- Joined
- Apr 15, 2016
- Messages
- 967
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- 26
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- Location
- Canada
- Your Mac's Specs
- rMBP i7 mid 2012 macOS 10.12
I think Apple has a very firm eye on the way people actually use computers, and already supply a range of touchscreen computers for those who want the capability. To dismiss the iPad, particularly the iPad Pro as a toy, is to refuse to face reality. Most people who are using iPads have them in their hands, with the result that the screen is instantly available for typing and interaction. Adding the Apple Pencil, with its single pixel accuracy, gives artists etc the control they need over the device. In 5+ years on iOS forums, I've lost count of the number of requests for information we have received for external keyboards and mouse support. It gets frustrating asking why people want mouse support for a touchscreen device, particularly when the answer is "Just because...". I suppose it cuts both ways. People think they want something without thinking through why they want it.
In the "real" computer area, the laptop is probably the only variant that could reasonably support touchscreen. Wall mounting of monitors, desk space, headless servers, using large screen televisions across the room from where one is sitting all conspire to make touchscreen useless for desktop machines, and adding this functionality would place the laptop into a completely different market to the rest of the computers in a manufacturers line-up.
Already, the new TouchBar has moved the goalposts for desktop machines. When we see new iMacs (and Mac Pros, assuming they survive to the next generation) will they have the TouchBar built into the BT keyboard? It's a tall order. For one thing, the TouchBar is at least partly controlled by its own processor so separating the TouchBar electronics from the main computer could be tricky, not to mention making the BT keyboard hugely expensive.
No doubt, Apple's design teams are working flat out on new designs. I, for one, believe that those designs will not be influenced by a a few shrill voices arguing that Microsoft and others are taking the lead. Time will tell how successful the new MBPs perform in the real world. Since I initially stated that I don't want fingermarks on my screen and had my objection casually dismissed as "lame" I've had a chance to think about this. I still don't want grubby fingers on my screen. Now, I realize, I don't want my workflow interrupted by having to move my fingers to the screen. Keyboard and touchpad are enough for me. The guy sitting next to me has a Windows laptop and is busily working away, using various apps. His fingers haven't moved to the screen in the last half hour. I can't tell whether his laptop has a touchscreen, but if it doesn't, he is clearly not missing the feature.
In the "real" computer area, the laptop is probably the only variant that could reasonably support touchscreen. Wall mounting of monitors, desk space, headless servers, using large screen televisions across the room from where one is sitting all conspire to make touchscreen useless for desktop machines, and adding this functionality would place the laptop into a completely different market to the rest of the computers in a manufacturers line-up.
Already, the new TouchBar has moved the goalposts for desktop machines. When we see new iMacs (and Mac Pros, assuming they survive to the next generation) will they have the TouchBar built into the BT keyboard? It's a tall order. For one thing, the TouchBar is at least partly controlled by its own processor so separating the TouchBar electronics from the main computer could be tricky, not to mention making the BT keyboard hugely expensive.
No doubt, Apple's design teams are working flat out on new designs. I, for one, believe that those designs will not be influenced by a a few shrill voices arguing that Microsoft and others are taking the lead. Time will tell how successful the new MBPs perform in the real world. Since I initially stated that I don't want fingermarks on my screen and had my objection casually dismissed as "lame" I've had a chance to think about this. I still don't want grubby fingers on my screen. Now, I realize, I don't want my workflow interrupted by having to move my fingers to the screen. Keyboard and touchpad are enough for me. The guy sitting next to me has a Windows laptop and is busily working away, using various apps. His fingers haven't moved to the screen in the last half hour. I can't tell whether his laptop has a touchscreen, but if it doesn't, he is clearly not missing the feature.