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The Razer DeathAdder gaming mouse is the company's most popular mouse line by sales, [47] having sold over 20 million units worldwide by June 2024. [48] Razer mice are used by around 8% of professional first-person shooter gamers. [49] In 2021, Razer introduced a new 8 kHz "HyperPolling" technology to power the Razer Viper 8K. [50]
Razer Blade Stealth supports full Chroma lightning with Razer Synapse software. [6] Chroma lighting is a unique light feature on all Razer mouse and keyboard products. The device comes with pre-installed Razer Synapse software and the software supports key clicks, Macro creating and other features that are supported within other Razer keyboards.
The Naga 2012 supported Razer's Synapse 2.0 software allowing all the buttons to be programmed and that information to be stored online. [9] The other 2012 installment was the Naga Hex, the first mouse in the series to have only six programmable side-on buttons. [ 10 ]
IntelliType supports all known Microsoft keyboards (including those that are shipped as parts of desktop sets, as well as entertainment keyboards – i.e. those that are intended for Media center). However, advanced features may only be available on certain models (the users select their keyboard's type inside the program to access that ...
Keyboard action describes the mechanism and feel of the keyboard. Keyboards can be roughly divided into non-weighted and weighted. Non-weighted keyboards have a light, springy feel to their keys, similar to the action of an organ. The least expensive keyboards, often with non-full size keys, use keys that are mounted on soft rubber pads that ...
The strength of a synapse has been defined by Bernard Katz as the product of (presynaptic) release probability pr, quantal size q (the postsynaptic response to the release of a single neurotransmitter vesicle, a 'quantum'), and n, the number of release sites. "Unitary connection" usually refers to an unknown number of individual synapses ...
Rhodes also released a keyboard-less version of the Chroma called the Chroma Expander at a list price of US $3150. [3] The Chroma was one of the early microprocessor-controlled analog synthesizers. It was designed before MIDI and featured a 25-pin D-sub connector computer interface used to slave the Expander to the Chroma.
As of version 8.5, Synapse Orion Studio contains following default instruments (generators): DrumRack - A 12-track sample-based drum machine, containing its own step and velocity sequencer. Sampler - Multisample player with two LFOs and three envelopes. Pro-9 - Virtual-analog drum machine. XR-909 - Analog drum synthesizer.