Any good WIRED Ergonomic mouse?

I've tried two wired vertical mouses, the Logitech MX Vertical and the Anker Ergonomic Optical, my choice would be the Anker, my hand and wrist adjusted more naturally, I used the MX for a long time before buying the Anker and I kind of developed a bit of a pain in the shoulder and upper arm. Perhaps it had to do with the height of the table I use, but in any case no more carpal tunnel pain.
 
The Ergo M575 can be used with the included "USB unifying dongle" from logitech, which use radio signal instead of bluetooth.

It's like having a virtual wire.
As I can figure, in terms of radiation, bluetooth and radio signals are similar or even the same thing.
Chat GPT:
In conclusion, both Bluetooth and RF wireless mice are similar in terms of radiation, with Bluetooth generally emitting slightly less due to its lower power requirements and advanced interference management.
 
As I can figure, in terms of radiation, bluetooth and radio signals are similar or even the same thing.
Chat GPT:

That's good to know, but we can't really hide from radio signals, so ultimately whether it's a bluethooth/radio or wired mouse it doesn't really matter, since we're fried every day by radio waves?
 
Your only option is to buy expensive LIGHT WEIGHT mice! For example:
Microsoft Business Optical Mouse = excellent at 93 grams because its super light weight with top-notch buttons, thus it comfortably slides on a shiny table cloth or a book cover = on everything with minimum wrist strain. And its accurate for 3D modeling and precision selection!

I recently bought an iMICE T91, which is a blatant Chinese copy of a gamer mouse ReDragon (heavy too): it has excellent buttons - wired of course - but it is HEAVY at 151 +5 g and requires very pricey super-slider mousepads. I could only acceptably slide it on my Wacom Intuos 3's special, bumped plastic package.

Laura's pricey recommendation is also heavy at 145 g, very probably needs a pricey super-slidy mousepad too. Especially if you work with complex software, - like CAD - where you need precise minute motion and selection of lots of 3D engineering components close to each other on blueprints.
 

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