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Kensington Slimblade Trackball USB 2.0 for PC and Mac, K72327US

by Kensington
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (188 customer reviews)

List Price: $149.99
Price: $89.24 & FREE Shipping. Details
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  • Multi-function ball lets you easily navigate through your music, pictures and documents using media or document view mode
  • With its low-profile shape, you'll be able to use it comfortably for hours on end
  • Gain fingertip access to image and media controls
  • Control cursor and scrolling; volume, play/pause, stop, and next; zoom in/out, and pan, all with the ball
  • Compatible with Windows 8
Great Gifts for Gadget Dads
Celebrate the dad in your life with a gift he can use like a new PC or tablet, that perfect peripheral, or a handful of high-tech accessories. Learn more.

Frequently Bought Together

Kensington Slimblade Trackball USB 2.0 for PC and Mac, K72327US + Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325 + Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000
Price for all three: $205.62

Buy the selected items together


Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 5 x 3.5 inches ; 11.2 ounces
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • ASIN: B001MTE32Y
  • Item model number: K72327US
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (188 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: January 5, 2009

Product Description

From the Manufacturer

Comfort and productivity are at your fingertips with the Kensington SlimBlade Trackball. The slim, low-profile design provides all-day comfort while the advanced dual laser sensors and large ball deliver exceptional precision. For even greater productivity, the four adjustable buttons can be set to the function or keyboard shortcut you use most with our TrackballWorks software. Kensington SlimBlade Trackball is backed by the Kensington 5-Year Warranty and free technical support.

Kensington SlimBlade Trackball
Comfort and productivity are at your fingertips with the SlimBlade Trackball. View larger
Kensington SlimBlade Trackball
Click here to learn more about the Kensington TrackballWorks software.

Why Trackballs?

Idea: Comfort No Mouse Can Match

It's simple: when you're more comfortable, you're more productive. For years, graphic designers and others have enjoyed the comfort and productivity that trackballs deliver. Now you can too. Trackballs require far less wrist movement than a mouse to provide a pain-free computing experience. They also use less desk space. And some can even be programmed to customized computing.

Idea: Your Trackball, Your Rules

Kensington TrackballWorks is software that allows you to customize the functions of each of the buttons found on your trackball. The result is a more productive and truly personalized computing experience. Now you can set your preferred functions or keyboard shortcuts for each trackball button or combination of buttons, adjust the pointer speed and acceleration and do so much more. Best of all, by allowing you to personalize your trackball experience, TrackballWorks makes your trackball work the way you do.

TrackballWorks is compatible with the latest operations system versions including Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP and Mac OS.

Why Kensington Trackballs?

For over 27 years, Kensington has been listening to the needs of the computer user and delivering innovative solutions. Many of our comfortable, ambidextrous trackball designs feature larger balls for greater precision and innovative scrolling solutions for higher productivity. Plus, TrackballWorks software lets you customize your trackball's functions, keyboard shortcuts and more. And all Kensington trackballs are backed by best-in-class tech support and warranties.

Trackball Comparison Chart
Kensington Orbit Optical Orbit with Scroll Ring Orbit Wireless Mobile Expert Mouse SlimBlade
Orbit Optical Orbit with Scroll Ring Orbit Wireless Mobile Expert Mouse SlimBlade
Model 64327 K72337US K72352US 64325 K72327US
Designed for Comfort/Ergonomics
Saves Desk Space
Customizable Buttons via TrackballWorks Software
Scrolling
Removable Wrist Rest
Large Ball
4 Buttons
2 Buttons
Color of Ball Grey Blue Ruby Grey Ruby
Five Year Warranty

Product Description

Now the ball does it all Your computing experience just got smoother, faster and easier with the Kensington SlimBlade(TM) Trackball. Choose navigation mode to control cursor and scrolling. Media mode controls volume, play/pause, stop, and track forward/backward, while view mode zooms in/out, and pans. And it does it all with the ball to put complete control at your fingertips. You can even keep an eye on which application you are in and which function is being performed with the heads-up display on your monitor. Mac and PC compatible, including Windows Vista, Windows XP, and Mac OS X. USB 2.0.


Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
230 of 246 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Software; Superb Hardware March 5, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase
UPDATE (16 October 2010): Kensington released their TrackballWorks in June of this year, which release enables users to customize the Slimblade Trackball's four buttons, adjust pointer speed/acceleration/function, and other features. The pointer sensitivity is much improved, though still not as good as the pointer sensitivity module found in the venerable MouseWorks software.

On the other hand, the ability to customize the four buttons of the Slimblade Trackball is a welcome (and much needed) improvement. This device should have shipped with this software.

The advent of programmable buttons places the Slimblade Trackball in a category of its own. It surpasses by a wide margin the ergonomics and aesthetics of the Expert Mouse. The scrolling function is superb, a perfect complement to a trackpad device. I am surprised by how much the Slimblade Trackball just "disappears" while I am working with it.

My only complaint is that the buttons are sometimes too sensitive, something that can be avoided by adjusting how much resting pressure one places on the device's surface.

Those of us looking for an attractive and elegant multifunction pointing device need look no further. The Slimblade Trackball now has software worthy of its stunning good looks.

(The previous version of this review rated the Slimblade Trackball at 2 stars, was found helpful by 190 of 201 people, and was titled "Missed Opportunity".)

============

(Amazon's system was not properly updating my review, so I deleted and reposted. At the time I did this, only 1 of 4 people found my review helpful. Even so.)

============
UPDATE (9 March 2009): After 4 days of continuous use. I am packing it in and reverting back to the Expert Mouse. If one needs either precise cursor control, programmable buttons or application-sensitive behavior, the Slimblade Trackball is unusable with the supplied software.

I've been using trackballs (mainly Kensington) since 1993 and am no stranger to change. This trackball simply was not designed with an expert user in mind, and I hope those who read my review will consider that it is written from this perspective. It is meant to inform professionals and expert users whose software and hardware demands are unusually high.

If you are an expert user who needs a pointing device to be application-aware, or if you need high-precision cursor control, this device is not one you should consider.

Tempting as this device may be for people frustrated with the terrible hardware design of the Expert Mouse, the Slimblade Trackball cannot replace the Expert Mouse.

============

The Slimblade Trackball is really a missed opportunity for Kensington. This device has so much potential but the software limitations make this device just barely usable.

The two major components of the Slimblade Trackball are the hardware design and the software affordances. Let's start with the good.

THE HARDWARE
==========

In order to understand what is amazing about the Kensington Slimblade Trackball, one should be aware of the last redesign of the Expert Mouse. That design is quite horrendous. The steep angle of the plastic housing strained the wrist tendons so badly that the device shipped with a faux leather pad that attached to the trackball to elevate the wrist. Besides being ugly, the pad kludge didn't work very well. Strained wrists are a common symptom among users of the Expert Mouse Trackball.

The Slimblade Trackball rectifies this situation. Big Time.

The low profile of the trackball housing is not only aesthetically pleasing, it also allows users to use the device with hand and wrist only moderately angled. The ball rolls smoothly (though it is an ugly color) and the buttons are very sleek as they are cut out of the housing. Clicks are unfortunately hollow-sounding, but the tactile response is superb, the buttons requiring a firm but shallow press for activation. The new device is a pleasure to handle physically.

The engineering of the trackball well is clever. Plastic bearings similar to those in the Expert Mouse Trackball keep the ball gliding smoothly, with the difference that these bearings are sealed in their sockets with only a portion of the bearing visible. The holes which contain the electronics that register ball movement do not appear to emit light. When the ball is rotated around its Y-axis (running through the top and bottom of the device), the electronics make an audible clicking noise. Think iPod scrollwheel sound. The faint sound could be a problem in quiet office environments, especially for users who do quite a bit of scrolling or zooming.

In all, the hardware of the device is excellent. The thought and care which went into the engineering shows, and if look and feel were all that mattered, Kensington would have produced a pointing device worthy of admiration and celebration.

Unfortunately for Kensington, there's also the bad and the ugly. Namely . . .

THE SOFTWARE
==========

(I'm testing the Slimblade Trackball software on a PowerMac G5 2 x 2.5 GHz running Mac OS X v. 10.5.6. Windows users may have an experience different than mine.)

First off, I want to say that the software seems also to have received quite a bit of attention from the designers at Kensington. Unfortunately, what those designers produced seems to be the victim of poor market analysis.

Some Slimblade Trackball users have forgiven Kensington for omitting the ability to program the buttons. I am not one of these users. The inability to reprogram the buttons is arrogance at its worst. When Steve Jobs and Jon Ives give users an extra-strength dose of designerly arrogance, they often succeed in curing ailments users didn't even realize they had (hockey puck mouse excepted). I'm here to assure you that the software designers at Kensington are neither Steve Jobs nor Jon Ives.

At all.

First, the drivers for the Slimblade Trackball do not have any user-accessible interface. Period. OK, that's not entirely true. The installer places a pointer-shaped item in the menubar. Clicking on that item reveals two items. 1) A dimmed line reporting that the Kensington Slimblade Trackball is active, and 2) a link to Kensington's online tutorial. As we all know (as of 5 March 2009), that online tutorial is not yet available. So, the link sends users to the promotional microsite for the Slimblade Trackball as if advertising will convince them that nothing's wrong. I suppose one can navigate one's way to the sparse FAQ which contains 8 items as of this writing.

If you can't read the sign that says Things are Not Good(tm) then look over yonder. Yup. That's the milestone for Here Comes Ugly(tm)

THE UGLY
======

Users not only cannot program the device's buttons, but they also cannot customize the speed and acceleration of the device outside of the operating system software provided by Apple or a piece of third-party software.* This is a problem of gargantuan proportions and has been documented at length in this TidBITS article: [...].

I have a 23" Cinema Display and a 17" Studio Display hooked together in a single extended desktop. I need my pointing device tracking to be set high. Setting the mouse tracking to high is possible with Apple's "Keyboard & Mouse" System Preference. The problem comes when moving the device slowly, as one might do when selecting text. The differences in slow and fast cursor tracking in Apple's Keyboard & Mouse System Preference settings render the Slimblade trackball practically unusable on medium-to-large desktops.

By removing the ability of users to customize slow and fast tracking speed--something that the Expert Mouse Trackball software does provide--Kensington has effectively turned what should have been a magnificent product into something only a mother could love, or at least a committee of marketroids who got their way over the tearful objections of old-skool Kensington software devs. Don't worry devs, having bought this device I feel your pain and then some.

At present, Kensington has no plans to offer programmable buttons for this device. One can only hope future software releases will enable users to customize the acceleration settings for the Slimblade Trackball just as users of the Expert Mouse Trackball are able to customize their settings.

CONCLUSION
========

The hardware engineers at Kensington deserve raises and your first-born. This is a beautiful device.

On the other hand, the managers of the software design team should have their computers confiscated and other really awful things like getting raisins for dessert.

The Kensington Slimblade Trackball is like a gorgeous date with a bland personality. You don't mind hanging out awhile but you hope something better will come along soon.

* My limited testing of USB Overdrive as a third-party driver has been unable to access the media buttons (the upper ones) at all, suggesting to me that the upper buttons are not regular mouse buttons at all.
Was this review helpful to you?
25 of 27 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Ready for prime time June 17, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase
I bought one of these just after the supporting TrackBall Works software became available which makes the SlimBlade pretty much a superior replacement for the much clunkier Expert mouse. I've used it a few days, but already love the lower/slimmer ergonomics and the all-optical sensing without the roller bearings that can get clogged and stuck. My only nits are the cable and the scrolling. The cable is stiff and covered with a cloth braid that reminds me of model trains made in the 40's. It is wired directly into the trackball case and is not user replaceable. A stand-alone USB cable would have been better. The scrolling mechanism is very cool, but even with the new TrackBall Works software, the right combination of resolution and scroll-rate is not there. The granularity cannot be set fine enough to scroll one row at a time in Excel, yet when set as fine as possible the scrolling is too slow. Scrolling needs to be finer and use acceleration like the X-Y positioning does. Still, this is my 6th or so trackball and it's easily the best.
I bought this unit in early June 2010 and was annoyed to discover just a few days later that it was no longer available directly from Amazon via Amazon Prime. Also, don't be taken in by the third-party 3-year warranty offer: the product comes with a 5 year manufacturer's warranty.
Updated December 2012:
I have had 3 of these for some time and continue to quite happy with them. The ball sits very low to the table and the ability to spin it around the vertical axis provides a feature that conventional mice and trackballs do not have. All 3 have been reliable (unlike the previous generation Expert Mouse which I replaced 3 times (under warranty)). The only negative is that dust eventually blocks the optics, but it's easily removed with a finger and/or by blowing on it.
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Was this review helpful to you?
79 of 94 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Kensington has decided what's best for you March 4, 2009
PROS: This is a BEAUTIFUL mouse, I've had issues with past larger Kensington trackballs because of their steep rake, this one fits in the hand fantastically. The scrolling action is ok (done by twisting the ball), sometimes I accidentally trigger it when mousing around.

CONS: The software ruin's this wonderful hardware. ZERO customizability. I was trying to "upgrade" from a Logitech Cordless Trackman and worse than being unable to program the top two buttons is being unable to set my vertical axis. For their premier mouse, Kensington decided that they would prioritize navigating my iTunes over navigating the web. It's been nearly 10 years since I have not had a back button on my mouse and now I'm left wanting.

BOTTOM LINE: I would take this up to a 5 star if I could customize the buttons and the vertical axis. Until then it seems like Kensington was targeting the casual user with this mouse as opposed to a power user. To me this would appear to be a mistake, since I would not imagine that a casual user would trade up to a $130 trackball. The only people I have ever heard of using trackballs are power users or people with carpal tunnel.

***Update***
Ended up having to return this trackball. I stand by my review that it's an average device, but seems mismatched to its price point. The features may be useful to some users but once the price goes beyond the century point my standards become much higher. I'd pay maybe 1/3 of the price for this device. Not being able to edit the buttons was a nuisance but not being able to set the vertical axis was a deal breaker.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful design, works wonderfully
As a fan of large trackballs -- and a repeat user of Kensington products -- I find the Slimblade trackball to be exactly what I was looking for. Read more
Published 6 days ago by Paul Brogger
5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVE my Trackball
I must have owned every version of Kingston's track balls going back for 20+ years. I can't imagine having to use a clumsy and space wasting dead rodent EVER. Read more
Published 9 days ago by Richard Adkins
5.0 out of 5 stars Just Perfect
I've been using trackballs on microcomputers since the days of the 128K Mac - including every model manufactured by Kensington and this is far and away the best ever. Read more
Published 15 days ago by Andy Bukram
5.0 out of 5 stars After many years of using the Expert Trackball .... This Version is...
I have used the Kensington Expert Trackball since 1995.

This is simply the best product they have ever developed. I will be ordering a backup just in case. Read more
Published 18 days ago by Daniel
5.0 out of 5 stars Skeptical as I have a Microsoft Trackball Explorer
Having used the Microsoft Trackball for five years or more and being very happy with it, I needed one for home, but the (idiot) folks offering them at $400+ get by disdain, not my... Read more
Published 20 days ago by Stephen
4.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Product
I had some reservations about buying this but they were totally unfounded. I use this with Windows 8 and it is smooth and very accurate. Read more
Published 21 days ago by J. Kurtz
1.0 out of 5 stars Support Stinks
OK, so the trackball was unusable out of the box. It happens Should have returned it, but thought that at least Kensington should have an opportunity to fix it. Read more
Published 21 days ago by Jim Weir
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Trackball I have used !
Works great, and is very comfortable. It also looks very slick.

I use it with both Mac and PC. and it performs great with both systems. Read more
Published 22 days ago by Tarek Algosaibi
1.0 out of 5 stars Excellent item flawed by software
Having carpel tunnel was the rationale for this purchase. The shape, size, ball action and physical properties are excellent. Read more
Published 26 days ago by Mr. Robert Matthew Bowers
5.0 out of 5 stars From an Expert Mouse Users who LOVES Slimeblade Trackball
I've been using trackballs since the 90's with the MS Trackball Explorer, then I got my first Expert Mouse from Kensington in the early 2000's. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Halo
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