With mice, the screws are always hidden by the glide pads on the bottom. It looks like an ASUS WT200 but after a quick look I can't find any for sale.
Ok if you can't get replacement guts, it might be something easy you can fix. Maybe some paint got on the laser or the lens. Flip it over and have a close look at the little hole. Some isopropyl and a q-tip might get it working again.
Hey, I think your mouse looks pretty cool. I love the speckled egg shell look. It looks kind of like a Robin's Egg. I have some advice for you, if you're interested. If you're going to spray paint something like this, you can disassemble it first with a screwdriver. Take it apart and spray the case only. Same thing for keyboards, PCs, and anything else you can take apart fairly easily. Second, when you're spraying it, suspend it from a string or two, or support it by a single stick from below. Don't touch it until it's dry.
As for your current situation, buy a new identical mouse and transfer the working guts from the new one to your customized one.
The price of copper is $4.44 per pound. Lady liberty is composed of 176,000 lbs of copper. Melting her down would be worth $781,440 which is less than it would cost to dismantle and melt her down. Basically she's not worth the trouble.
I met him as a child in the mid 80s at a balloon festival in NJ. He was there with some other rich dude, might've been Warren Buffett. They were handing out those little spinning helicopter things to kids. He seemed pretty cool from a five year old's perspective.
I know the Windows vs Linux thing is like beating a dead horse, but I use both, and the Linux machine never gets slow like Windows does. Windows does so much crap in the background that you and I don't need want or care about, and Linux just does what it's told when it's told. Give it a try if you're feeling adventurous.
When joining acrylic, the absolute best method is to use Weld-On 3. It's not a glue but a solvent. It dissolves the acrylic where they meet and hardens to be as strong as one solid piece.
Depends on the version. Some versions of older films that have been remastered can be quite sought after.