Je peux pas jai Johnny Wireless optical mouse with usb receiver
by Cadeaux
Wireless mouse to personalize with your own images. Our wireless mouse comes with usb receiver to plug into your computer.
Frequency 2.4G Hz. 500/1000 Dpi.
Receiver storage inside the mouse.
Works on both PC and MAC
Plug And Play! The mouse does not require any installation. You remove the USB key that is inside the mouse to connect it to your computer, and that's it ... The mouse is functional.
Because now almost everything is custom, it is the same for your computer mouse. A product that is currently a sensation and allows you to get the photo of your choice or your logo on your own mouse. Originality and creativity will make this practical and cheap gift an indispensable object for any computer scientist, man or woman.
A custom computer mouse is a useful desktop advertising accessory. Marked with your logo, it will stay in your customer's mind for a long time and accompany them in their daily activities.
As a business gift or as a CE gift, the customizable wireless computer mouse reinforces the links created by customization. A perfect advertising gift to complement your client's or partner's hardware. A stylish, high-tech corporate gift, synonymous with successful communication!
Design Je peux pas jai Johnny Wireless
Illustration for singer Johnny Hallyday's fans "I can not Johnny" Johnny Hallyday, whose real name is Jean-Philippe Smet, born June 15, 1943 in the 9th arrondissement of Paris and died December 5, 2017 in Marnes-la-Coquette (Hauts-de-Seine), is a singer, composer and actor French. During his 57-year career, he has established himself as one of the most famous French singers and one of the most prominent personalities in the French media landscape. If he is not the first to sing rock in France, he is, from 1960, the first to popularize rock 'n' roll in France. The different musical streams he's playing - rock 'n' roll, pop, rhythm and blues, soul, psychedelic rock - all come from the blues. Although he plays many variety songs, ballads and sometimes country, rock remains his main reference.