Khaleej Times

Apple adds keyboard touch control functions to Mac in major refresh

- AP

cupertino — Apple’s high-end Mac laptops are getting a touch control strip above the keyboard, part of a long-awaited update aimed at reviving interest in a product often overshadow­ed by newer gadgets like the iPad and iPhone.

The new Touch Bar, which is both a narrow display and a control panel, replaces the old physical function keys on a traditiona­l laptop. It will offer a variety of controls that change according to the app or website that’s open. It also has functions that will be familiar to many iPhone users — showing word suggestion­s as you type, for example, or letting you scroll through a library of emojis.

The company unveiled the laptops at its headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California, where executives showed how the Touch Bar works with a variety of apps and software — providing playback and editing controls for videos or music, for example, and search functions for Apple’s maps and photos apps. Apple is also opening the Touch Bar to work with outside software, including Adobe’s Photoshop editing program and Microsoft’s Word, PowerPoint and Skype.

Along with faster processors and brighter screens, two of Apple’s new laptops will also get a fingerprin­t sensor, similar to the one on iPhones.

The sensor can unlock the device, authorise software installati­ons or recognize a different user and quickly switch to that person’s settings. It works with Apple Pay, so users can authorise an electronic payment for online purchases.

At least for now, the new Touch Bar and Touch ID features will be available only on higher-end models — a 13-inch MacBook Pro that starts at about $1,800 and a 15inch MacBook Pro at about $2,400. Both ship in a few weeks. Starting Thursday, Apple is selling a 13inch MacBook Pro without the Touch Bar or Touch ID, but with other improvemen­ts, for $1,500.

Older versions sold for prices starting at about $1,300 for 13 inches and $2,000 for 15 inches. Apple will still sell older MacBook Pros at those prices, along with less expensive MacBook and MacBook Air models. But its cheapest laptop, the 11-inch MacBook Air for about $900, will be sold only to education markets.

The company is also replacing some computer ports with new outlets compatible with USB-C standards, which can be used both for charging and transferri­ng data. Connectors with USB-C technology can transmit data faster than older USB jacks. They are also smaller and have a symmetric shape, which means the USB-C jack can be inserted with either side facing up. But older USB printers and other devices will need adapters.

Sales of the Mac have been in a slump this year, after a streak of growth in 2014 and 2015 that year when the first Mac

model was introduced by Steve Jobs seemed to defy global trends. Consumers generally are buying fewer PCs and using smartphone­s or tablets instead. Apple itself has promoted its latest iPad tablet, the iPad Pro, as capable of replacing the laptop for many users. And in contrast with the Mac’s earlier years — when Apple marketed its computers to people who saw themselves as creative profession­als or just independen­t thinkers — Apple also has begun promoting the Mac as a computer for businesses, which once mostly used competitor­s’ PCs running Microsoft’s Windows software.

Microsoft, meanwhile, has begun selling its own line of high-end Surface laptops and this week introduced its first Surface desktop PC. Analysts say the new Surface Studio has a premium price and features that will most likely appeal to visual designers and other creative profession­als — an area that has been Apple’s strength. Microsoft has boasted about modern controls with touch screens; the Touch Bar is Apple’s answer to that, placed near the keyboard where people’s fingers are already.

For Apple, the Mac line has been eclipsed financiall­y by other products — first the iPod and now the iPhone — that have made far more money in recent years. But the Mac has been important for Apple since co-founder Steve Jobs introduced the first model in 1984. — Printed and Published by Galadari Printing & Publishing (LLC), P.O. Box 11243, Dubai. Telephone: 3384545, 3383535. Telefax: 3382238, 3383676. e-mail: business@khaleejtim­es.com. Internet Home Page: www.khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? Reuters ?? CEO Tim Cook speaks under a graphic of the new MacBook Pro during an Apple media event in Cupertino, California, on Thursday. —
Reuters CEO Tim Cook speaks under a graphic of the new MacBook Pro during an Apple media event in Cupertino, California, on Thursday. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates