Monday, August 6th 2018

Apple Files Patent for a MacBook with Virtual Keyboard and Invisible Trackpad

Did you know, that the home buttons on the iPhone 7/Plus, and iPhone 8/Plus aren't real buttons? It's a flat surface with pressure and fingerprint sensors, and when pushed hard enough, the Taptic module underneath simulates the tactile-feedback of pushing a real SMD button (which is why the button feels jammed when the iPhone is powered down). Apple's latest generation of MacBooks already have real keyboards with extremely short key travel, that's well enough received by its users to convince the company to toy with a notebook with completely virtual keyboards.

Apple filed patent applications for a new generation of MacBooks that completely lack physical keyboards, and instead have two screens on the opposing halves of the traditional notebook clam-shell. The upper half has a higher-resolution main screen, while the lower half has a slightly lower-resolution screen that's good enough to display virtual keyboards of any shape, layout or character-set; in addition to more content. This screen will have toughened glass, and a super-sensitive capacitive 3D touch layer, and Taptic modules underneath. The trackpad, too, is virtual, and can be located wherever you like. Apple will give MacOS more gesture-based control riding on the success of the iPhone X. The patent application shows that Apple has succeeded in simulating keyboards' tactile-feedback on Taptic, and it's only a matter of time before notebooks with real keyboards could be relegated to sub-premium market segments.
Source: WCCFTech
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30 Comments on Apple Files Patent for a MacBook with Virtual Keyboard and Invisible Trackpad

#26
AsRock
TPU addict
TheOne

Found it.
Yup that looks like it, i would hate to use it or any thing like it for a keyboard simply due to their being no real sense of knowing were your fingers are. I would buy the ASUS before a Apple as with Apple repair sucks and on top of that it's probably glued together.

Small ipads are nice to use even for a keyboard but larger ipads are horrid, this is even bigger.

But a again due to being basically 2 ipads in one will require a good slapping time to time later it's life.
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#27
AltCapwn
AsRockYup that looks like it, i would hate to use it or any thing like it for a keyboard simply due to their being no real sense of knowing were your fingers are.
That's why I bought a Blackberry KeyONE. Very underrated smartphones unfortunately.
Posted on Reply
#28
ssdpro
Problem is Apple doesn't have anything innovative in tbe works. We are on iPhone 9 they called X. MacBook 16,2 or whatever. They are inventing/copying innovations to something that doesn't need innovation. Just build a keyboard well. Make a trackpad work like a mouse. Make voice recognition actually recognize. "Siri, what time is it?" Siri: Did you say popups?
Posted on Reply
#29
StrayKAT
ssdproProblem is Apple doesn't have anything innovative in tbe works. We are on iPhone 9 they called X. MacBook 16,2 or whatever. They are inventing/copying innovations to something that doesn't need innovation. Just build a keyboard well. Make a trackpad work like a mouse. Make voice recognition actually recognize. "Siri, what time is it?" Siri: Did you say popups?
Some say it's Tim Cook's fault.. but it's been the most profitable under him. So it's not like he's going anywhere. It might've been more of the old Apple if Scott Forstall had taken over.. he was kind of the closest in design philosophy to Steve Jobs (and just as hated apparently). Tim Cook fired him.
Posted on Reply
#30
Valantar
StrayKATSome say it's Tim Cook's fault.. but it's been the most profitable under him. So it's not like he's going anywhere. It might've been more of the old Apple if Scott Forstall had taken over.. he was kind of the closest in design philosophy to Steve Jobs (and just as hated apparently). Tim Cook fired him.
It seems they've timed their slide from pro-level to high-end consumer design quite perfectly to coincide with the appearance of a large-scale market for high-end consumer goods, and they're framing their products perfectly for this. Need ports to do your work, or need to type a lot? Go somewhere else. Want a slim, nice-looking computer with decent performance and heaps of brand cred tacked on? You've come to the right place!
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