PCWorld (USA)

Microsoft’s adaptive PC peripheral­s are some of its coolest ever

Who wouldn’t want an Adaptive Mouse with a variety of custom “tails” that can be swapped out?

- BY MARK HACHMAN

It’s very likely that the Microsoft Adaptive Mouse, Microsoft Adaptive Hub, and Microsoft Adaptive Buttons are the coolest PC peripheral­s Microsoft has ever made.

The three PC peripheral­s were introduced at Microsoft’s Ability Summit, which showcases and elevates the ways the company is trying to make its technologi­es more accessible for those with disabiliti­es. But what’s so fascinatin­g about the new peripheral­s is that they can be universall­y beneficial to a variety of users. For instance, the Adaptive Mouse is actually modular, so that it can be swapped between right-handed and left-handed users simply by switching the thumb support.

All three peripheral­s will be released later this year for an as-yet-undisclose­d price, Microsoft said.

Like many Microsoft hardware designs, the new peripheral­s build on work Microsoft engineers have performed previously. In 2018, Microsoft debuted the Xbox Adaptive

Controller ( fave.co/3sxxpyn) at that year’s E3. The peripheral featured large, accessible buttons, as well as 20 3.5mm jacks on the rear of the device for users to plug in third-party accessibil­ity controls. Last year, Microsoft announced the Surface Adaptive Kit ( fave. co/3nbn8hj) alongside its Surface Pro 8. The Kit included keycap labels and stickers to highlight keyboard commands and indicate ports—useful for all users, not just those with disabiliti­es.

MICROSOFT ADAPTIVE MOUSE

In a demonstrat­ion in advance of the Ability Summit, Microsoft’s Gabi Michel, director of accessible accessorie­s, showed how the Microsoft Adaptive Mouse is really just the “front” of a typical mouse, with a squarish shape, two buttons, and a mouse wheel. The back is more of a structural addition, known as a “tail.” At the bottom of the mouse is a small “eject” button that allows the back to come off.

Essentiall­y, this allows the Adaptive Mouse to be clipped into any number of custom frames, or “tails”—even those a user can 3D print. The thumb support itself can be swapped to either side, providing the ergonomic benefits of a right-handed or left-handed mouse, but the flexibilit­y of an ambidextro­us device.

“When we developed and launched the adaptive controller…all of those learnings, all of that interface with the community continued even after launch,” Michel said. “Over that time, we continued to listen to the community. And that all influenced what has become the new adaptive accessorie­s for Microsoft: the mouse, the hub, and the buttons.”

MICROSOFT ADAPTIVE HUB AND MICROSOFT ADAPTIVE BUTTON

The Microsoft Adaptive Hub serves as a control box of sorts, connecting wirelessly via Bluetooth to up to four Adaptive Buttons as well as standard 3.5mm assistive tech switches, Microsoft said.

The Microsoft Adaptive Button is as intriguing as the Microsoft Adaptive Mouse,

or even more so. While it looks like nothing more than a giant button, it’s actually a control that can rock into any of eight directions. Those digital inputs can be used for multiple functions, as eight discrete inputs. Naturally, each input can be programmed for something as simple as a keyboard shortcut or as complex as a long macro.

The Button controller can also be “replaced” with a custom “topper,” too. Toppers can include, say, a traditiona­l or custom joystick or a two-button input, executives said.

The Adaptive Button hearkens back to the Surface Dial, another PC peripheral that could be used as an adjunct control for adjusting the zoom on a tablet like the Surface Pro 8 or Surface Studio. Microsoft now calls the Surface Dial the Surface Dial for Business ( fave.co/3lbjwdx), priced at $100.

Microsoft’s Ability Summit will also show some of the improvemen­ts that Microsoft has made to its software and operating system, including Narrator, Focus Sessions ( fave. co/3n4zubp), and the newly introduced Live Captions feature. The latter capability, currently part of the Windows Insider Program, expands on the live captioning found within Microsoft Teams, Youtube, and elsewhere on the web, and applies it within Windows to videos that users have stored on a hard drive.

The Microsoft Edge browser, for its part, was designed with Immersive Reader to eliminate distractio­ns, as well as a read-aloud feature; in February, Microsoft added the capability for Edge to autosugges­t alt-text captions describing images found on a webpage.

Still, it’s the new Adaptive Mouse, Hub, and Buttons that are most intriguing. If a one-touch peripheral that can be used as a shortcut to various macros appeals to you, then Microsoft’s new Adaptive hardware is worth keeping tabs on.

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 ?? ?? Microsoft’s Gabi Michel shows how the Microsoft Adaptive Mouse can slide into a “tail.”
Microsoft’s Gabi Michel shows how the Microsoft Adaptive Mouse can slide into a “tail.”
 ?? ?? Microsoft Adaptive Hub (background) and the Microsoft Adaptive Button.
Microsoft Adaptive Hub (background) and the Microsoft Adaptive Button.

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