Logitech's latest mouse mat is a giant wireless charging pad
 
      
    
    
  
  
    
It takes a lot to surprise me these days, but Logitech 
has done it. The PC gear company has just revealed a new Powerplay 
technology that builds wireless charging directly into its mouse pad, 
allowing compatible wireless mice to charge constantly while on the pad.
 As someone with bitter memories of being let down by the feeble 
batteries of wireless gaming peripherals, I've developed something of a 
phobia for anything untethered, but this Powerplay action sounds like 
exactly the thing I've been waiting for.
The wireless charging tech built inside the Powerplay 
mouse mat is proprietary to Logitech, and the company claims it took 
more than four years of research and development to make it a reality. I
 asked Logitech why it didn't go with something more ubiquitous like the
 Qi standard, and the answer I received was that it wouldn't have been 
possible to cover the whole surface (275mm x 320mm) of the pad with Qi. 
Corsair's Project Zeus concept
 does use Qi, but consigns it to just one corner of the pad, whereas the
 Logitech G Powerplay mouse pad will charge your mouse wherever it's 
positioned and no matter how it's moving.
 
      
    
    
  
  
I can't overstate just how ingenious and appropriate an 
application of technology this is. Conceptually, I love it already, and 
the only trace of skepticism I have is about whether it works quite as 
well as Logitech promises. There's no Mac compatibility listed, for one 
thing, and the idea of the wireless charging causing no interference to 
the wireless data transfer for the mouse to communicate with a PC 
certainly needs to be tested. If it works as advertised, though, I'd 
grab one of these Powerplay pads and never look back. It even comes with
 a choice of hard or cloth surface to suit your mousing preferences.
Alongside the Logitech G Powerplay, which is to be priced
 at $99.99 and released in August, Logitech has also announced the first
 two mice officially compatible with it: the G903 and G703. The G903 is a
 very modest upgrade from the G900 while the G703 is practically 
identical to the well liked G403; both of the two new models use the 
PMW3366 optical sensor and just add improved switches rated to last 
longer. The G903 will cost $149.99 and the G703 will be $99.99 when they
 go on sale later this month.
The article was published on : theverge 
 
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/57777485/Untitled.1511901265.jpg) 
Post a Comment