerned with super speedy scrolling than they are with the middle-click. Read the full review →
Logitech very well should be an expert mouse-builder, and the Anywhere MX ably showcases their talents. Darkfield tracking technology finally realizes the vision of perfect tracking on glass and reflective surfaces, and the overall product execution leaves little to be desired.
The Anywhere Mouse is like a travel mouse with benefits. It has the two forward and back thumb buttons, a separate middle click/app switcher button and the same Darkfield laser. It's also slightly larger than usual travel mice, but still small enough to fit easily in bags without bulging out too much. It's definitely one of the best travel mice we've used, and the fact that it has better trackability with Darkfield means you won't need to bring a mousepad along with you—you can just mouse anywhere.
The good: Darkfield technology tracks on any surface including glass; Unifying receiver pairs easily with other Logitech peripherals; power button conserves battery life; runs off a single AA battery.
The bad: Pricier than other mobile mice; smooth vertical rocker lacks precision.
The bottom line: The Anywhere Mouse MX bears Logitech's multiconnective Unifying receiver and glass-tracking Darkfield laser, but $80 is too much for a portable mouse--especially when the Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 4000 costs half the price for almost the same features.
The Logitech MX mouse is a mobile high-end mouse that can especially score with the excellent Darkfield Sensor. Workmanship, feel and design were impressive, too. The switchable mouse wheel allows fast scrolling through long documents, but in return doesn't have a mouse key.
The largest drawbacks are the lack of wired operating and the imperfect gliding traits of our test unit.
The very good overall impression remains almost undimmed and thus we can recommend the Anywhere MX as a mobile notebook mouse.