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Friday, June 5, 2009

ValueRays® Warm Mouse Pad Giveaway




The ValueRays Warm Mouse Pad is a USB Heated Computer Mouse Pad delivering infrared heat to the mouse pad surface. The surface of the heated mouse pad is a warm temperature. It's not hot and is completely safe for you, your computer and your mouse. A standard mouse pad's surface is cold and creates an uncomfortable resting area for your wrists and hands. It's constructed with a carbon heating element to create infrared heat. Infrared heat is a deep penetrating heat and is a source of healing warmth. Sore, stiff and painful joints and muscles respond positively to the use of infrared heat therapy. Infrared heat helps improve blood circulation and can help in reducing the onset of computer-related hand injuries like carpal tunnel syndrome. Continue Reading & Enter the Giveway.......



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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Mama's Money Savers has Warm Advice for YOU!


Hey Fellow Bloggers - Check this out:
A company called "Warm Mouse, Heated Keyboard" is looking for some mommy bloggers to sign up for her affiliate program. By doing so, you will also be featured on her Partners page (Check out my button there). I was the first one, and Anna asked me if I could mention it to all of you guys! So if you have a blog and don't mind featuring a link to her awesome store, then definitely check it out! You can click below to sign up, then scroll all the way to the bottom and you will see details on her Affiliate program and how to sign up. It is quick, easy, and painless, I promise.

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Sunday, March 29, 2009

Heart Warming Product - Special Needs Computer Mouse | Foot Pedal and Mouse


from kidsdesk

If you have a special needs child or teach special education, check out this innovative foot pedal & mouse combination. This foot pedal and mouse enables students to type and perform other mouse functions with their feet. It was designed specifically for students with special needs. It can be utilized for computer learning activities and using literacy software. When you are able take advantage of classroom technology and provide tools like the foot pedal and mouse for students with special needs, you are helping make learning a little bit easier. We continue to look for products that are innovative and can improve learning environments.

Some of the features included in the foot and pedal mouse for students include:

* Foot pedal performs left / right / double click functions just as on a conventional mouse
* Connectivity via USB port
* Foot mouse moves cursor
* Five buttons A, B, C, D and E (red and yellow) can be programmed as keyboard shortcuts
* Horizontal roller allows the user to use their feet to scroll through windows or web pages

One school district we contacted indicated that they have strict technology standards for special needs students and they are looking at different ways to improve learning environments and give students the latest in classroom technology. It has been reported that students do notice the change and seem to be taking to these innovative solutions. This is good news and we are proud to offer products that will improve the quality of education for these students. If you are interested in learning more about this and other products featured, please visit KidsDesk.net. Have a great weekend!

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Mouse Potato Vs. Couch Potato

Potato Mouse
Photo by Patricia Denis, Artist.



Too Much Time Watching TV? You may be a Couch Potato
Posted by thanhlt

Some unusual words describe how a person spends his or her time. For example, someone who likes to spend a lot of time sitting or lying down while watching television is sometimes called a couch potato. A couch is a piece of furniture that people sit on while watching television.

Robert Armstrong, an artist from California, developed the term couch potato in nineteen-seventy-six. Several years later, he listed the term as a trademark with the United States government. Mister Armstrong also helped write a funny book about life as a full-time television watcher. It is called the “Official Couch Potato Handbook.”

Couch potatoes enjoy watching television just as mouse potatoes enjoy working on computers. A computer mouse is the device that moves the pointer, or cursor, on a computer screen. The description of mouse potato became popular in nineteen-ninety-three. American writer Alice Kahn is said to have invented the term to describe young people who spend a lot of time using computers.

Too much time inside the house using a computer or watching television can cause someone to get cabin fever. A cabin is a simple house usually built far away from the city. People go to a cabin to relax and enjoy quiet time.

Cabin fever is not really a disease. However, people can experience boredom and restlessness if they spend too much time inside their homes. This is especially true during the winter when it is too cold or snowy to do things outside. Often children get cabin fever if they cannot go outside to play. So do their parents. This happens when there is so much snow that schools and even offices and stores are closed.

Some people enjoy spending a lot of time in their homes to make them nice places to live. This is called nesting or cocooning. Birds build nests out of sticks to hold their eggs and baby birds. Some insects build cocoons around themselves for protection while they grow and change. Nests and cocoons provide security for wildlife. So people like the idea of nests and cocoons, too.

The terms cocooning and nesting became popular more than twenty years ago. They describe people buying their first homes and filling them with many things. These people then had children.

Now these children are grown and have left the nest. They are in college. Or they are married and starting families of their own far away. Now these parents are living alone without children in their empty nest. They have become empty nesters.

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If you or someone you know is a Mouse Potato, visit the Mouse Potato Blog.

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Heated Computer Keyboard Pad for Ergonomic Support


A Heated Computer Keyboard Pad is a good partner for the Heated Mouse. They both provide infrared "deep healing" heat to your mouse hand and keyboard hands. See links below for online resources.

Everything is about comfort these days. With the amount of time we sit in front of a compute screen, it's about time we do something good for ourselves. There's enough said about the computer-related hand injuries like carpal tunnel, repetitive strain and cumulative stress, but what about creating some "real" comfort for our computer keyboard area?


The keyboard hands, wrists and fingers do more than type. Actually, the keyboard arms do a lot of elbow-perching on the desk top when we sit and read the screen. Elbows get tired and sore from the desk's hard surface. This can be remedied by using a warm keyboard pad in front of the computer keyboard.


The warm pad plugs into the USB port and provides a steady flow of low-heat. Wrist, hands, arms and fingers rest on the soft, sponge covered pad at the perfect height in front of the keyboard. The only part of the ergonomic equation not getting much attention these days is the computer keyboard. Sure, there are many ergonomic keyboards with strange shapes and designs, but the cost of them prohibit a test drive for most of us. We purchase a new computer, and a standard keyboard is included. We get used to using a standard keyboard and stick with it until something new comes along.

If wrists and hands remain on the desk top or on the keyboard itself, it can become quite uncomfortable to type. The desk and the keyboard surfaces are cold. It doesn't take very long for the wrists and hands to feel the chill. It can actually make your entire body feel cold. Cold hands when using the computer are uncomfortable and unproductive.

A value-added item to provide warmth and support is a pheated computer keyboard wrist pad. One of the warm keyboard pad designs can be put into the microwave to heat. The warmth lasts about 15 minutes. Although novel, the practicality of this style of heated keyboard pad is not practical for most.

An USB (universal serial bus) connected keyboard pad seems to be the best solution for adding warmth and ergonomic support while keyboarding. A heated keyboard pad connects to the computer and draws a low voltage of electricity providing warmth to the pad's surface. The keyboard pad consists of a cloth cover and a soft sponge-like interior. The arms and wrists rest on the pad at just the right height over the keyboard. The surface of the pad delivers a steady flow of heat. Hands never touch the keyboard or the desk's surface.

The remarkable component of the USB heated keyboard pad is its healing qualities. The heating element is made of a carbon fiber which produces infrared heat. Infrared heat has been used for many years as a source of healing. The most familiar and natural source of infrared heat is the sun. A heated keyboard pad using a carbon fiber delivers infrared heat without the harmful UV rays of the sun.

Research shows 20-30 minutes of infrared heat treatment daily can improve blood circulation through the blood vessels and reduce symptoms related to RSI (repetitive stress injury). People who suffer from poor circulation, arthritis, diabetes and Raynaud's welcome warmth throughout the year to deal with cold, painful joints and muscle tension. By using an infrared heated computer keyboard pad, arms, wrists and hands are ergonomically supported in front of the keyboard, and they are kept warm. Plus, the soft pad is a comfortable resting place for arms and elbows.

Heated computer products are somewhat new to the computer accessories market. A warm mouse, heated mouse pad and warm, heated keyboard pad are just the beginning of heated ergonomic computer work aids available today. With the continued use of the computer, and the advancements of technology, we'll probably see many more heated computer gadgets invented. USB heated computer products are an economical and energy-efficient way to provide warmth and ergonomic support while using the computer.
Source:

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Friday, March 27, 2009

The Ergonomic Computer Mouse

The ValueRays® USB Heated Ergonomic Computer Mouse


From ChristiaNet


Purchasing an ergonomic computer mouse could prove to be a major investment in good health. While the device has changed somewhat over the years, this lowly technological tool was invented over forty years ago and has only recently begun to see a face lift to its original design. Those changes are in large part due to health concerns that have arisen around the repetitive use of this pointing device and its impact on the muscles and wrist. As more and more workers spend the greater part of the work day facing a computer monitor with keyboard and mouse close by, the repetitive motions needed to manipulate these tools begin to take their toll. In the decades that have passed since the PC became a part of everyday life, the words "carpel tunnel" have become very familiar to workers and physicians alike. New designs that have made this simple device less hazardous to the health of the user have become popular. The wireless computer mouse has also become a popular option and can feature the same kind of ergonomic design elements.

Some of the health concerns that have come to the forefront concerning the use of these mice belong under the heading of cumulative trauma disorders. Simply put, this means that the repetitive nature of movement that is required to operate these devices can cause serious trauma to the muscles and joints. The need to modify the work site has resulted in the development of the ergonomic computer mouse. Because the original design of these tools tended to keep the wrist at an awkward angle, the development of wrist rests helped to reduce injury. The speed of the computer mouse can also be a determining factor in the development of carpal tunnel disease or repetitive stress disorders. If the device is set at too low a speed, extra effort and repetition are required to use the tool. This problem presents one of the simpler and more economical work station fixes. Some of the warning signs associated with the cumulative trauma disorders and carpal tunnel disease are persistent pain, a deficiency or weakness in the ability to grip objects, numbness, dexterity loss, spasms or muscle cramps.

Whether in the market for a standard or a wireless computer mouse, there are a wide variety of ergonomic designs that promote ease of use and maximum comfort for the user. These mice come in a variety of shapes and styles. Some have the vertical appearance of a gear shift or a video game control, while others have more of a rectangular and upright design. Because the older technology required the user to turn the forearm so that the palm can face down toward the mouse, extra pressure is put on the wrist and forearm. Some of the newer designs allow the user to rest the wrist and click with the thumb. In addition, optical tracking technology allows for more accuracy and smoothness in use. Since hands are not all the same size, one size of mouse does not fit all users. The ergonomic computer mouse generally comes in a variety of sizes, allowing the user to find the fit that is most comfortable for them.

Most of these devices also offer wireless technology, making it possible for the ergonomically minded consumer to purchase a wireless computer mouse that also protects them from workspace health issues such as repetitive stress disorders or carpal tunnel disease. In addition to better control and ease of use, many of these new mice also offer a vertical scroll feature that works more precisely than the old fashioned and awkward scrolling wheel. These products also are usually available in both left handed and right handed models. Traditional mice can require uncomfortable movements such as continually pressing down on the right button while scrolling down to select text. Many of the newer mice offer a click lock feature that eliminates the need for this uncomfortable movement. Whatever choice a consumer might make in this area, finding a device that will prevent future health problems is an important priority. The Bible talks about the gift of health. "Why art thou cast down, O my soul? And why art thou disquieted within me? Hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise him, who is the health of my countenance, and my God." (Psalm 42:11)

Another type of ergonomic computer mouse is the no hands device. These mice allow the user to work the pointer function with their feet. While eliminating the awkward wrists positions associated with traditional mice, these mice also remove the need for wasted motion as the hand goes back and forth between the keyboard and the mouse. The user saves motions and is able to keep their eyes focused on the monitor. These hands free models generally come with two foot pedals, one to control curser movements and the other to control clicks. Wrist rests and pads can also encourage the user to keep the wrist in a more relaxed position.

There are other options beyond the wireless computer mouse or the ergonomic computer mouse. Some businesses are investing in special software that reminds workers to momentarily stop and stretch. This programmable software periodically appears on the monitor screen and leads employees in brief stretching and relaxation exercises. The thinking behind such products is that encouraging workers to stop and stretch will not only reduce injury due to repetitive stress issues, but will also increase productivity and employee efficiency. The employer can decide how often these mini breaks take place and can choose from a library of possible stretching exercises.

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Arthritis Hand Pain? ValueRays® Heated Mouse

Arthritis pain and stiff joints make it difficult to use the computer mouse and keyboard. With the help of infrared heat, a regular optical mouse is transformed into an infrared heated therapeutic healing device!


ValueRays® Warm Mouse heats to a warm 99-104 degrees fahrenheit. Just plug the USB into a port and within a few minutes the computer mouse is toasty warm. When finished using the mouse, turn the heat off on a switch located conveniently on the USB cord.


The heated mouse is new, it's novel and it's available online at authorized resellers. Enjoy FREE SHIPPING + NO SALES TAX only at these locations:






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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

A warmer story about the demise of the computer mouse

Touch screens are useful for hand held devices, but think about the RSI (repetitive strain injury) one would experience if we did not have the computer mouse. Can you imagine reaching over the desktop to touch screen all your functions? I'd be bed-ridden in about a week! I think the warmer thought about this mouse story ending is this.... the computer mouse is here to stay for a very long time for all desk top computer users.

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Death of the computer mouse? - Wii & iPhone show a different future



By Dave Parrack
from Tech Blorge


There are an estimated one billion people hooked up to the Internet around the world, and the vast majority of those people will use a computer to do so. And what comes hand in hand with a computer? The humble mouse, a peripheral essential to doing almost anything on a computer, but which is very rarely cited for being the marvel that it is. And according to some, the mouse could be on its way out.

This year marks the 40 year anniversary for the mouse, with Dr Douglas Engelbart inventing it while working for the Stanford Research Institute in 1968. Unfortunately for him, he never received a penny for his invention, and the patent ran out in 1987, just before the computer revolution really hit the mainstream.

At this point in time, the mouse is utterly indispensable, being used by millions of people all around the world. However, there are the beginnings of some new technological advances around, which have lead some to predict the death of the mouse in the next 3-5 years. According to the BBC, a Gartner analyst, thinks new ways of interacting with computers, and technology, will take over in the very near future, and make the mouse completely obsolete.


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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Warm memories from our pad to yours.... The Mouse Turns 40!

The First Mouse

Mouse Inventor Doug Engelbart

We've come a long way over the past 40 years. Mouse technology has become mult-faceted and mouse pads are multi-functional. Take the warm mouse pad as a good example. It has a 4-port USB hub and a mouse pad surface providing infrared heat. How comfy does that sound? For more details about the warm mouse pad and warm mouse, visit any of these sites: IGMproducts, ValueRays, Warm Mouse Heated Keyboard.

The mouse turns 40

By Martin Veitch
NetworkWorld.com - Southborough,MA,USA


On December 8, 2008, the computer mouse turned 40 and, like many of us who reach that totemic and solemn age, the unappreciated little fellow next to your keyboard will doubtless take the opportunity to reflect on some ups and downs, roads not taken, bridges burned and opportunities scorned. But he'll also doubtless also raise a glass and say 'Well, at least I'm still around'.

On 9 December, 1968, Hugo Montenegro's theme from The Good, The Bad And The Ugly topped the US charts. Perhaps Doug Engelbart heard it as he drove towards a convention centre in San Francisco to give a presentation to show 1000 attendees the first demonstration of the mouse. Looking a little like a presenter of The Twilight Zone, he showed how a mouse could be used to control a cursor (but referred to by Engelbart and cohorts as a bug) to move around blocks of text. The mouse was patented but the patent terms ran out in 1987, according to Wikipedia, just a few years before it became an essential part of the personal computing world.

The mouse was popularised by the rise of the WIMP or GUI, first on the Xerox Star, later on Apple systems and subsequently on Windows PCs. A little like its traditional partner in crime the QWERTY keyboard, for much of its life people have talked about what will replace it, but trackballs, touchpads, digitisers, touchscreens and pens have largely been seen off and most of us still find the keyboard/mouse combination as the most effective way to operate a desk-based computer.

As computer designs have morphed it is quite remarkable that the mouse is still going strong and appearing in a wide and sometimes bizarre variety of wired and wireless, single and multi-button formats from ingenious companies like Logitech.

Gartner's Steve Prentice contends that the mouse could be replaced by a new paradigm and certainly it is true that the success of the iPhone, the Wii and other products hint that the way we interact with computers is changing quickly towards a world of interpreted gestures. However, it would not be completely surprising if the mouse were to be still here in another four decades so long as having a quick, cheap efficient way of manipulating text and other screen objects is required. After all, as the greetings card industry never tires of telling us, life begins at 40.
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Can't get enough heat for your mouse hand? Try a ValueRays® Warm Mouse!


i-GlobalMall.com, Inc. launched IGMproducts.com in mid-2008 making the transition from a fashion accessories supplier to computer accessories. By October, IGMproducts.com launched the Mouse Hand Warmer® blanket -- a product to keep the mouse hand covered while using the computer. By new year, and with the help of encouraging Press, ValueRays® launched USB Infrared Heated Computer Accessories in January 2009. Manufacturing of the Warm Mouse, Heated Mouse Pad, Heated Computer Keyboard and USB heated Mouse Hand Warmer is underway. The first of several IGMproducts will be available online at IGMproducts.com in early April.

IGMproducts.com offers the best prices and free shipping for all their high-quality merchandise. To learn more about the value of shopping online at IGMproducts, please visit their website.




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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Cold Hand Pain: Warm mouse, heated mouse pad & heated computer keyboard

Mouse Hand Warmer & Warm Mouse & Warm Mouse Pad & Heated Computer Keyboard

Cold hands when using a computer are a common symptom for many people. People who use nicotine and alcohol report having cold hands because blood vessels open less when nicotine or alcohol is present in the blood. People who suffer from poor circulation of the hands experience cold, numb hands and fingers when they are using the computer.

Poor ciculation may or may not be associated with a medical condition. The medical conditions known to have symptoms of cold hands are: Buerger's disease, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, Arthritis, Raynaud's phenomenon, de Quervain's tenosynovitis syndrome, Tendonitis, Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, Diabetes, and any condition affecting the circulatory system causing poor circulation.

Although the medical conditions are treated, at times, the medication itself causes side effects and cold hands. Whether you suffer from a medical condition, or have cold hands without any medical diagnosis, the task of using the computer with cold hands is not comfortable. As a matter of fact, it can be very painful. Painful cold hands and numb fingers make it difficult to use the computer mouse and the compute keyboard. The only relief for cold hands is to stop using the computer, and in today's technology-dependent environment that's not a viable option.

There are ergonomic computer work aids designed to provide heat for computer users with cold hands. The heated USB computer gadgets are the Warm Mouse, Heated Mouse Pad, and Heated Computer Keyboard. These products use infrared heat to deliver soothing, relaxing warmth to the computer users frigid hands.

The USB warm computer gadgets use infrared heat. Infrared heat removes toxins from the blood and improves blood circulation. Studies show 20-30 minutes of infrared heat daily can have positive results. Infrared heat is known to heal stiff joints and sore muscles making it ideal for many people with arthritis. Infrared heat penetrates deep through the skin's layers through the blood expanding blood vessels to enable blood flow. When blood flows easily, poor circulation is improved. Poor circulation is most-likely the top cause of cold hands and fingers.

Not all people suffer with cold hands when using the computer, but if you do, or if you know someone who does, using infrared heat computer gadgets may solve the cold hand problem. For therapeutic cold mouse hand pain relief, use the warm mouse and warm mouse pad inside a mouse hand warmer blanket pouch. The heat generated from the warm mouse and heated mouse pad is insulated inside the blanket pouch creating a perfectly warm mouse hand environment. This trio of hand warmers is ideal for anyone who has cold hands when they use the computer. Plus, it's an economical and energy-efficient source of warmth for computer users.

Nothing ventured is nothing gained. When we have a sore back or stiff neck, we reach for the heating pad. Now, when we have a sore hand, wrist, fingers or stiff joints, we can reach for the warm mouse, warm mouse pad and warm keyboard pag. Plus, slipping the warm mouse and heated mouse pad inside the mouse hand warmer blanket is an added feature and creates a multi-functional ergonomic work space. These items deliver healing infrared heat to our aching, sore and cold computer hands. No need to suffer while browsing the Net or surfing your favorite website. USB heated computer gadgets deliver quick warming relief from the computer to your fingertips!

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Friday, March 13, 2009

Cold Hand Help for Computer Users: ValueRays Infrared Heat - Warm Mouse, Heated Mouse Pad & Warm Computer Keyboard Pad

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Computer users can get help with cold hands by using infrared heat computer gadgets; an infrared heat warm mouse, heated mouse pad and heated computer keyboard pad. The cold hand help is enhanced when the products are used in combination with one another and with a mouse hand warmer blanket.


It doesn't matter if you sit and think, or if you just sit! It doesn't matter if it's Summer, Winter, Spring or Fall. When your hands are cold, your entire body feels the chill. Chills create distraction, and the only thing to think about is the cold. Not all people have cold hands when using the computer, but for those who do, there are infrared heat, ergonomic computer work aids to help cold hand pain.

Three items used whenever we use a computer are the computer mouse, mouse pad and computer keyboard. Using the computer mouse and keyboard with cold hands is very uncomfortable and at times very painful. A cold mouse hand creates numb fingers, and the chill is felt to the bone. Trying to grip a computer mouse and typing with freezing, frigid fingers and hands is nearly impossible. The solution is an infrared heat warm mouse, heated mouse pad and heated computer keyboard.

ValueRays heated computer gadgets and mouse hand warmers connect to the computer using an USB port. USB connections create an energy-efficient and cost-effective source of heat energy during winter months or during the summer when air-conditioning creates a cold work space and hands become cold. Some people sit near a drafty window or under a ceiling fan where cold drafts become a problem. Using a heated mouse, warm mouse pad and warm keyboard pad can help relieve cold hand pain.

The ValueRays USB warm computer gadget is designed with a carbon fiber, it creates infrared heat. Infrared heat is an excellent source of healing energy. The natural source of infrared heat comes from the sun. It's the deep penetrating heat we feel when the sun's rays hit our skin. The sun's natural infrared rays are capable of penetrating deep into the body where they elevate surface temperature and activate healthy body functions.

The infrared heat from USB warm computer gadgets is the same as the sun's infrared heat without the harmful UV rays of the sun. The infrared waves are a safe alternative to natural sun infrared rays. The infrared rays heat objects by direct light conversion - a process to directly warm an object; i.e., the warm mouse, warm mouse pad, and warm keyboard pad, and not the surrounding air. Infrared heat rays from the warming mouse, warming mouse pad and warming keyboard pad penetrate the hand, warm the muscles, tissues and dilate the blood vessels. The infrared heating process improves blood circulation by allowing the blood to flow more freely through the cold, painful, tense hand.

A standard, ValueRays USB heated computer mouse connects to the computer through an USB (United Serial Bus) port and delivers infrared heat creating a comfortably warm mouse hand. It has the basic functions and characteristics of a standard mouse with the added feature of delivering heat to a cold mouse hand. The USB infrared heated, warm computer mouse is an efficient way to stay warm by using energy generated from the computer. The USB warm mouse is ergonomically shaped and comfortable to hold. It is an optical scrolling mouse with an accurate 800dpi. The warm mouse has two buttons and three functions, and it works with any PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. A warm mouse has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

The ValueRays heated mouse pad connects to the computer through an USB (United Serial Bus) port and delivers infrared heat to the mouse hand. It has many more functions compared to a standard mouse pad. The USB heated mouse pad creates a warm mouse pad surface to rest the hand and wrist. It's an efficient way to keep the mouse hand warm. The USB warm mouse pad is ergonomically shaped and comfortable to use. It has an ergonomic wrist support pad at the front of the mousepad, and at the opposite end of the mousepad there are four USB ports. The warming mouse pad is constructed of a smooth, hard surface compatible to use with any mechanical or optical mouse for ease of mouse movement. A standard heated mouse pad measures about 10" x 10" with a height of about .5 inch. When plugged into the USB port, the heated pad illuminates around three sides with colored lights. The warm mouse pad operates on a safe, low voltage and generates soothing heated mouse pad warmth. The warm mouse pad works with a 2.0 USB outlet on a PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. It has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

The ValueRays warm mouse and heated mouse pad help the cold mouse hand and serve a purpose when used together or separately. When the two items are used in combination with a third item, a mouse hand warmer blanket pouch, infrared heat is insulated inside and under a mouse hand blanket creating a perfectly warm mouse hand environment. It creates an ideal, warm house for the mouse hand.

With the mouse hand warm, the keyboard hands are still an issue for the person who suffers with cold hands. The ValueRays USB heated computer keyboard pad connects to the computer through an USB port and delivers infrared heat to the hands, arms and wrists. It is ergonomically shaped and offers support for the keyboard hands and wrists for typing on the keyboard. The wrist pad is easy to maintain. It has a nylon cover with a zipper closure making it easy to remove and hand wash/air dry. A standard USB heated computer keyboard pad measures about 16 inches long, 3 inches wide and has a height of about 3/4" tall. It has a soft sponge insert making the wrist pad very comfortable for keyboard use. It aligns your wrist ergonomically over the keyboard adding supprt and warmth while you type or work. The USB heated keyboard wrist pad works with any PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. It has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

There is help for people who have cold hands when using the computer. Warm computer gadgets to help cold hands are available online at IGMproducts.com or ValueRays.com. Making an investment in one or all four ValueRays warm computer gadgets to help relieve the cold has high payoff value when cold hands cause pain and discomfort.

Visit http://www.IGMproducts.com and/or http://www.ValueRays.com for additional information.





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