Claims
- 1. A method for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
removing the computer mouse ball from the interior ball cavity; inserting a cleaning surface of a mouse cleaner into the interior ball cavity; and rotating the cleaning surface with a motor of the mouse cleaner so as to cause one or more of the plurality of mouse contact rollers to roll and thereby be cleaned by the cleaning surface.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of an abrasive, absorbent material.
- 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of a hook material.
- 4. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of:
inserting a second cleaning surface into the interior ball cavity; and rotating the second cleaning surface with a motor so as to cause one or more of the plurality of mouse contact rollers to roll and thereby be cleaned by the second cleaning surface.
- 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of hook material, the second cleaning surface is comprised of an abrasive, absorbent material, and both are rotatably coupled to the motor.
- 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the second cleaning surface is inserted into the interior ball cavity and rotated by the motor after the cleaning surface has been inserted into the interior ball cavity and rotated by the motor so as to cause one or more of the plurality of mouse contact rollers to roll.
- 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the cleaning surface is susceptible to losing electrons and becoming electrostatically charged, and the method further including the step of electrostatically charging the cleaning surface with an electrostatic mechanism.
- 8. The method of claim 1, further including the step of cleaning contaminants off of the cleaning surface with a cleaning mechanism.
- 9. A method for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising the steps of:
removing the computer mouse ball from the interior ball cavity; providing a mouse cleaner including a handle; connecting an attachable, disposable cleaning surface to the handle; inserting the cleaning surface into the mouse; rotating the cleaning surface so as to permit removal of mouse contaminants from the plurality of mouse contact rollers and the plurality of mechanical parts; removing the cleaning surface from the mouse; disposing the cleaning surface after a single use.
- 10. The method of claim 9, wherein the cleaning surface is pre-saturated with a cleaning substance.
- 11. The method of claim 9, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of an abrasive, absorbent material.
- 12. The method of claim 9, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of a hook material.
- 13. The method of claim 9, wherein the cleaning surface is a detachable sleeve that detachably connects to an attachment member of the handle.
- 14. The method of claim 13, wherein both the detachable sleeve and attachment member are cylindrical.
- 15. The method of claim 9, further including attaching a new, different cleaning surface to the handle, and cleaning the mouse contact rollers and the plurality of mechanical parts with the new, different cleaning surface.
- 16. A method for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
removing the computer mouse ball from the interior ball cavity; inserting a cleaning surface of a mouse cleaner into the interior ball cavity, the cleaning surface attached to a lumen and in communication with a pressure mechanism via the lumen; actuating the pressure mechanism so as to cause an operative effect at the cleaning surface; and rotating the cleaning surface so as to cause one or more of the plurality of mouse contact rollers to roll and thereby be cleaned by the cleaning surface.
- 17. The method of claim 16, wherein the cleaning surface includes an expandable and collapsible body, and the operative effect is to expand the body within the mouse cavity so that the cleaning surface compresses against the mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts.
- 18. The method of claim 16, wherein the cleaning surface includes a plurality of pores in communication with the lumen, and the operative effect is to deliver cleaning fluid through the lumen and plurality of pores to the cleaning surface.
- 19. The method of claim 16, wherein the cleaning surface includes a plurality of pores in communication with the lumen, and the operative effect is to create a vacuum force at the cleaning surface by drawing air and other debris through the plurality of pores and the lumen.
- 20. The method of claim 16, wherein the pressure mechanism is a squeezable handle attached to the lumen.
- 21. The method of claim 16, wherein the pressure mechanism is a syringe attached to the lumen.
- 22. The method of claim 16, wherein the pressure mechanism is a pump attached to the lumen.
- 23. A computer mouse cleaner for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
a motor; a shaft rotatably driven by said motor; a cleaning surface connected to said shaft for rotatable movement therewith for cleaning the plurality of mouse contact rollers and the plurality of mechanical parts in the interior ball cavity.
- 24. The mouse cleaner of claim 23, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of an abrasive, absorbent material.
- 25. The mouse cleaner of claim 23, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of a hook material.
- 26. The mouse cleaner of claim 23, further including a second cleaning surface rotatably driven by said motor.
- 27. The mouse cleaner of claim 26, wherein the cleaning surface is comprised of hook material, and the second cleaning surface is comprised of an abrasive, absorbent material.
- 28. The mouse cleaner of claim 23, further including a cleaning mechanism to remove dirt and other debris collected on the cleaning surface.
- 29. The mouse cleaner of claim 23, further including an electrostatic mechanism to add an electrostatic charge to the cleaning surface to attract charged contaminant particles to the cleaning surface.
- 30. A computer mouse cleaner kit for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
a handle; multiple disposable cleaning surfaces adapted to be detachably connected to the handle.
- 31. The mouse cleaner kit of claim 30, wherein at least one of the multiple cleaning surfaces includes a cleaning surface pre-saturated with a cleaning substance.
- 32. The mouse cleaner kit of claim 30, wherein at least one of the multiple cleaning surfaces includes a cleaning surface with an abrasive, absorbent material.
- 33. The mouse cleaner kit of claim 30, wherein at least one of the multiple cleaning surfaces includes a cleaning surface with a hook material.
- 34. The mouse cleaner kit of claim 30, wherein the handle includes an attachment member, and each of the multiple cleaning surfaces includes a detachable sleeve that detachably connects to the attachment member of the handle.
- 35. The mouse cleaner kit of claim 34, wherein both the detachable sleeve and attachment member are cylindrical.
- 36. A computer mouse cleaner for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
a handle; a cleaning surface connected to the handle, the cleaning surface pre-saturated with a cleaning substance.
- 37. A computer mouse cleaner for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
an expandable and collapsible cleaning body including a cleaning surface and an interior; a lumen in communication with the interior of the expandable and collapsible cleaning body; a pressure mechanism in communication with the lumen and the interior of the expandable and collapsible cleaning body to expand the body when the body is within the mouse cavity so that the cleaning surface compresses against the mouse contact rollers and the plurality of mechanical parts to enhance cleaning of these parts.
- 38. A computer mouse cleaner for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
a cleaning body including a cleaning surface, an interior, and a plurality of pores in communication with the interior; a lumen in communication with the interior of the cleaning body; a pressure mechanism in communication with the lumen and the interior of the cleaning body to deliver cleaning fluid through the lumen and plurality of pores to the cleaning surface.
- 39. A computer mouse cleaner for cleaning a computer mouse device with a computer mouse ball located in an interior ball cavity that has a plurality of mouse contact rollers and a plurality of mechanical parts, comprising:
a cleaning body including a cleaning surface, an interior, and a plurality of pores in communication with the interior; a lumen in communication with the interior of the cleaning body; a pressure mechanism in communication with the lumen and the interior of the cleaning body to create a vacuum force at the cleaning surface by drawing air and other debris through the plurality of pores and the lumen.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part application of application Ser. No. 09/081,163, filed May 18, 1998.
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09081163 |
May 1998 |
US |
Child |
09792787 |
Feb 2001 |
US |