The Touch Bar Could Replace the Keyboard on Future Macbooks (cnet.com) 211
Apple's new patent applications hint at more touch-sensitive surfaces and virtual keyboards. From a report: In the wake of user complaints and multiple lawsuits concerning problems with the "butterfly switch" keyboard Apple has used in its laptops since 2016, the company may be developing new user interfaces that depend less on moving mechanical parts. The company has filed three new keyboard-related patents, Mashable reported on Monday. One of the patent applications describes a laptop with a digital panel where a keyboard traditionally sits. This could be interpreted as a plan to replace the conventional keyboard with technology similar to the Touch Bar -- the row of virtual, customizable buttons that Apple debuted on the Macbook Pro in 2016. The patent also includes information about sensors and haptics embedded beneath the envisioned digital panel, which would allow it to detect and respond to user inputs such as keystrokes, taps and clicks.
Macbook Wheel anybody? (Score:5, Funny)
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How do you top this? To which mystical lands can your courage possibly take you now? Only one thing left to take away. Ladies and gentlemen, we give you: The New Macbook With No Screen.
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Will the Touch Bar Replace the Keyboard on Future Macbooks?
to trigger Betteridges Law.
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Everything is just a few hundred clicks away.
The Onion couldn't do better... (Score:5, Insightful)
As usual, life imitates art.
https://www.theonion.com/apple... [theonion.com]
This is a stupid idea and Apple should feel bad.
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This is a stupid idea and Apple should feel bad.
Companies file patents for silly stuff all the time. That doesn't mean they are going to do anything with it.
Apple already has a good solution to their keyboard problem: Go back to the 2015 keyboard.
They just need to give up a millimeter of thinness.
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How it works. Keyboard to create content vs touch pad to consume content. It depends whether it is a content creation computer in the hands of a content creator or a content consumption device in the hands of an empty headed content consumer. So the difference between interacting with the device many times a second and interacting with the device a few times per hour. Different devices for different users and Apple is a content consumption company and not really a content creation company. It used to be, bu
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The 2015 keyboard was crap too, just less crap than the current one.
Flat keys are really bad for typing, no matter how much travel they have. The reason proper keys are concave is so that your fingers can feel when they are off centre and you subconsciously correct any errors as you type.
Lenovo Thinkpad keyboards are short throw and thin but retain that curvature. Many other manufacturers copied Apple with the flat, useless caps that look nice but fail badly for usability.
It doesn't surprise me that Apple i
So basically... (Score:2)
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In all their avoiding having touch screens on the Macbook line, they managed to come up with something worse.
A DS has physical keys (Score:2)
Because this sounds like a Nintendo DS to me.
At least a Nintendo DS has a Control Pad, four face buttons, two shoulder buttons, and two system buttons. It's why a lot of game genres work better on a DS or 3DS than on the flat sheet of glass that is the input device of an iPhone or Android phone.
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Apple will be lavished with praise for inventing a Nintendo 3DS with no physical buttons.
Outstanding (Score:5, Insightful)
I was hoping that someone would take my least favorite aspects of the newer macbook pros (a picture of an escape key (vi much?) and pictures of other buttons that take zero force to activate, littering my typing with garbage when a finger strays past the top row) and extend that frustration to every key on the keyboard.
Hey, Apple- while you're at it, why don't you give me a nice papercut and pour lemon juice in it?
Re:Outstanding (Score:4, Insightful)
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my employer gives a choice between Dell Windows or Macbook pro laptop... hey at least it's BSD. So the thing does very well plugged into a couple of monitors, keyboard and mouse. But take it outside the building? nah, that keyboard and giant touchpad sucks. It's tolerable to take to meetings...
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Old joke:
Employer: You have the choice. A, a MacBook Pro, or B...
Employee: B.
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Windows is still the worst OS I've ever worked with, and I've worked with over a dozen
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I agree. It makes me cringe every day I have to work with it. It has design faults and inconsistencies that were in Win3.1 and still haven't been fixed.
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It has design faults and inconsistencies that were in Win3.1 and still haven't been fixed.
That's a very strange kind of inconsistency.
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You never used a VIC-20 then, or a Spectrum, or an Atari ST.
Great computers for their time. Glad I'm not constrained to their OS now.
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Funny thing is in reality employees prefer Macs
https://www.macrumors.com/2018... [macrumors.com]
Sorry to ruin your joke.
Re: Outstanding (Score:4, Informative)
You put BSD on the Dell? Because that's not BSD on the Mac. It's a stale FreeBSD userland on top of the kernel from crochety old NeXT Step.
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OS X is still mostly BSD from command line and POSIX/BSD point of view.
kernel is mix of mach and some BSD
The *nix is slowly eroding away (Score:3)
You know Apple "deprecated" cron, right? That kind of idiocy is a strike at the heart of "being *nix" as far as I'm concerned. The less *nixy it is, the more work it is to use it for me, because I have to support both types of OS — I have considerably better things to do than figure out what Apple's screwing up, or planning to screw up, in the latest OS.
Back OT, the awful chiclet keyboards on the macbooks weaned me off ever buying
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cron still works though
on the other hand, some scripts that worked for years in GNU/Linux are fucked up by systemd and needed a lot of work. The Debian SJW systemd-tards shit on GNU/Linux and the other major distros picked it up
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Idunn:develop angelos$ cron /var/run/cron.pid: Permission denied
cron: can't open or create
Seems to work as intended
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You use systemd? Wow, how foolish.
Real work done on external keyboard ... (Score:2)
Apple laptops aren't designed for work anymore
*Laptop*, where mobility and compactness may be more important. When at your desk at the office or home, where people may do more typing, plug in the external keyboard, mouse and display. Working from the laptop's display and keyboard at the office is a joke, its only for those idiotic open floor plan offices that provide nothing more than crappy tables and chairs. Any employer with half a brain will provide external displays, keyboard and mice, as will any half serious home worker.
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Also note I was responding to a claim that *current* Apple laptops are not designed for work. These current keyboards are sufficient for travel and couch. I am *not* defending the notion of a touch screen keyboard, I agree that this would be a bad idea. However I disagree regarding the current keyboards. Wh
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Chicken-poking typists UNITE!
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No lemon juice, it'll liquid damage the laptop.
It'll be glued together with "no serviceable parts" inside, but it will still let in liquid.
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Do it worry. With the advent if autocorrect out does nits matter of you misstype dir the lack of tactile feedback anymore. I an using a touch keyboard and I an fine.
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Actually, I wonder why GVim for macOS doesn't have support for the Touch Bar. Seems like at the very least, you could turn the entire bar into the Escape Bar.
Why make it an itty-bitty key when you have the ability to get out of whatever mode you're in by tapping with either hand.
cos hitting the escape 'key' isnt weird enough.. (Score:3)
This will never fly, it's probably pre-emptive in case someone else thinks its a good idea or for their war chest.
Just like the touch bar itself, no one else gives it positive feedback either ...
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This will never fly.
It will, most like through a window.
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Just like the touch bar itself, no one else gives it positive feedback either ...
Hey, who started with giving no feedback! Or any for that matter, hell, those damn things giving you no feedback when typing IS one of the key complaints.
Alternative solution (Score:4, Insightful)
remember old Western Bell dial phones? (Score:2)
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I still maintain the older model Ms can stop 9mm bullets.
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but with Apple's you can do the anime or movie katana meme where you run by the opponent moving the thin thing so fast the eye can't see it, then the opponent takes a step before either torso slides off waist or head or face falls off.
The real alternative is an external (Score:2)
Quit trying to make the damn laptop so thin and put a good keyboard in it. IMHO Apple's obsession with thin is form over function.
The real alternative is to get an external keyboard (and mouse and display) for office and/or home. You only need to use the built-in keyboard when away from home or office.
And yes, that includes the modern Model-M keyboards from Unicomp.
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Its kind of hard to think of not using an external display at the office or home when in "work" mode, so an external keyboard and mouse see
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Why bulk up a laptop with a real keyboard when the laptop's primary features are mobility and compactness.
I added the hardware keyboard to my Surface Pro because it adds no more thickness than a decent case would, provides the same protection and includes some rather excellent utility.
for any extended duration typing a person is more likely to be at the office or at home
In the office I'm likely to be in the canteen drinking coffee. If I want to do work I'll work from home, so at work I'm talking to people.
At home I'm going to be sat on the recliner, feet up. Or maybe sat in the garden, cat lying beside me. Sometimes I'll be working from home while sat at the local pond, bait in the water, telecon
Maybe Apple wants out of the laptop business (Score:2)
Re: Maybe Apple wants out of the laptop business (Score:2)
They do need to maintain a development platform for their line of gadgets, though. I suppose they could port an iOS toolchain over to BeOS or some other viable platform.
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A robust keyboard without contacts to wear out (Score:2)
I use a keyboard [massdrop.com] that uses hall effect (magnetic) sensors instead of physical contacts. Theoretically it is nearly waterproof and won't wear out, with an exception for the bamboo version.
Hall effect, capacitive sensing, or opto-mechanical are all viable options for keyboards that are more robust than traditional rubber dome keyboards. If there were only a company that prided itself on innovation. It could perhaps make a thinner and lighter version of these designs.
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Except almost no one wants super thin keyboards, except as a trade-off. The actuating mechanism is irrelevant, it is all about the course and tactile feedback. Very thin keyboards don't have enough course and are uncomfortable.
About longevity, even well designed rubber dome keyboards can last for more than a decade and be water resistant. Fancy switches can make things even better but they are not really a necessity for the average user.
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It's possible to make rubber dome keyboard water resistant. It just costs more to manufacture
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They rubber domes do wear out though. And the feel is usually not great, but laptops are certainly a place where compromises are often made.
How about FIXING THE KEYBOARDS? (Score:5, Insightful)
When it comes right down to it, all smart devices need a text entry mechanism. I hate using the touchscreen on my iPhone for basically anything other than a text and the examples here seem to be pushing users in that direction.
Apple Engineers: Rather than trying to come up with new ways for users to enter text into Macbooks, why don't you accept the input method that has been around for more than a century and come up with a keyboard that fixes the problems that were introduced in 2016? If you don't feel like they can be fixed than either go back to the old mechanicals or come up with new ones.
When you have a problem with your hardware, the optimal solution is not to change everybody in the world's approach to interfacing with devices, you should fix the problem.
They did fix the keyboard (Score:2)
The latest revision of the MacBook Pro actually fixes the keyboard problems with better dust barriers.
That's why the notion that the touch bar will expand to be the whole keyboard is absurd.
What they really need to do is offer force feedback on the touch bar for presses.
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>"Apple Engineers: Rather than trying to come up with new ways for users to enter text into Macbooks, why don't you accept the input method that has been around for more than a century and come up with a keyboard that fixes the problems that were introduced in 2016? If you don't feel like they can be fixed than either go back to the old mechanicals or come up with new ones."
Or perhaps contact Lenovo and license their designs. They seem to make perfectly good laptop keyboards that last forever, feel good
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>"Apple Engineers: Rather than trying to come up with new ways for users to enter text into Macbooks, why don't you accept the input method that has been around for more than a century and come up with a keyboard that fixes the problems that were introduced in 2016? If you don't feel like they can be fixed than either go back to the old mechanicals or come up with new ones."
Or perhaps contact Lenovo and license their designs. They seem to make perfectly good laptop keyboards that last forever, feel good, and are quite functional, all while being thin and nice looking too.
Except that Lenovo makes their $700 Yoga keyboards crappy (they feel like stabbing a bowl of dough) so you relent and buy a $1800 Thinkpad instead while the keyboard as a spare costs $50. Also the Macbook Pro keyboard is a quarter as thick.
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>"Except that Lenovo makes their $700 Yoga keyboards crappy (they feel like stabbing a bowl of dough)"
Good point- I was talking about the Thinkpad, not Yoga and not Ideapad. I should have been more specific.
>"so you relent and buy a $1800 Thinkpad instead."
Or you buy a $600 Thinkpad, which does have the same keyboard as the other Thinkpads (you aren't forced to buy a super-high end with Lenovo to get the good keyboard). Although it is not backlit.
>"Also the Macbook Pro keyboard is a quarter as th
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People will have to go back to hunt-and-peck typing while staring at the keyboard. After all, the layout can change at any time and there is no tactility to help you find keys.
didn't read (Score:2)
<rant>
Unless it is massively improved, as a mac user, I have zero interest in such 'innovation'.
These guys need to get a reality check. They're becoming the Microsoft of the early 2000's, where each new release felt like a downgrade with a barely 'better' UI.
Fix the broken pieces, before adding new ones @apple
</rant>
Are these "inventors" really that dull... (Score:4, Interesting)
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>"...to never have noticed themselves the positive value of tactile feedback??? Seriously!"
It isn't just tactical or hepatic, either. I would imagine trying to "type" on a flat surface will create all kinds of new repetitive stress injuries; on top of being unfriendly, slow, and uncomfortable.
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>"Tactile and Haptic."
LOL! Not sure where my mind was when typing that. Not wanting to use my keyboard as a weapon, generally, although it has been a difficult day...
Re:Are these "inventors" really that dull... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Oh, I thought it was the fault of the LG Prada. Afterall, all the Slashtards say that Apple COPIED the Prada, even though it came out like a couple of MONTHS before the iPhone was demoed.
No, Apple copied the variety of HTC devices that came out *years* before the iPhone existed.
and apple will be kicked out of bar test + may oth (Score:2)
and apple will be kicked out of bar test + maybe others as well.
Called it (Score:3)
About a month ago, I speculated [slashdot.org] (only half jokingly) that Apple was knowingly and intentionally putting really crappy keyboards into their "Pro" laptops so that they could subsequently move to completely fake keyboards without the users noticing any further degradation in keyboard experience (because basically, at that point, Apple users would already be used to basically drumming their fingers on a piece of metal).
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About a month ago, I speculated [slashdot.org] (only half jokingly) that Apple was knowingly and intentionally putting really crappy keyboards into their "Pro" laptops so that they could subsequently move to completely fake keyboards without the users noticing any further degradation in keyboard experience (because basically, at that point, Apple users would already be used to basically drumming their fingers on a piece of metal).
They came with flat chiclet keyboards starting with the late 2008 MacBook exactly for this reason. And it worked, since all keyboards look this way now. The thing is not that Apple has plans, the thing is that Apple's plans WORK.
You would think (Score:2)
Eight Years old crap (Score:2)
Apple is still selling computers which are based on eight years old technology being outmatched by current Goldmont Atoms but still selling at insane prices.
Who ever thinks there is something coming up soon is a religious zealot.
I am not making fun of apple. They are another greed company. I make fun of their customers.
RIP macbook (Score:3)
This could be interpreted as a plan... (Score:2)
A patent is not a product plan, it's speculation on valuable future technology. Patents cannot be interpreted as a plan to do anything.
Oh JOY! (Score:2)
Another shitty virtual keyboard with only the absolute MINIMUM of haptic feedback!
Sorry I ever complained about chicklet keys! I TAKE IT ALL BACK!
Apple staff and Apple fans, emperors clothes? (Score:2)
Do people within Apple just continue to agree with stuff because someone higher up suggested it? No critical thoughts?
They had 'laser' based keyboards nearly a decade ago, keyboard directly on your desk surface. Not only would tapping the table endlessly hurt the finger tips, the lack of tactile feedback is awful. Also, how do you "hold down" a key or repeatedly press it?
Between this and the touch bar itself, the headphone jack (sorry, no, I'm not a luddite, I'm just someone doesn't need or want to charge
Vote with Your Money (Score:2)
"Butterfly switch" (Score:2)
Just for being precise, the butterfly mechanism isn't the "switch". It's just a clever mechanism to keep the keycap level when you press it. The actual switch sits under this mechanism and other than with basically all other laptop keyboards this isn't a rubber-dome switch, but a mechanical stainless steel micro-switch. That's the reason this keyboard is so loud. Apple did it this way because with a traditional rubber-dome switch and a scissors-mechanism you just can't arrive at the short travel and thinne
It takes courage (Score:2)
What I want (Score:2)
A laptop with a mechanical keyboard. Don't care if the laptop is 2" tick. :)
Think of the censorship (Score:2)
Only approved words can be entered.
Touchstream (Score:2)
I'm surprised nobody mentioned Touchstream yet.
They developed this keyboard:
https://www.engadget.com/2010/... [engadget.com]
Maybe 8 or 10 years ago?
If you don't see it at first glance: It doesn't have keys. The whole thing is a big multi-touch surface, long before multi-touch appeared on smartphones. So you can type and the next second use it as a touchpad. It was pretty nifty.
FingerWorks, the company that made it, was acquired by Apple. Then the iPhone appeared, with multi-touch. Ever since, I've been waiting for an all-
Apple says... (Score:3)
The Lenovo Book already does this (Score:2)
The Lenovo Book already does this - Its basically 2 touchscreens one in the position of the keyboard [lenovo.com], and you have a non tactile touchscreen to type on (and in my opinion it sucks).
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i lol'ed (Score:2)
i really lol'ed when i read this, until i realised that probably others will copy Apple and as a result we will end up with a lot of laptops that have this kind of keyboard. just, you know, to be cool like Apple is.
just like with the phone nodge, Apple their silliness is affecting us all!
Patent? (Score:2)
Clearly not. So what the hell are they going to get a patent for?
Touch Screens with Tactile Feedback and Relief/Dep (Score:2)
Two thoughts on this before everyone overreacts (Sorry about those of you who already did overreact):
1. The touch screen style keys could bulge up slightly and depress slightly when pressed. This would give us the tactile feedback we're used to having with mechanical keyboards with the advantages of non-mechanical devices that would last longer, possibly indefinitely (compared to your short human lifespan). Sound can be played through the speakers to give you the auditory feedback you so love (or don't in w
Where we're going, we don't need keyboards (Score:2)
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I doubt That most people cannot type 120 word per minute in general.
I can normally do 60-100 myself and I have been typing for about 35 years.
Mostly what is slowing me down is making sure that I am am spelling the words correctly and making sure my fingers do not go out of sync with what I am trying to write.
Normally the old typing speed calculations of 120 wpm is for straight transcription typing where what you need to type is in front of you and you are copying what needs to be written. However being tha
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I have a MBP late 2011 set up as my desktop for my photo work. I have a wacom tablet hooked to it, a large IPS screen and one of the remakes of the old IBM buckling spring keyboards.....
I don't think I could type with any measure of accuracy or speed on a non-tactile keyboard.
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Just as past generations of users could only work with one mouse button.