A trackball is a pointing device consisting of a ball held by
a socket containing sensors to detect a rotation of the ball about two
axes—like an upside-down mouse with an exposed protruding ball. The user rolls
the ball with the thumb, fingers, or the palm of the hand to move a cursor.
Large tracker balls are common on CAD workstations for easy precision. Before
the advent of the touchpad, small trackballs were common on portable computers,
where there may be no desk space on which to run a mouse. Some small thumbballs
clip onto the side of the keyboard and have integral buttons with the same
function as mouse buttons. The trackball was invented by Tom Cranston and Fred
Longstaff as part of the Royal Canadian Navy's DATAR system in 1952, eleven
years before the mouse was invented. This first trackball used a Canadian
five-pin bowling ball.
When mice still used a mechanical design (with slotted
'chopper' wheels interrupting a beam of light to measure rotation), trackballs
had the advantage of being in contact with the user's hand, which is generally
cleaner than the desk or mousepad and doesn't drag lint into the chopper
wheels. The late 1990s replacement of mouseballs by direct optical tracking put
trackballs at a disadvantage and forced them to retreat into niches where their
distinctive merits remained more important. Most trackballs now have direct
optical tracking which follows dots on the ball.
As with modern mice, most trackballs now have an auxiliary
device primarily intended for scrolling. Some have a scroll wheel like most
mice, but the most common type is a “scroll ring” which is spun around the
ball. Kensington's SlimBlade Trackball similarly tracks the ball itself in
three dimensions for scrolling.
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