But at the end of the day I just couldn't get over the ergonomics of the mouse. It’s just so much more effortless than using a scrollwheel, even the newer low-friction wheels. I found myself getting excited whenever I’d have a window open that I needed to scroll in. The supported gestures include scrolling (both horizontally and vertically) and two finger swipe to flip through photos or web pages. Instead of using a touch sensor to simply determine left from right clicks, you can now gesture on the surface of the mouse. Even the on/off switch underneath is well designed. Stylistically the Magic Mouse is probably the best looking mouse I've ever used. The successor to the Mighty Mouse is named the Magic Mouse. A nifty way of adding a right mouse button without actually capitulating to the demands of the radical two buttoners. By using a touch sensor in the mouse itself you could push on the right side of the mouse to simulate a right click. The Mighty Mouse was Apple's first attempt at a two-button mouse with a modern Mac. The mouse however, I'd never had any real experience with. I'd say there's still tons of room for improvement in the comfort department so I'd like to see Apple go back to the drawing board with its now 3-year old design. I've used the keyboard before, it's actually what I do most of my writing on. The ports are only good for delivering 100mA of power so you'll have to look elsewhere to charge your iPhone/iPod. You get a row of helpful function keys along the top and two USB ports integrated into the keyboard itself. The biggest issue is that it isn't an ergonomic design in the style of the Microsoft Natural keyboards. The angle feels just right, there's good feedback from the keys and even the key travel seems just right. If you're ok with the relatively condensed design, it's great to type on.
The Mac Pro ships with two input devices by default: the Apple USB keyboard with numeric keypad, and the Magic Mouse.