RSS
Follow us on:

Downloads

  • Recommend:
Popular in iPhone OS

Air Mouse Pro

  • Version: 1.5.2
  • Downloads Count: 5,714
  • License Type: Buy Only
  • Price: $6
  • Date Added: Apr 24, 2009
  • Operating Systems: Macintosh OS X, Microsoft Windows XP, Microsoft Windows Vista, iOS
  • Requirements: 32-bit or 64-bit Windows OS or Intel Mac OS X 10.4; iPhone or iPod Touch running iPhone 2.1 Software Update
  • File Size: 717.0 KB
  • Author: RPA Tech

Before you download:

Click here to scan Windows for issues affecting performance »

Sponsored Link

Editorial Review of Air Mouse Pro

When I give presentations, watch movies from the sofa in my office, or need to start a task away from my desk, I don't always want to be within arm's length of my mouse. So I appreciate the freedom offered by Mobile Air Mouse, a full-featured remote control from R.P.A. Tech. The top half of the Air Mouse Pro Screen features a two-button trackpad, while the bottom half gives you a keyboard, along with controls for browsing the Web and playing movies and music.

Using the accelerometer and touchscreen of either an iPhone or iPod touch, Air Mouse works over a local Wi-Fi network to control you computer's mouse and keyboard. Before using the app, you do need to install a small application on your computer-there's a version for both Mac OS X and Windows users-which manages the connection and controls many of the mouse and keyboard settings.

The Air Mouse Pro screen features a two-button trackpad on the top half of the screen, while the bottom half switches between media control buttons and a keyboard. I found Air Mouse Pro to be as responsive and stable as my current wireless mouse, with touchscreen mousing no different using a computer trackpad.

Using the accelerometer to control mouse gestures is comparable to using a the controls for a Nintendo Wii-fun, though not always practical. You won't write novels with the app's keyboard, for example. But when combined with customizable keyboard shortcuts, Air Mouse Pro can be handy for conducting fast searches, launching applications, or, as Macworld editors have noted elsewhere, running a Mac-based media center. That said, the set of buttons for controlling iTunes and Web browsing, while useful, make the omission of presentation controls all the more glaring.

Still, Mobile Air Mouse is a genuinely fun and practical application for anyone who needs to break free of the desk.

Note: This link takes you to the vendor's site. From there, you can follow the link to the iTunes App Store, where you can download the latest version of the software.

--Kate Dohe

Sponsored

 
You are browsing iPhone OS

  •   2,969
    Mar 9, 2009
    Free

    Make dinner reservations from your iPhone with this freebie.

     
  •   3,745
    Mar 6, 2009
    Free

    Control iTunes from your iPhone with this freebie.

     
  •   3,587
    Feb 6, 2009
    Free

    Find the name of that really catchy song with with your iPhone and this app. Well, sometimes.

     
  •   3,479
    Jan 6, 2009
    Free

    Does just what it says: Sets up a fake call to get out of any situation. They never have to know.

     
  •   44
    Feb 6, 2009
    Free

    Select healthy and sustainably harvested fish with this iPhone guide from the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

     
  •   1,709
    Mar 9, 2009
    Free

    Split the check amicably with this free iPhone app.

     
  •   2,022
    Mar 6, 2009
    Free

    Check out local eateries--and see which ones are open--with this freebie on your iPhone.

     
  •   2,106
    Dec 10, 2008
    Free

    Turn your iPhone into a personal voice recorder with this freebie.

     
  •   10,397
    Jan 6, 2009
    Free

    Furiously tap to the beat of some great tunes in this game inspired by Guitar Hero and Dance Dance Revolution.

     
  •   10,683
    Jan 6, 2009
    Free

    Identify and connect to WiFi hotspots that even the iPhone can't find.

     

PCWorld Related Content
  • Highlight Is Like the 'ChatRoulette' of iOS Apps I can sort of see the potential of an app like Highlight, but more than that I see the possibility of it being a privacy concern and prospective safety risk to share my location with random strangers.
PCWorld Community

Most Recent Threads

Subscribe to the Smart Phone News Newsletter - weekly

See All Newsletters »