2Tired2Tango said:
Given some of the other commentary I'm not so sure I am targeting the wrong people... but I will agree that this isn't the best place for such a discussion.
My request to you is to copy and paste absolutely anything I said in this thread or elsewhere that made me a rightful target for any of your comments. I stand behind anything I said, as I have never alluded to the fact that I'm the one who doesn't care. To add to that, I'm not the one who's using super-inflated metrics to improve my own argument.
I've made it clear here, and many times in the past, that I feel there is a greater need for left-handed mice. But it doesn't matter what I think... I'm not the CEO of any of these companies. I don't count ambidextrous mice, either. They're not more comfortable for left-handed people, they're just more uncomfortable for everyone.
2Tired2Tango said:
My original point was that if they must produce such a product it's not to their advantage to bias the thing to only certain users. Not only does it cost them sales money, it presents an uncaring image to the public.
The problem as I see it, is this. Companies
cannot simply make a left-handed version of a mouse, such as this one. If they do, then customers are going to inevitably end up purchasing the wrong model. So in order to avoid confusion at all, companies would have to design a completely different mouse, which costs a lot of money. And when the market is 1/10th the size...
If I ran one of these companies, what I'd do is release both versions of the same mouse, but name them something completely different. That way, a gamer will have a far greater understanding of exactly what model they need. It's easier to differentiate completely different names than it is to differentiate names like, "Sentinel Advance L".
Of course, a huge "For left-handed gamers" sticker would probably work just as well.
2Tired2Tango said:
I can't help but wondering how reviewers might react if some company produced a product that somehow biased itself by race or sex... Surely it is not beyond reason to expect marketplace commentary to include a sense of fairness to consumers.
It's an issue, yes, but why does it have to be beat to death in every mouse review we do? I have complained in previous mouse reviews I've done that there is a real lack of left-handed mice... I just don't see the need to do that every time. Rather than point out issues with content, why not take action if you are so passionate about it? Create online surveys, petitions... anything, and get the word out there to these big companies that they need to stop favoring right-handed people. You cannot just expect all right-handed people to care near as much as left-handed people... it's not as though we fully experience the frustration.
2Tired2Tango said:
Anyway... subject dropped. I can see this is heading in a direction I never wanted from my original comment ....
Well, what direction were you aiming for when you first retorted Bill's comment, and then mine? From the get-go, you aimed your comments at the wrong people. We're not the ones who don't care, and even if we didn't care, I'm not sure what it would matter. It's not as though we're going to be able to do anything about it.