Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 6000
Garmin software download. Garmin Express is a computer application for easily setting up, registering and managing your Garmin device. Redeem a Voucher Activate your maps or services with a voucher or product key. Use BaseCamp to plan your next hiking, biking, motorcycling, driving or off-roading trip. You can view maps, plan routes, and mark waypoints and tracks from.
Device downloads. For software and drivers, select your product from the list below. Wireless Laser Mouse 6000. Follow Microsoft Accessories. Share this page. I have a Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse and keyboard 6000. Running Vista Ultimate 64 bit. I have installed Microsoft Intellipoint version 6.1 for Vista 64 bit and have had intermittent mouse problems. Numerous times the mouse works perfectly fine. I have the Microsoft Wireless Receiver 3.1 stationed less than 6 inches from the mouse.
Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 6000 Model 1052 Manual

Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 6000 Driver
For some reason, use of this wireless mouse (like many other Microsoft products) is better when managed by Microsoft software rather than by the Mac's operating system. Programmable buttons are this mouse's major advantages over Apple's one-button mouse, especially if you use web browsers, publishing, and photo-editing software a lot.The gray color is reminiscent of the Radio Shack TRS-80, not the slick enclosures of today. Ergonomic design is 'handy,' however, and at least to my large hand is quite comfortable. The forward/backward rolling of the scroll wheel is uneven to the touch, though the cursor on the screen doesn't seem to show any effects of the bumps felt under the wheel. The preference panel shows the quality of the wireless connection and the power of the battery. I could not find an option showing signal strength or battery strength in the top menubar, however (like the WiFi monitor), and I found opening Systems Preferences followed by the Microsoft mouse preference pane to be a bit inconvenient just to check the mouse.
For some odd reason, in some apps the pre-programmed button functions might go dead, but not for all the buttons at once. It's usually only the loss of the functionality of one button or another.
For me, a heavier feel in the hand would improve its handling along with slipperier glide pads underneath the mouse. Button clicks could be made more substantive and solid. The sideways action of the scroll wheel, for horizontal scrolling, could feel more solid and less flimsy.
I don't know why I experience mouse failure frequently enough to be out shopping for a mouse every other year, but it keeps my mouse purchases low-cost and encourages updating to the latest technology, so I'm not really complaining about build quality that much. I just wish that the mouse (any mouse) felt like a high-quality electronic instrument.