Analyst Predicts Mouse Extinction In Five Years

Andy Chalk

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Nov 12, 2002
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Analyst Predicts Mouse Extinction In Five Years


The ubiquitous little electromechanical beast known as the computer mouse is headed for extinction, according to technology consultancy firm Gartner [http://www.gartner.com/], which has predicted the demise of the device within the next five years.

The advent of "gestural controllers" like those used with the BBC [http://www.wii.com]. "The mouse works fine in the desktop environment but for home entertainment or working on a notebook it's over," he said, adding that new interactive controllers designed for games are driving a whole new generation of interfaces.

"You've got Panasonic [http://www.panasonic.com] showing forward facing video in the home entertainment environment," Prentice said. "Instead of using a conventional remote control you hold up your hand and it recognizes you have done that."

"Canon [http://www.sony.com] and other video and photographic manufacturers are using face recognition that recognizes your face in real time. And it recognizes even when you smile," he continued. "You even have emotive systems where you can wear a headset and control a computer by simply thinking, and that's a device set to hit the market in September. This is all about using computer power to do things smarter."

Of course, not everyone agree with Prentice's ideas. Logitech [http://www.logitech.com/], the world's biggest manufacturer of mice and keyboards, has sold over 500 million mice over the past 20 years, according to Senior Vice President Rory Dooley, who said, "The death of the mouse is greatly exaggerated." He agreed that computer and gaming interfaces were changing and growing, pointing out that Logitech was manufacturing many alternative control devices, but claimed the mouse was nowhere near the end of the line.

"People have been talking about convergence for years. Today's TV works as a computer and today's computer works as a TV," he said. "The devices we use have been modified for our changing lifestyles but it doesn't negate the value of the mouse." Dooley also pointed out that much of the developing world had yet to get online, leaving a large, untapped market for conventional controllers that will result in increased mouse usage rather than any decline. "There are around one billion people online but the world's population is over five billion," he said.

Despite his dire predictions for the mouse, Prentice admitted that at least one piece of old-school hardware is going to be with us for a long time to come. "For all it's faults, the keyboard will remain the primary text input device," he said. "Nothing is easily going to replace it. But the idea of a keyboard with a mouse as a control interface is the paradigm that I am talking about breaking down."




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Feb 13, 2008
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Let me guess, Gartner also predict that people will be travelling in flying cars by that time, and that Duke Nukem will soon be out.
 

Johnn Johnston

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May 4, 2008
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And he also predicts that the Cthulu Mithra will manifest itself.

People were saying that the mouse would be phased out by 2000.
 

BobisOnlyBob

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Nov 29, 2007
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Double his timescale and I think he might have a point. In the next 5 years, we'll see smug bastards who are currently saying "I use gestures in Firefox" saying "I don't use a mouse".

Mice will continue to be used until everyone who's learned to use them has died, but as for mainstream acceptance of an alternative to mice, 5-10 years from now sounds about right.
 

Echolocating

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Jul 13, 2006
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My guess is that Gartner was paid by some company who'll be releasing alternative control devices in the next 2 years or so. Why would I want to buy the Brain-O-Tron 3000 controller? Because the computer mouse will be obsolete in a few years! The sky is falling! Buy our product!
 

Blayze

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Dec 19, 2007
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Mice will become obsolete when keyboards do, not before. And I hardly think keyboards will be replaced by things that act based on your thoughts. If they did, most people would have to strain mentally to do anything more complicated than a slight movement of the mouse cursor. Assuming programs like Dragon Dictate could actually pick up on what you were thinking and then transfer those words onto the computer screen.

It'd make note-taking in front of your boss a nightmare, for one. You'd spend so much time trying not to think of how they're a wanker than you'll see "WANKER" on the screen in size 96 font. Bolded, of course.

And then there's the problem of the transcribed sentences themselves. Somehow, I don't think any business would be impressed by a program's ability to put the phrase "Blah blah fiscal shit made a mistake undo undo UNDO DAMN IT STUPID PIECE OF SHIT" onto the screen.

Mice ain't dying. Keyboards ain't dying. They're the simplest and most effective way we have of providing computers with input. Tele-whatever ain't going to surpass that.
 

SinisterDeath

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Nov 6, 2006
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I agree, as long as the keyboard is in exsitance, the mouse will exist to.

But for an analyst, he seems to such as an economics.
As long as Demand for the mouse Exists, The mouse will sell. It doesn't matter if there are only 500 people in the world who like mice, it'll exist (at a premium probably) but considering how MANY of us grew up with the ol' keyboard & mouse, That demand will probably last for another 60 years, cause you know these youngin whippersnappers will get into ANY fad these days, even those 'devices' that read your 'thoughts' or 'emotions', or 'facial recognition', cause its the 'cool thing' to do.
People don't wear baggy pants because its fun trying to pull them up above there knees every 5 seconds. ;)
 

aRealGuitarHero707

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May 19, 2008
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damn i feel so retarded right now... i thought he was talking about real mice

like the ones who eat cheese and everything

:(
 

Jumplion

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Mar 10, 2008
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But...how could i possibly copy and paste the porn sit-I mean halarious YouTube videos onto my blog? Hang on, i've got to right click and save this awesome picture here. Okay, now that that's done i'm just gonna highlight this message and make sure to copy it so i won't lose it if my computer goes badonk.

Wait....
 

ElArabDeMagnifico

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Dec 20, 2007
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I'm trying hard to hold my laughter - but if what we are getting is better than a mouse then who cares? He's greatly exaggerating their death with the "5 year" lifespan because he acts like the motion sensing capabilities have been perfected - we're far from it.
 

shatnershaman

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May 8, 2008
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But I like the mouse! Its something for my cat to play with.... er I mean copy and paste porn....yea that's what I meant.
 

Broken Blade

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Nov 29, 2007
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I use a trackpad rather than a mouse (and have for about? oh, seven years or so), but even I don't see this coming true. At least for a while.
 

iamnotincompliance

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Apr 23, 2008
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Come on, I just upgraded to a laser mouse earlier this year! I'm not ready for another paradigm shift!

iamnotincompliance: gaming with a ball mouse 1998-2008.

And the only reason I got rid of it was because it died. Anyway, touchscreens are never going to replace mice because there will always be people like me: people who hate it when their screens are dirty, especially when it's fingerprints. The idea of dragging my finger across glass while playing solitaire has no appeal whatsoever, and first person shooters would boring as all hell (I think that already, but I digress). Touching my screen and talking to myself "You die. Okay, you die. Now you die"... I'd be leaning on my other hand attempting to relieve myself of the tedium.

Motion control: someday, perhaps, when it's perfected (as ElArabDeMagnifico points out), and when everyone has truly massive screens to take advantage of it (otherwise, you're waggling a thingy mere inches from the screen, and may as well be touching it), but certainly not in five years.

Mind control: cutting edge technology that, again, when perfected, may someday do in both touchscreens and thingy-waggling (there's something I never thought I'd type), but even when that day comes, it'll need years for the price point to come down before it'll be a true competitor.

Conclusion, I'm inclined to agree with Logitech on this. On the other hand, they changed the G15 color scheme from blue to orange, so maybe they don't know everything.

[EDIT] Holy shit, I didn't even notice that incredibly wrong bastard also used "paradigm." I was just attempting to be a smart ass.
 

Flour

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Mar 20, 2008
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I've tried to think of a way to replace the mouse for how I use the computer, I typed, edited and deleted huge walls of text, nothing really fit for what I tried to say and I tried for nearly 1 hour. This will have to do, I'm not happy with it but I no longer care.

Nothing will replace the mouse for me as a gamer.
FPS: I put my crosshair on target while looking where cover is, new targets are or if there's not some hazard near me
RPG: Same as FPS, I look everywhere while clicking on my target.
RTS: Again, I look at my targets while ordering my units to move somewhere else.

Nothing will replace the mouse for me as a computer user.
I can move the cursor out of the way, move my right hand 10 centimeters to the left and use it to type.
I know where things are on my screen eliminating the need to look where I click.

The things I've typed here are arguments against both motion sensors and eye tracking, both are great and will help people that need it, but a mouse will never be replaced by them.
 

stompy

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Jan 21, 2008
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They have to perfect the technology first... which'll take some time. Somehow, I think the mouse and keyboard will last me for more that 5 years. You know, just a feeling.
 

SilentHunter7

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Nov 21, 2007
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I have no desire to re-learn how to do things, and will completely resist doing so. Therefore his argument is invalid.