Unotron's keyboards and mice can be dunked in water
Just how clean is your computer keyboard and mouse ? If you work in a hospital or have small kids who like eating junk food and rolling around in the front yard then your mouse could be covered in germs and grime. Unotron is selling a line of keyboards and mice with their "SpillSeal" technology that can be fully immersed and washed.

Unotron claims that their peripherals are not just spill resistant, but can take a full dunking in hot water or disinfectant. From their product website, the company says the gear can, "withstand being immersed in antibacterial solutions and rinsed under a tap to reduce spread of germs." In fact, the company points to an lab report that says 100% of Staphylococcus Aureus bacteria were killed when the keyboards were put under a Presept wash, which is a common hospital grade germ killer.
The company has also tested their gear against international standards IP66 and NEMA4X, which puts equipment through tortuous high-speed water jets and wind-blown dust particles. The secret to the Unotron’s durability are the fully seals keys and buttons that can keep out dust, water and harmful liquids - like blood in hospital settings.
Unotron’s keyboards and mice are sold at several online retailers for around $40 and up.
- unotron ,
- fullyimmersible ,
- keyboards ,
- mice
- Seagate unveils SV35 HDD for security monitoring
- LG.Philips reportedly sets 8G substrate standard
- Fire at CMC Magnetics may aggravate tight CD-R supply
- 512 MB microSD cards to become mainstream in Q2, says SanDisk
- Sony dominates Q4 2005 microdisplay RPTV Market
- SDRAM prices to increase in Q2, says Etron
- Abit launches AT8 32X motherboard
- "Net Neutrality" bill aims to prevent two-tiered Internet traffic
- Oracle joining HP's Itanium-based Integrity
- US Justice Dept. confirms probe into download price fixing
- Finnish group to test cellphone radiation on human skin
- Google grabs 48% market share in online searches
- Gossip: Dell to acquire Alienware
- RIAA wants a 30% cut of Sirius' revenues
- Microsoft said to have topped brand awareness study in Japan
- Case dismissed: Settlement with NTP for $612.5 million puts RIM in the clear
- Apple employees file for wide touchpad patent
- Antivirus groups fight over Crossover sharing




