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Introducing: Kolink is a novelty, or if you have little money you should have no doubt

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After the introduction, you will not be surprised by this site. As I wrote, two keyboards are exactly the same. Interestingly, although they are really cheap pieces, the strength of pressing the buttons is very much hit. They move on a road of the right length, we don't feel hard on the lower end point either, so it would be especially good to type on them. It’s no accident I wrote the conditional mode because one thing is very much missing from them, and that is the rubber foot. All the feet are hard plastic and the keyboard is just a few decks, which makes them slide on the desk as if they were on a skating rink. Too bad for it, because I would have liked to keep one as a spare keyboard anyway.
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What was more sad was that this was the case with the desktop as well, because as it turned out, the keyboard was next to the extremely simple mouse than what I found in the simple cardboard. Both the keyboard and mouse have a USB port, and the length of the cables is adequate for both.
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There is no particular problem with the two demonstration mice. Noticeably simple structures, two traditional buttons, a wheel that also functions as a third button. The sensor is a traditional optical solution, at this price level we are still looking for laser detection in vain. What’s gratifying is that the manufacturer promises 1000 DPI resolution for sensing, which means we’ll get perfect performance on any mouse pad. I tried them without a mouse pad, simply on the table top, but I still didn't get a glitch in the movement of the mouse pointer. Of course, there is a difference between a tabletop and a tabletop, so I invisibly dare not promise that everyone will have a similar experience.
 

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.