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Hugged to death w/in 10 mins.

I caught a glimpse of the page -- is there a lefty model? Or as with many left-right specific products do we get screwed?

From the site:

We now offer trackballs for left-handed ballers! It’s exactly identical to a right-handed trackball, but it’s for lefties. Celebrate! But note that the writing and the logo and all of that is actually mirrored!

What an unfortunate name. I don't get it, have some pride in your thing!

Looks like an awesome product though. Like sibling, as a lefty I would love to see a "mirrored" version of this product.

I do wonder about the general feel of the case. It's 3d printed yeah? Perhaps this is very dependent on the materials. But overall an open design will mean that people can iterate on this idea and share knowledge. A win-win for everyone involved!

What’s wrong with the name? It sounds cute.

Oh: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Ploopy

It sounds and looks like "poopy", and makes me think of poo.
I agree. Sure it’s fun, but some people will either be turned off by it as it brings up negative connotations, and it can impact word of mouth effects if people don’t want to recommend something that the other party might think sounds juvenile.
I'm shy about saying silly words, so I would never be able to recommend this product or talk about it.

There's a bunch of food items I won't order off a menu if the restaurant chose to give it some ridiculous name I can't say out loud. Same thing here.

Can anyone confirm if the trackball is actually ploopy? Looks like ordinary hard plastic from the pics.
I own one; it a normal FDM 3D print, with ridges and all. I assume PLA, but could be ABS.
I agree. I find the name off-putting too, and they have also embossed the product with name in big bold letters. If they like it, more power to them, but I would honestly be hesitant to own this trackball because of the logo on it.
Specialty mice aren’t quite as image-focused as social media, but it does give Mastodon’s “toot” a run for its money. There’s also a fine line between not being marketing-focused and deliberately sneering at the sensibilities of folks who culturally associate less with FOSS culture. Some day he might admit to himself that clinging to his juvenile sense of humor kept his product out of people’s hands and cash out of his pocket. The number of upvotes this product gets on HN indicates he should be selling a ton of them but I’ve only seen one or two comments from owners.
Not knocking this product, but I personally prefer a trackball on top with buttons to either side. My thumb get very stressed out using the "on the side" arrangement where the top I can vary how I interact with it more (hover hand, rest a finger on it, flick it with index/middle, etc).

~~Either~~ Both are preferable to the standard mouse for me, though!

I'm similar. I prefer a symmetrical trackball so I can alternate hands and give the other hand a rest. I have been happily using a Kensington Orbit [1] for many years now. It has a scroll ring surrounding the track ball which I also really like. Absolutely love this trackball!

[1] https://www.kensington.com/p/products/electronic-control-sol...

I have the Kensington Expert Mouse [1] which is just great.

[1] https://www.kensington.com/p/products/electronic-control-sol...

That looks pretty nice too although the angle of it concerns me a bit. I use a standing desk so it looks like it might require me to bend my wrists backwards a bit more than the Orbit. I might give it a try though.
Yeah, I used to use these, the angle is a problem. The Slimblade I think it's called is much better in that regard.
Same for me, although personally I'd prefer a mouse over thumb-wheel.

I've been using various versions of the Kensington Expert line for the past 20 years. I am on #3 and #4 now (one for home, one for the office). Unfortunately there aren't many good alternatives in this form factor, the X-keys one is probably closest. I am happy with the Experts for the most part just wish there was more competition.

Same here. For this reason, my preferred trackballs have been the L-Trac[0] and more recently the Gameball[1].

The former of those two is built like a tank but lacks buttons (though some models have jacks that allow you to add your own buttons), while the latter is more ergonomic and has more buttons. The Gameball’s capacitive scrolling is nice too.

[0]: https://www.amazon.com/CST2545-5W-Ambidextrous-Performance-E... [1]: https://www.gamingtrackball.com/

I switch in between both kinds of trackballs (as you say, thumb or finger) as well as using a regular mouse at times.

My reasoning is that I'm trying to avoid repetitive strain injuries, so by varying my position and the fingers doing the work, I'm basically giving everything time to rest.

Same. The Logitech Cordless Optical TrackMan is my favorite device. I wish they still made them (or something like it.)
I long for a modern Corless Optical Trackman. Last I checked the few you could find on ebay went for hundreds.
I think that’s one of the points of the Ploopy mice/trackballs. They are all open source, so it’s possible to reposition components (if you’re into 3D printing, etc…).

Maybe it won’t be long before someone does come up with a similar design.

Very much the same here. I had a Logitech thumb trackball that I used for a long time, but my thumb started to twitch uncontrollably and I had to drop it.

I was using it for CAD, so I used it quite a bit all day long, which may have something to do with it.

If your use case works with it, and you're not susceptible to this kind of RSI, thumb trackballs are great. I loved mine.

Interesting/clever flexible board design that eliminates the need for one cable. Never seen that before.

You can see it a bit more clearly on the sister product page: https://ploopy.co/mini-trackball/

Longtime trackball user. I'd totally buy one, but they don't sell it in a configuration I like. I wish they'd sell me everything except the shell. I have a 3D printer. I'd rather customize and print my own shell.

I mean, I guess I could get the kit, but then I have a random empty mouse that I need to do something with.

Agree - wish they'd sell the non-printable components as a kit and let me print the rest.
Ploopy has come up on HN before and I’m pretty sure similar complaints were made.

I’d happily buy the non printed parts too.

Did you try emailing them? Wouldn't be surprised if you could place a "custom order" since it seems a very small outfit (or maybe not, I don't know).
This simply reminds me of the absolute graveyard of Logitech M570s that I’m holding on to for some reason. A couple have worn out switches, others need cleaned. Love the thumb trackball.
I have one of these and it’s by far the most comfortable trackball I use. It took a bit of tweaking the sensitivity to get it to the point I like (it’s very sensitive out of the box) but the firmware’s all free so I can tweak it however I like :)
I wish I had a 3D printer, because my hands are too small for my ploopy (I have very small hands). Going back to my EX-G for now.
Ender 3 V2 - ~$250 fantastic product for the money
I've been a die-hard thumbball user for nearly 25 years; I'm still nursing my old-school wired 1999-era Logitech Trackman Wheel.

Ploopy's thumb trackball looks great! What does the customizable firmware get me? I've never considered "layers" on a pointing device, like a keyboard.

Well for one, it runs the same open-source firmware that most open-source mechanical keyboards use. You can alter anything you want about it, including things like the tracking of the ball, drag-to-scroll in firmware, button mapping, and indeed layers. It's running mainline QMK.
> What does the customizable firmware get me? I've never considered "layers" on a pointing device, like a keyboard.

I could see it as useful; although maybe not with these trackball designs.

I'm not sure what form factor you'd want for layers.

But, I could see stuff like "go desktop left/right", "prev/next tab", "skip video forward/back", "volume up/down" as things which it'd be neat to while casually using a computer, without needing hand on the keyboard.

Oh neat, it's been a while since I've checked in on this project! I hope they find enough success to move on to other configurations. I saw a nano version floating around at one point, which was literally just a ball without buttons.
I was looking at the archived version [0], and I had a question.

Regarding their PCB design (visible on the bottom of the page, with additional details here [1], could someone explain why the optic part is separated from the rest of the board by a long, wavy connection?

(I am trying to learn more about PCB design ideas and principles.)

Thanks!

[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20220313204334/https://ploopy.co... [1] https://github.com/ploopyco/thumb-trackball/blob/main/hardwa...

> Regarding their PCB design (visible on the bottom of the page, with additional details here [1], could someone explain why the optic part is separated from the rest of the board by a long, wavy connection?

I think the pcb has to be slightly bent to accommodate the angled position of the track ball. Making it like that helps alleviate stresses on the pcb.

If I where to guess it would be to act as a spring to push the sensor against the ball
Is this just a trackball, or is it a mouse too? It would seem like a combo (where the trackball or moving the whole thing moves the pointer) would be awesome! Every time I’ve tried a trackball, my thumb got really tired after a while.
It's just a trackball.

One of the things you want with trackballs is that they "grip" to the surface so it doesn't move easily, the exact opposite you'd want with a mouse, so you need some solution for that (removable bottom like the MX ergo?)

I agree it might be nice, but I think it's probably a niche in an already niche market.

Not directly related, but I have fond memories of finally getting a Kensington Expert trackball (the old big, white one) to work with mame versions of Missile Command, Marble Madness, Golden Tee Golf, etc.

There's something about the trackball oriented games that just really hit my nostalgia button harder than other games.

I bought an X-arcade which has dual joysticks and a center trackball. Just to play Marble Madness.
I tried thumballs for years and got never get into them - a fingerball (which ploopy also make) works better for me. I have been using an Elecom HUGE for about a year now: https://elecomus.com/web/product/3271/.
The HUGE is the only peripheral I liked so much that I bought a second one for home. Been using them for over 4 years now.
I have been using one for a few months after getting tired of throwing away M570s once a year because the switches wear out.

(By throwing out, I mean tossing in the closet in the hope that one day I'll get around to soldering on new switches.)

Out of the box it was way, way too sensitive. I had to turn down the DPI, which took a few hours of finagling with the firmware. Some of the documentation was a little sparse, and I chased down a few rabbit holes which got frustrating.

Now that it's configured it's mostly usable, but I still struggle with precision compared to the M570. I find myself a few times a week clicking the wrong icon on a bar, or the wrong item in a list. Or my hand tenses up because I'm working extra hard to hone in on the right place on the screen. These are problems that I never had with the old Logitech, and in fact, I still have a working one on the desk that I jump to occasionally when I need real precision.

The M570 has 3 little nylon-looking bearings that the trackball sits on. The Ploopy instead has 3 large wheel shaped rotators. Every once in awhile the trackball will seemingly catch a hitch on the rotators when I'm trying to make precise movements and I'm unable to get where I need it to go unless I make coarse adjustments to move the rotators off the hitch, then back a different path to where I was before, finally to make the precision movements I needed. Not the end of the world, but another minor annoyance. This has happened less lately so it's possible there was a "breaking in period" with the rotators.

Overall it's a decent device and after a few months I am mostly happy with it. Durability is TBD.

Does anyone know - is the Logitech MX Ergo more durable than the M570? I, too, have a pile of broken M570s and I'm not sure I want to spend more money on the upgrade if the result will be the same within a year or two.
I have had the same MX Ergo for a few years now; no issues. I went through several M570s before making the switch. In addition to durability I had constant signal issues with my M570s–lag, dropouts, etc–that I do not experience with my Ergo.
I was in the same boat, and I also now swear by the MX Ergo over the M570/M575. I have two complaints with it that (neither of which seems to be addressed by the MX Ergo+): the thing still charges with micro-USB (not a deal-breaker, but it's annoying that I need to keep an adapter or cable around for that one device), and that it's stuck on BT 3.0 (I'd prefer 5.0, as running trackball+keyboard+audio over BT from my old work laptop was enough to cause drop-outs, and 5.0 helps mitigate that).
I'm interested in broken M570s, dralley and matthiaswh, lmk if you would like to sell. :-)
I have had MX Ergo failing due to switches wearing out after ~3 years of use and several hundred hours of Factorio. Both MX Ergo and M570 share the same D2FC-F-7N switches, so durability should be similar. I've replaced the stock D2FC-F-7N with D2F-01F for over a year and half and it has been working great since.
Very similar experience here. I found I’d also prefer scrolling with my ring finger than thumb. I still need to make the DPI adjustment in firmware
> I have been using one for a few months after getting tired of throwing away M570s once a year because the switches wear out.

This seems crazy to me, yet it seems to be ubiquitous. Everybody I talk to about it says their computer mice wear out and have to be replaced after a few years. Meanwhile I've been using the same USB/optical Microsoft Intellimouse for twenty years and it shows no sign of quitting. I've used it hard too, I've dropped it on hardwood and tile floors more times than I can count and the rim of the plastic shell is ringed with microfractures of the plastic, yet it still holds together and never malfunctions.

I think more modern mice must be engineered to fail after a few years. That's the only way I can explain people going through two or three mice a decade when mine lasts several times as long despite the abuse I put it through.

Yes, they do, they are. It sucks. Logitech is the worst. I've bought some of their (not cheapest) mice and they all started double-clicking in 6-12 months!!! And when I tried to resolder switches on my G100 the tracks started to peel off the PCB - and I'm an experienced engineer. I ended up switching switches with a cheap A4Tech lying in a closet. And these still work. Shame on Logitech. In the era of M-SBF96 they were making reliable products.
Hm, yeah. It’s on a different timescale, but I’ve had the same Apple Magic Mouse for just about 6 years and it’s still going strong. At home my (wired) Logitech G502 has been going for longer (but I don’t have a convenient purchase date handy like “starting a job”). Annual mouse purchases do seem a bit crazy.

Here’s to hopefully finishing up the decade!

I ordered one of their Classic models a few weeks ago, it should be here Monday. (They just moved warehouses, so my order was delayed.) I'm really excited for it!

The trackball uses QMK firmware (https://qmk.fm), which is mostly known for powering open-source mechanical keyboards. Customizing it is a breeze, and it's got a whole lot of great functionality built-in too!

One of the big things that pushed me to Ploopy is the use of roller bearings, although now I see there's a ball-transfer-unit mod which is basically the ideal form of bearing for this: https://github.com/ploopyco/classic-trackball/tree/master/ha...

Total aside, but I always get a chuckle when mainstream publications have to attribute quotes to someone with a weird (or rude) Reddit username. Good to see you leaning in to this with your testimonials!
Maybe slightly off topic, but - looking at this mouse, the shape it has overall is exactly what I'm looking for ergonomically (not vertical, but slightly more slanted). Are there mice like this that have 3+ side buttons instead of a trackball?
I wish them all the luck in the world, but trackballs are bad for repetitive stress of the thumb joints and shouldn't be used by long term computer workers.
I had terrible RSI from mouse usage.

Switching to a thumb trackball resolved those issues.

I suspect it was the act of switching that was key, not the trackball itself. I had horrible pain a year or so ago due to working with the lovely designed Apple Magic Mouse for so long. Eventually, I learned that for me, I was better off switching between devices. So now I flip between a trackpad and two different mice. That’s what worked for me.
I also did that in the past. After a while, I had to switch to another one for the RSI to go away. Eventually I was switching between a regular mouse, a Logitech with the thumb ball, a Logitech with the finger ball, and a Wacom trackpad with pencil. I also found out the remedy was more in the switching than in anything else. For years now I use the regular mouse without switching to others.
I've been using thumb trackball consistently for 15 years now.

I don't think switching devices is what did it.

I did lower my pointing device usage overall at the same time, so that has a confounding effect.

This appears to have been hugged to death. Anybody got a link for an archived version?
I enjoy the foul language “no cheap shit.” Not quiet the level of the pit viper sunglasses site but close!