| | Stanford Magazine > March/April 2002 > Feature Story > Mighty Mouse |
 | | The mouses evolution from the laboratory to the living room, as one of its designers puts it, is not well knowneven some Apple fanatics arent familiar with itbut it reveals something of the personalities of its designers, the Stanford program that trained them and even the history of Silicon Valley. |
 | | Hovey, the mouse projects informal head, says he hacked together the first conceptual prototype in a weekendusing the ball from a bottle of Ban Roll-On deodorant and a butter dish purchased at the Palo Alto Walgreens (the mouse parts store, he calls it). |
 | | The fact that the mouse was unobtrusive and natural is the result of a lot of work. Few users ever notice the heft of the cord, or the effect the connector linking the cord to the mouse has on the mouses agility, or the silence of the ball as it moves across the desk. |
| www.stanfordalumni.org /news/magazine/2002/marapr/features/mouse.html (3005 words) |