![]() ![]() With that said, what I see here in many comments is that people are not able change their workflow and experiment for a bit with it. I find it useful and I love some of the perks it has while in different applications. I don’t dislike mine, but I don’t love it to death. And, still think it’s just a neat gadget. I still understand the benefit of reaching for dedicated keys, but it’s still outweighed for me by being able to make adjustments on the fly on the same part of keyboard real estate without having to constantly remap, use levels of fn keys, etc. I say this because it seems the critique is that it’s not for power users. I am a full time employee where my job is to be both tech support and digitally creative, so I spend a lot of time on the machine as a power-user. Update: I still have this computer and I still love the Touch Bar. Even though this is all conceptual at this point since they’re (almost) definitely killing it, is there a way that you figure they could design it to keep both sides happy? Some folks below suggested haptics for example. Not only do I think Apple should keep it in future generations (which it sounds like they won't be), but I have no idea why everyone hates on this thing all the time! Contextual for all of the apps I use, clear, and just a neat gadget! Too good.Įdit: There are some good points that have popped up for and against. I just bought the M1 MBP and it's my first Mac that has a Touch Bar. ![]() I get that purpose-built keys are easy to reach for and can be remapped, etc. ![]()
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