One of Apple's latest innovations8 U.S.C 2257be making its way to even more keyboards.
A newly granted trio of patents shows Apple might be working to bring its Touch Bar tech to more devices than just the MacBook Pro line. The Touch Bar famously debuted with the 2016 MacBook Pro, replacing the row of function keys with a much more functional super-responsive OLED touch panel.
Since the computer's release last November, the Touch Bar has been used in countless different ways, from the functional to the frivolous, and it's proven to be a killer addition to the keyboard we never knew we needed -- even if it's not as sexy as some of Apple's fanboys would've liked. Bringing it to more keyboards is just the next logical step.
SEE ALSO: Don't cry for Mac Mini, it's still part of Apple's lineupThe patents, which were unearthed by AppleInsider, all describe the means for creating a "Keyboard with Adaptive Input Row," aka the Touch Bar. The filings appear to be essentially identical.
The text of the patents mostly provide directions for how the touch-controlled tech actually works, rather than its application in different systems -- but images included in the filings appear to show it outside of the MacBook Pro's laptop housing.
Apple's wireless Magic Keyboard accessory could be the best candidate for Touch Bar treatment. It could become the premier accessory for Apple's computers -- or, the company could decide to release the Touch Bar tech across all of its keyboard lines.
Given Apple's track record of slow rollouts for new features and tiered product classes, that wholesale adoption is probably unlikely. This is just a patent, anyway, so there's no way of know if Apple actually has any plans to give any other keyboards the Touch Bar feature.
The latest word out of Cupertino promises a 2018 overhaul to the Mac Pro and a more imminent update to the iMac, which proves that Apple is ready for some shakeups in the computing department -- but don't get too ahead of yourself. Phil Schiller, Apple senior VP of worldwide marketing, promises there will not be touchscreens. Instead, you could just get your touch fix from your keyboard.
Topics Apple MacBook
Aly Raisman shares beautiful message about selfBeware Snapchatters: Apple's iOS 11 makes it much, much easier to record snapsThe Cavs' locker room reportedly smelled like weed after NBA Finals Game 2Muslims are handing out letters and roses at scene of London attackYour cracked iPhone screen might soon be easier and cheaper to repairApple still loves you, pro users, but that love will cost youOculus installing free VR systems in nearly 100 California librariesThe iPad is almost good enough for doing real work now. Almost.DARPA funds researchers to give you an inside look inside AI's brainsHere's the full lineup of gaming events at E3 ColiseumThe world's best airport is about to become the only one with a hedge mazeTala Ashe joins 'DC's Legends of Tomorrow' as Muslim'Stranger Things' cast tease new Season 2 charactersYou, yes you, could play Young Dumbledore in a 'Fantastic Beasts' sequelMorocco fossils push back the timeline on human originsApple's iOS 11 will take Facebook and Twitter down a notchIBM turns to artificial intelligence to solve poverty, hunger, and illiteracyFirst look at ARKit, Apple's big jump into augmented reality'Planet of the Apps' combines several shows and strips them of excitementFacebook Live introduces closed captions for deaf and hard of hearing users A Day at an Upper West Side Bank Silly Love Songs, and Other News by Jeffery Gleaves The Candor of Tourists On the Origin—and the Modern Staff Picks: Solstad, Agee, Gates Ken Grimes’s Outsider Art Searches Restlessly for Alien Life Tatiana Trouvé’s “Desire Lines” Finds Art in Central Park Staff Picks: Lorenzo Chiera, Michael Friedman, Yuknavitch The Bizarre Beauty of Early Hand An Artist Found the Fountain of Youth—It’s Not What You Want The Enlightenment Is Like a Centaur—and We Must Kill It! Nick Sousanis on How Comics Help Us Make Connections Antoine Volodine on Writing Post The Treasure Maps of Pamela Singh Beelzebub's Closeup, and Other News Linda Rosenkrantz on Her Book “Talk,” Fifty Years Later Has Anyone Really Smelled a Rotten Egg? An Appreciation of Tove Jansson Staff Picks: Coates, Cartels, Caesar, Cigarettes by The Paris Review My Parents’ News Cleanse
2.6159s , 10131.6640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【18 U.S.C 2257】,Prosperous Times Information Network