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the naos 7000 is a comfortable, ergonomic mouse. Its ridged design give you a place to rest your ring and pinky fingers, and overall build quality is very solid. The primary and secondary click panels are a little narrow for such a wide mouse, but you get used to it quickly, and the clicking mechanism itself is nicely responsive. The mouse wheel is sturdy and requires just the right amount of pressure to move from one click-stop to the next. The Naos 7000 doesn’t pack any surprising extra features, but it does have all the basics covered. It has two thumb buttons, which are nicely placed and have a good clicking action, and a pair of dpi-adjustment buttons on top, which select between three sensitivity profiles. The mouse is plug-and-play, but if you want to customize it you can download an application that lets you choose sensitivity levels, key bindings, and LED color. The Naos has onboard memory, so your settings are used even on another computer. The Naos is known for its optical sensor, which some people claim is superior for ultra-high-performance competitive gaming. We’ve never had any performance issues with high-end laser mice, and in general are more comfortable recommending them for most users. The Naos’s sensor is responsive, and offers an incredibly-strong-for-optical 7,000 dpi sensitivity, but we had major problems with surface detection. Unlike laser mice, which work well on almost any surface, the Naos was unusable on a number of common desk surfaces, and even on one of the hard-surface mousepads we tested it with.