Apple May Ditch the Butterfly Keyboard (9to5mac.com) 138
AmiMoJo writes: Apple is apparently set to ditch the butterfly mechanism used in MacBooks since 2015, which has been the root of reliability issues and its low-travel design has also not been popular with many Mac users. A report published today says that Apple will roll out a new keyboard design based on scissor switches, offering durability and longer key travel, starting with the 2019 MacBook Air. The MacBook Pro is also getting the new scissor switch keyboard, but not until 2020. The new scissor switch keyboard is a whole new design than anything previously seen in a MacBook, purportedly featuring glass fiber to reinforce the keys.
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> Doubtful. They can't compete on performance. Intel is still the best desktop chip.
The A12X in the iPad Pro outperforms the vast majority of Intel's mobile processors in raw performance - only the high-end i9's can beat it. It also performs as well or better than the midrange desktop CPUs.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2018/11/apple-walks-ars-through-the-ipad-pros-a12x-system-on-a-chip/
The A13X, soon to be announced, will likely match or best the performance of all of Intel's mobile processors and move
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I think you missed the whole "emulator to run your existing software" part. Forcing developers to supply fat binaries won't be enough. ARM isn't exactly known for running high-performance emulators of high-performance architectures.
PowerPC became a choice between IBM, who only wanted to make high-performance (and high wattage) server CPUs, and Motorola/Freescale, who only wanted to make low-power embedded CPUs with weak front-side buses. If Apple has a problem with Intel, AMD is quite willing to sell deskt
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> I think you missed the whole "emulator to run your existing software" part. Forcing developers to supply fat binaries won't be enough. ARM isn't exactly known for running high-performance emulators of high-performance architectures.
But I think it's safe to say no one has demonstrated real-world platform movement like Apple. They've moved platforms six times now (68k, PPC, Intel, x86-64, ARM32, ARM64), and every time the comments were always "wow, they pulled it off".
xCode happily builds real apps acros
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> I think you missed the whole "emulator to run your existing software" part
A lot of apps won't even need to be recompiled by developers. Apple already has the apps in bitcode format uploaded to the store. They can recompile to ARM (or whatever) with minimal pain.
For the rest; We (developers) will have to download the latest version of XCode, let it auto-enable arm compliation, recompile and release/submit.
That will probably be much less painful than the changes coming in with notarization in Mac OS 10.1
glass fiber = FRP (Score:2)
Re: glass fiber = FRP (Score:1, Funny)
I'm eager to read the fanboys explaining that Apple invented scissors keys in 2019 :-)
Re: glass fiber = FRP (Score:5, Informative)
I'm eager to read the fanboys explaining that Apple invented scissors keys in 2019 :-)
You'll likely be disappointed, given that most Apple fanboys still have scissor switches in their Apple laptops.
Apple switched from scissor switches to the much-maligned butterfly switches in 2015. The summary seems to be suggesting that they are now going back to a new and improved scissor switch, so Apple fanboys may finally start upgrading their laptops again for the first time in several years after clinging desperately to their scissor switches all this time.
So far as "inventing" anything goes, while Apple certainly didn't invent the scissor mechanism (millennia old?), nor were they anywhere close to the first to use it in keyboards (companies were using doing so in the late '80s and early '90s), they might have been the first to deploy them at scale in laptops. I can't find anything definitive, but I have an old PowerBook G4 from 2002 that has scissor switches, and it looks like scissor switches only started appearing in laptops around 2002 [xahlee.info], meaning that Apple may have been the first or one of the first to popularize their modern usage in laptops.
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And just when Apple finally got their butterfly keys feeling acceptable.
Oh well. I’ll just have to content myself with a reliable keyboard. ;-)
Good news for me, too, as I’m close to sucking it up and buying a new MacBook of some sort. (Air, probably, since I can get a real keyboard and touchID that way. But godDAMN I wish they used standard-ass SSDs and RAM Even if they had to invent a fucking standard for socketed LPDDR5 or whatever the fuck they’re going to use.)
You know what, fuck it.
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Look around you. Look in the mirror. Do you really think that any of us here are the life of the party?
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You're not even correct on when Apple started using them in notebooks - the 2001 iBook has scissor mechanisms. They probably existed in other notebooks before that.
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Aren’t I though? I cited a source that said “around 2002”, though I didn’t stake a claim on that particular year, other than to say that from my personal experience I know it to be at least that far back. If the 2001 iBook had them as well, that’d actually be further support for my conjecture that Apple might have been one of the first to popularize them in laptops.
It’s not a hill I’ll die on, but I don’t see how anything you’ve said undermines the thing
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I can vouch for IBM using them in laptops in the late 90s onward (600 series; I don't know if any older ones did, as I can't find any solid information). I also have a Compaq Presario CM2060 (PIII 800, built in 2000) that uses scissors.
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TFA mentions that the mechanism will be partially made of fibreglass. That's Apple's gift to fanboys, a little change that they can use you justify why Apple's scissor switches are so vastly superior to all other scissor switches.
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You’re the first person saying that to me who has actually punctuated “you’re” correctly, so you’ve got me curious. Why do you think that of me?
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I'm eager to read the fanboys explaining that Apple invented scissors keys in 2019 :-)
And by extension, scissors and keys.
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I've got a couple of MacAlly keyboards I bought about 15 years ago that made a big deal about their use of scissor keys. They're OK for low-stroke keyboards. They're no IBM Model M, of course, but they're head-and-shoulders above the butterfly garbage that Apple has been trying to force on us for the last few years.
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They're made by Sanwa Supply. I have a few Sanwa-branded ones with the same mechanisms. I quite like them, but they don't have N-key rollover and they don't like certain combinations of keys being pressed at the same time.
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I know that. But the fact remains that there are key combinations that are nice to be able to press for games (e.g. when trying to do a Party Up in Project Justice on a Dreamcast emulator) that work fine on an Apple keyboard but don't work on the Sanwa keyboard. It's very frustrating.
Jony Ive quits, Apple dumps his keyboard design 2 (Score:4, Interesting)
Im sure its just pure coincidence.
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I laugh when people *still* bought MacBooks with the poor and unreliable keyboard. How much would it take for some people to stop using MacBooks? A screen that falls off after a few months?
Glad they are ditching the butterfly, _finally_. I may even consider getting a MacBook at some point. Although Linux does just about everything I need and the latest Windows 10 update makes the asinine forced reboots delayable even without the Pro verison.
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I'd been using a loaner MBP at work, and just got swapped for an older 14" Thinkpad X1.
What a revalation. The keys have a nice long throw and a bit of heft to them, the have the appropriate dishing so you can center your fingers without looking and mashing two keys at once, the action is quiet and ends with a nice positive feel.
I can't believe anyone would EVER pay any kind of a premium for the absolute garbage that was that MBP keyboard. Is the brand really worth that much to you?
Maybe I'll upgrade my Air? (Score:2)
I have been in the market for a new MacBook Pro, since I am starting to feel some limitations of my MacBook Air. I have been holding out, mainly due to the keyboards in the new MacBook Pros. I spend a lot of time on my keyboard and the feel of the keyboard is important.
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Upgrade to Linux, don't settle for some shoddy FreeBSD imitation of Linux.
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Linux actually supports a number of different kinds of keyboards. Upgrade today.
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Maybe you should turn the computer on.
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Just relax and take another good suck on Tim's knob. Protein.
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Yah, no. Earth to you. That was then, this is now. Today, FreeBSD copies Linux and tries to catch up, not the other way round. Sorry if it's tough to let go.
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For that we give thanks, random asshole.
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Upgrade to Linux, don't settle for some shoddy FreeBSD imitation of Linux.
Thug Apple sent out asshole troll mods again
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Yeah, that's why I bought this refurb 2015 MacBook Pro - in 2018. I had one from work already, so I knew the processor would keep up. I'd also used a couple different newer MBPs for a couple weeks, and at the end hated the keyboard probably more than I'd hated it at the beginning.
But even if they replace the butterfly keyboard, I'll be in no hurry to replace this laptop. For most of us, laptops (and their processors) are like cell phones - years ago they reached the point where they can do pretty much every
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Ditch the butterfly CEO (Score:2)
Just sayin
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A lot of the defenses of Tim Cook seem eerily similar to the defenses we heard last decade regarding Steve Ballmer - mainly centered around "they've never been bigger and they're making boatloads of money". While true, it ignores the fact that Apple seems to be coasting on its past successes and products which to some degree or another bear Steve Jobs' imprimatur.
Re: Ditch the butterfly CEO (Score:2)
Glue, glue, and more glue. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Hey, glue’s okay. They could switch to hot glue, designed to melt at temperatures well below their plastic parts.
Then again, with Apple’s thermals lately...
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Having replaced Unibody keyboards multiple times, I almost agree with you. Summary: remove all the guts from the laptop, unscrew 70+ tiny-ass screws that the only way you can keep from losing them is with a magnet, install new keyboard, then put everything back. Total time, a mere 1-2 hours! If it was glued, the bad part would be trying to glue it back the right way.
The flip-up keyboard is the only thing I miss from the 2000-2008 era of Pismo/Titanium/Aluminum laptops.
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Funny, I can buy a Thinkpad that's put together with screws, not glue, for $250 less than the cheapest Macbook.
I mean, nobody's making people buy these things - clearly people see value in them. I don't see why anyone would complain about a company making things like this - unless perhaps, you still wish you could have a mac?
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Apple will fill the keyboard entirely with hot glue so the keys don't move. Form over function.
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Unrepairablily is a feature. You had better pay for AppleCare or you will be hit with massive repair bills. One spec of dust can write off your several thousand Euro laptop.
Oh, of course they eventually offer an extended warranty... Long after you already paid, or ditched the thing, or paid out for AppleCare. Good luck getting a refund on that.
Butterfly Keyboard Effect (Score:5, Funny)
A change made in Cupertino, CA affects things in Suzhou China*.
[ * Where the MacBook is actually made. ]
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Use a proper mechanical keyboard (Score:2)
Re:Use a proper mechanical keyboard (Score:5, Insightful)
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Actually, the tech is there to do it without being too terribly thick.
Cherry's got new switches [techcrunch.com]
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The Macbook Pro is 180mm thick. I don't think a few extra mm to add a decent amount of travel to the keys is going to turn it into a brick.
Might also fix the thermal throttling issues too.
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The Macbook Pro is 180mm thick. I don't think a few extra mm to add a decent amount of travel to the keys is going to turn it into a brick.
Might also fix the thermal throttling issues too.
But then it might look a little bit less pretty and they can't be having that. Form over function etc etc.
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To be fair it would be kinda ugly if it was 180mm thick. That decimal point slid a little too far.
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The Macbook Pro is 180mm thick.
It's seven inches thick? I think you might have confused the Macbook Pro with the Mac Mini. And thickness with width.
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Not likely to happen. Razor did it, and produced a laptop as thick as a brick - mechanical keyboards pretty much add an inch to thickness, and given we've got laptops less than half that in thickness from everyone.
Heck, low-travel laptop keyboards
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Better or cheaper? (Score:2)
Please don't tell Apple, but there has been cheaper and less tactile keyboards in computer history: https://images.app.goo.gl/jFjW... [app.goo.gl]
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WOW (Score:3, Interesting)
Apple is so courageous. It's not like most of their users complained about the shoddy crap when they first came out or anything.
Desktop first, then laptop. (Score:2)
Apple should roll new keyboard tech to the desktop keyboards first to see if it actually works reliably. At least it is easily replaced then.
but that's a whole nother year (Score:2)
The new scissor switch keyboard is a whole new design than anything previously seen in a MacBook, purportedly featuring glass fiber to reinforce the keys.
General Dreedle, take this sentence out and shoot it.
It's jut haters (Score:5, Funny)
The keybard on my Macook woks perfecly.
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Lucky you, mine doesn't, and it's the 'up' key which is playing up at the moment. Oh, and i've taken it once to have it looked at...
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I've had that problem with my MacBook Pro keyboard before too. Only it was a 2012 model, and a new keyboard was 15 bucks and 2 hours of work. Oh wait, that was after about 5 years when the matrix failed and a whole row was broken. The up arrow key I just popped the cap off of, cleaned around it, and if the nylon scissor broke, I could replace that too. Now you've got a keyboard that is sure to start dying just as soon as your Applecare expires.
Apple: Planned Obsolescence different!
ever diminishing user experience (Score:2)
My 2011 MBP had a perfect keyboard, and it was only a little thicker than the butterfly. The entire unit was probably 0.3" thicker and probably half a pound heavier. But the used experience was superior. It had ports, and an escape key. I wish they kept that form factor, and just updated the components. I would gladly buy one.
Yes, they can go smaller, but they paid too high a price in usability and fragility.
Great!! Now bring back: (Score:5, Insightful)
- magsafe
- headphone jacks
- replaceable and upgradeable components
- multiple ports
- optical drives
- 17" or larger laptops
- thickness
. . . and we'll just about have a good Apple product again!
Apple may ditch keyboard (Score:2, Funny)
ESC key (Score:2)
I sure hope they bring back the physical ESC key. It's mandatory to use vim (my dev. env). Lack of it is a complete nonstarter - I can't switch to the current MBPro. I do like my 2015 version though.
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Once you've remapped caps lock as control, as any right-thinking person does, it leaves the control key in the lower corner available to map as escape.
It took surprisingly little time to get used to this.
hawk
Apple's new motto (Score:2)
Apple's new motto: "It Just Breaks"
Coincidence that this comes up after Ive's exit? (Score:1)
Just wondering at the timing of this rumour.
Apple's been pretty adamant that their butterfly keyboard is just fine. Ive leaves and then this rumour.
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I like new keyboards (Score:1)
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Is this gonna be the DNC's strategy for 2020? Try to get Republican voters to go back to the swamp politics of the Clintons and Bushs? Get ready to lose again, losers.
So who should run against him? Hulk Hogan?