Macworld

Touch Bar doesn’t herald a touchscree­n Mac

Apple’s design chief Jony Ive says Apple won’t turn the MacBook into a tablet, writes Caitlin McGarry

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As we’ve already seen, Apple’s two new MacBook Pros have slim OLED displays that replace the keyboard’s function keys. Apple launched its latest products just one day after Microsoft unveiled its massive Surface Studio desktop designed for creative profession­als, a demographi­c once solidly in Apple territory. Why didn’t Apple go fully touchscree­n with its new MacBooks? Is the Touch Bar an interim step, a sign that Apple is unsure of its footing?

No. Jony Ive, Apple’s chief design officer, told Cnet that Apple had decided “many, many years

ago” that touchscree­n Macs were not the right approach. Why? Well, Ive didn’t really get into specifics (of course):

“When we were exploring multitouch many, many years ago, we were trying to understand the appropriat­e applicatio­n and opportunit­ies for [it]. We just didn’t feel that [the Mac] was the right place for that. It wasn’t particular­ly useful or an appropriat­e applicatio­n of multitouch.

“It’s difficult to talk without going into a lot of details that puts me starting to talk about things that we are working on. I don’t really want to talk much more about it.”

He revealed the company develops prototypes that employees, then live with for awhile to see if the approach is a good one. Two years ago, Apple began developing larger trackpads with haptic input, then decided to combine a touch display with a mechanical keyboard. But the Touch Bar “still just marks a beginning,” Ive added.

He avoided hinting at where Apple will take the Mac, but the Wall Street Journal reported recently that the company is planning to swap out the mechanical keyboard for a Kindle-esque e-ink display. That change would come courtesy of e-ink keyboard creator Sonder Design, an Australian startup backed by Apple supplier Foxconn.

According to the WSJ, that new keyboard won’t make its way to the MacBook until 2018. And as for why Apple is more interested in putting touch in its MacBook keyboards than its MacBook screens, well, it’s unclear.

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