Microsoft Trackball Explorer — The World’s Most Comfortable Trackball

And, of course, it’s no longer available. This device is just one of the many items whose demand appears strong regardless of the fact that their manufacturers have inexplicably decided to discontinue making them. A quick search on eBay produces a handful of Trackball Explorers, each fetching at least $100 (often a lot more; recently even several hundred dollars!) That’s pretty good for a device that one could pick up from a local computer retailer, or from the web for $39.95 few years back!

Today the mainstream trackball alternatives include Logitech and Kensington models (plus some more industrial, or “80′s looking” trackballs by ITAC and Evergreen Systems). None of the currently available models come anywhere close to the ergonomy of Microsoft’s Trackball Explorer, and this sentiment is echoed on countless hardware review forums on the web.

Was the demand really so minimal for the trackballs that it wasn’t worth it for Microsoft to continue manufacturing it? Perhaps the sales weren’t as strong as they’re “supposed” to be for this kind of a device—perhaps when compared to the sales figures of mouses. But my guess is there are quite a few people out there who would be more than happy to pay, say, $69.95 for the (perhaps even slighly improved) device rather than scouring the dwindling sources for the trackball, or settle for another manufacturer’s best model that the “late” MS Trackball Explorer beat hands down. Today Microsoft offers just mouses for pointing devices — but a mouse won’t always do. Oftentimes the available desk-space is limited — there is no space to move the mouse around (whereas, of course, a trackball is stationary). And more importantly—especially when using 3D or CAD applications—mouse is less accurate. When you’ve placed the cursor on the exact pixel you want it to be on, with trackball you can then remove your finger from the ball before releasing the button to get a positively accurate placement. With a mouse the action of releasing the depressed button moves the mouse enough so that the cursor is moved a pixel or two before the ‘drop’ action occurs.

I have written Microsoft a few times regarding this issue, and it’s likely few other people have done so, too. There has never been a response, probably because their trackballs are gone, period. If Microsoft is not going to bring it back, it would be a great business idea for someone to revive a truely ergonomic trackball… there would be many users who would be glad to pay, say, the aforementioned $69.95 for a well designed, professional trackball, the “Trackball Explorer 2.0″.


Update 23 September 2008:

To get an update on TBE I contacted Edelman | Seattle yesterday.  The original contact, Kerry Gentes, was no longer with the company and I spoke with Brittany Turner instead.  According to her Microsoft’s stance on the issue has not changed; they are still not listening to what their customers want (she didn’t use those words exactly, but that’s basically what it boils down to).

Microsoft is also not willing to license the device at this time.

This puzzles me.  Microsoft bases their decision not to continue manufacturing and marketing the device on a “strategic decision” to concentrate on mouse devices because the market share trackballs hold is “insignificant”.   I’m sure the sales figures for mouses are greater than for trackballs, but it’s the same situation between any consumer and “pro” product.  Most people who go to buy a computer at Fry’s or Best Buy automatically buy a mouse as the computer comes with one.  In many cases it’s a Microsoft mouse, so naturally Microsoft sells a lot of them.  However, unlike many other devices, there is no viable alternative for the Trackball Explorer, and the “strategic decision” to not sell them makes a significant number of users rather unhappy.  If you go to a computer or office supply store they may carry a Logitech or Kensington model or two whose ergonomics simply have nothing on the TBE.  Microsoft could easily hold that shelf-space instead simply by resuming the manufacture of the already existing product which even has up-to-date drivers (Vista compatible, etc.)

If Microsoft doesn’t feel like investing more R&D funds to the TBE at this point, they could use the exact same design as TBE 1.0.  They might change its colors slightly to match the current product line and slap on a price tag equivalent to that of Kensington Expert Mouse ($99.99, or perhaps a little more competitively at $74.95) and it would sell like hot cakes.  It would still sell fairly strongly even if the price tag was $149.99, just as long as it would be available (recent prices for functional units sold on eBay have fetched $400+).  Surely the sales figures would not reach those of mouses, but then Microsoft also sells many more of the consumer licenses than professional licenses to its operating systems for the same exact reason – most computers sold come readily with “Windows Vista Home” installed.  Yet lower sales figures for the “Pro” versions of the operating system products, for example, don’t result in pulling a product from the market.

Microsoft’s unreachability and inertness regarding this issue is very frustrating.  You’d have to look hard for a product that so many users feel so strongly about (just read the comments in this blog for a small sampling of TBE users who have searched the web, come across this blog, and decided to post!) If Microsoft discontinued a particular mouse, nobody would think twice of it – they’d just pick up a newer (or, perhaps, a competitor’s) model.  Same goes for most anything I can think of – there’re always alternatives.  In most cases a new, improved versions of the older products are made available by the same manufacturer.  Unfortunately the situation with the TBE serves to illustrate the way Microsoft is going: business decisions are made internally without paying too much (or any) attention to the customer feedback.  This, also, is why the agile younger companies like Google are gradually eating away Microsoft’s market share in many areas of business.  When the time comes to make a choice between a Microsoft product that does have competitive alternatives – and most do – users who were shorted by Microsoft previously are more likely to choose a competitor’s product, especially if the competitor appears more responsive to customer feedback.

Microsoft Trackball Explorer

Microsoft Trackball Explorer

HP and the Lame Service Policy

I inadvertedly left our laptop accessible to our 20-month-old, and like had happened few times before, he removed a key or two from the laptop’s keyboard. This time the backslash/pipe key below the backspace wouldn’t snap back in, and on closer inspection I realized that one of the flimsy plastic supports underneath the key cap had broken. No problem, I thought, I’ll just order a new key mechanism from HP. So I dialed their tech support number, and reached a representative (hello, India!) after just couple of minutes of wait. So far so good.. but not so fast, this is where the Good Things end. The tech support rep checked the serial number of the laptop in their system, and soon correctly determined that it was out of warranty (of course, just by couple of months). I said I’d just like to order a replacement key mechanism — a few tiny plastic parts that are standard on many of the HP laptop models, and whose manufacture surely costs HP few cents if that, and for which I would’ve been glad to pay something like $9.99 + s&h, or begrudgingly even some more. But, of course, HP doesn’t sell them—the end-users cannot be trusted for any hardware installation as they’re totally incompetent to meddle with hardware. So the options the tech support rep gave me were: total replacement for the laptop at a premium (a new laptop at Costco costs about as much), or the “inexpensive” option of having the laptop »serviced at a HP service center for only $299.» Such a bargain! Oh, but they would »completely service the laptop at the same time to make sure it’s running smoothly» and »if the laptop is running slow, they could fix that, too». AND I would get three months extra warranty, at absolutely no extra cost!!!

No, thanks. My laptop is not running slow, or in need of any other kind of service than replacement of the tiny plastic mechanism under the backslash key—something I could do easily and quickly myself (if I had the replacement part) without having to ship the laptop away for at least several days, likely for a week or two, and then potentially having to reinstall all the software on it (in the event of replacement to a refubished unit). This is a good example of what plagues today’s manufacturing / business ideology: servicing failed devices, even when it would be a very simple thing to do, is priced so high that consumers rather toss a broken device and buy a new one than attempt to fix (or have fixed) what’s broken.

Cost of the service or the replacement rarely provides enough perceived value to the consumer; in the case of this example all I wanted was a small part which I considered worth a few bucks, but accepted that for logistical reasons it could be priced slightly higher, perhaps at $9.99 or $12.50.  But “complete service” for a computer that is not in need of any other service,  or “three months of additional warranty” provide no added value to me, and certainly not worth $299.

P.S.
I fixed the broken part with a drop of “Plastic Surgery” superglue that I found in my electronics tool chest. HP didn’t get a dime while they could have made $9.99 or even slightly more, and in the process they seriously annoyed a customer who previously had a neutral, perhaps even a favorable image of the company, and who then went on to write an article in the blogsphere about his negative experience.

Links everywhere

I’ve been cleaning up my PC’s desktop and the countless nested “dump” folders that contain all the junk from the desktop, stored at some point in the past. Most of the stuff is links that have been dragged to the desktop from a browser window. Occasionally the links are something I’ve stumbled across, but in most cases they’re the result of myself having been researching one topic or another. The links that have some kind of loose correlation tend to be grouped on the desktop (I have two monitors so there’s plenty of desktop space to be cluttered). Periodically I become tired with the cluttered desktop, create a new “dump” folder and dump everything from the desktop into that folder. Often this includes a previous “dump” folder (which contains several levels more of “dump” folders).

Over the years I’ve tried various solutions for storing the links. The browsers’ built-in “favorites” lists are completely inadequate; I generally store just the real favorites in them — sites that I actually do visit frequently and repeatedly. More links I’ve stored for later reference are stored in the Link Resource which I started several years back. However, maintaining such a monstrous list takes effort and despite of occasional run with Web Link Validator, the list is bound to contain links that have in some way or another expired. I also use Linkman, which was recently updated, but whose user interface is starting to look rather arcane. I find that I rather seldom actually access links that I have stored in Linkman (and there are many). In most cases I use Google, but on occasion there’s a resource that I know I’ve been to in the past, but that I can’t find anywhere. In such times I go hunting in my link archives, and sometimes the effort produces a result.

I think it’s weird there is no better solution for storing links. Most everyone who is using the web these days needs to store links. Yet both IE and Firefox have a fairly unsophisticated built-in link managers. My wife has been experimenting with Google Bookmarks, but while it would often be handy to have access to one’s bookmarks regardless of the location, Google doesn’t provide a much better way to organize the links than, say, Linkman.

Considering that my preferred way of storing links resulting from researching the web appears to be to drag them into “visual” groups on my desktop, perhaps some kind of program that would allow the links to be organized and placed visually onto some sort of pages, or folders, would suit the bill.  Maybe something like that already exists, but as of yet I haven’t come across it.

But there could be a better solution to the problem!  In the future, “storing links” will probably be so last century.  It is, after all, Google’s plan to replace links simply with web searching, and for the most part this has already happened.  However, sometimes, for example, a solution to a programming problem is discovered by following archived bulletin board discussions.  The final page containing the key piece of information is not the one that came up in any of the searches.  If I don’t bookmark that page or otherwise store the information found on it, I may or may not find it in the future.  But what if it was possible to add a custom “meta tag” to the page?  Let’s say I’d write “Solution to the programming problem X.”  Now the next time I personally would be looking for information about that specific issue, that page would come up in the search even if the original poster didn’t realize the information she provided would actually resolve the seemingly unrelated problem I was researching a solution for. Maybe this technology could be called Wikitags.

More About iBootBar

It turns out I hadn’t introduced a typo in the new admin user name when I renamed it to something less obvious than “admin” (see Hardware Frustrations). When I got the unit back from the manufacturer, reset and loaded with the new firmware that allows password recovery (see Hardware Frustrations, part II), I created a temporary second admin account, made sure I could log in with it, and then renamed the original admin account to what I thought I had renamed it to originally. And sure enough, that admin account was no longer usable! Using the second admin account, I renamed it back — and it started working again! After some more testing I realized that some user names longer than 8 characters made the login name unusable. A firmware bug! Once notified, Dataprobe promptly fixed the bug and forwarded me the fixed firmware. So if you’re buying one, be sure to check it has firmware version 1.1b80 or newer (or create a second admin account and verify that you can log in with it before renaming or deleting the default “admin” login).

Dataprobe handled the situation fairly well; I’d give them a “10″ if they would have offered to pay for the overnight shipping of the unit back to them to be unlocked since the lock-out was the result of a manufacturing flaw (firmware bug), and lack of a warning in the manual for a potential of a lock-out if the admin login is lost (with the new firmware this can no longer occur since a hardware-based password reset feature is now available).

Hardware Frustrations, part II

How did the issues I wrote in the previous post turn out? Well, Dataprobe shipped the iBootBar back promptly (two day turn-around at their end which I suppose is reasonable) with the settings reset, and with the new firmware that now has a hardware-based password recovery mechanism. The project was delayed by a few days, but such happens. I’m ok with that and will buy and recommend Dataprobe products in the future.

Meanwhile Adaptec could not (or would not) find the drive activity LED cable. I also found that the “kit” for AAR-2410SA is simply not just the card with more software and cables—it’s the controller with a drive enclosure kit at more than three times cost of the controller by itself! So if you install 2410SA to a chassis without Adaptec’s enclosure kit, Adaptec has decided you don’t need to have a visual cue as to whether the array is active. Adaptec clearly suffers from the »large business syndrome» where customers aren’t always accommodated, even if they’re willing to pay. Individual end-users are not significant to the bottom line. :(

I’ve also been trying to source the connector, but so far the attempts have been fruitless. A picture of the cable shipped with the kit can be found on this page. Below is a picture of the [male] connector on the controller itself. If anyone happens to know where to find a cable with such connector (Adaptec says it’s “not proprietary”.. but clearly it is not very commonly available), I’d like to know. It doesn’t matter much what’s in the other end of the cable as the right kind of connector can be easily attached with some solder.

Since the controller supports four drives and there’re four pins on the controller, I assume each pin, representative of a drive, provides +5v to a corresponding LED with ground being supplied from the PSU.

mini-connector.jpg
The problematic drive activity LED connector on Adaptec AAR-2410SA. The female connector that would match the male connector on the card would be about 5.6mm wide.