Microsoft Ergo Keyboards (and why)
I've owned several low-end and middle-end keyboards, but my three favorites have all been from Microsoft, and my top two are both ergo (Natural Keyboard Elite, which is my current backup, and my Wireless Keyboard 6000 V.3, which I use now).
Having spent a LOT of time using computer keyboards (and also growing up with a major addiction to pinball machines) hand cramps and carpal-tunnel syndrome can indeed be a real bear. (Ever have your fingers literally "cramp up" just as you're going on a roll? And by "cramping up" I mean literally lock straight from tip to wrist!) Ergonomic keyboards (such as my pet NKE and the Wireless 6000) pretty much put such problems to rest, no matter how much time I spend whaling away. However, I'm also somewhat of a cheapskate; I won't overspend if avoidable. (I picked up two Wirelss 6000s at, of all places, TJMaxx, for less than the cost of one almost anywhere else.)
The same thinking applies to mice (both wired and wireless); I currently have the Logitech V220 Cordless Notebook Mouse (despite the "notebook" in the name, it's equally at home on desktops, which is where my V220 gets used). Amazingly, it can use either Logitech OR Microsoft's mouse software (I use IntelliPoint 7.0 with my V220 with zero issues). The only quibble I have with the V220 is that it tends to over-track in games (too sensitive, as opposed to not sensitive enough), which is not a quibble I expected to have with a wireless/cordless mouse (especially since most complaints with wireless mice are of a lack of sensitivity). However, the over-track problem can be compensated with (remember, I did call it a quibble) adjustments in the software; I'm more used to mechanical wired mice, as opposed to any sort of optical/laser mouse (the V220 is an optical/laser mouse, as opposed to mechanical/ball-type mouse, in addition to being wireless/cordless, and optical and laser mice are more sensitive than their mechanical counterparts).
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"Mighty Mouse, V. 2.0"
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