Mac|Life

Random Apple Memory Trackpads, then and now.

Adam Banks tracks the surprising­ly long history of the Mac’s most inscrutabl­e input device

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The glass-to pped Multi-Touch trackpad has been a distinctiv­e central feature of the modern MacBook since 2008, when OS X Snow Leopard introduced gestures across Apple’s range. But its roots go back further.

In 1991, the original PowerBook 100 came with a dinky little trackball in front of the keyboard, which you rolled to move the pointer. The competing Olivetti S20 had a large touchpad behind the keyboard instead.

That’s often thought of as the first example of a trackpad, but in the early ’80s, Apollo desktop systems came with an optional touchpad in place of a numeric keypad; pressing this turned the blinking command-line cursor into a draggable arrow.

“Take care not to puncture the conductive material,” warned the manual: The resistive membrane, which needed firm contact, was easily damaged. In 1983, the portable Gavilan SC featured a large touch strip between its screen and keyboard, strikingly prescient of today’s MacBook Pro with Touch Bar, which complement­s the trackpad’s pointer and gesture control.

When the PowerBook gained its touchpad in 1994, the capacitive surface used third-party Cirque GlidePoint technology. It was Multi-Touch, adapted from the iPhone’s revolution­ary new finger-operated screen, that finally gave Apple a unique selling point in touch input. And in 2009 it squared the circle of touch on the desktop with the Magic Mouse and its gesture-sensing top panel. Despite a stubborn tendency to accidental­ly scroll, swipe, or disconnect, today’s rechargeab­le Magic Mouse 2 remains an unrivalled hybrid.

But it’s the Magic Trackpad 2 and recent MacBook and MacBook Pro trackpads that represent the peak of touchpad technology. While the Magic Mouse has invisible buttons, Apple’s latest trackpads go one better: pressing down on one doesn’t move anything, yet Apple’s “Taptic” vibration engine makes you feel like it did. After 35 years of people touching computers, now the computer touches you.

 ??  ?? The not-so-humble Magic Trackpad has a long history of antecedent­s.
The not-so-humble Magic Trackpad has a long history of antecedent­s.

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