I assume you're referring to the Lightning to USB connection. Pics on the website show Lightning ports on the accessories, so the other end would be USB. This wouldn't connect an iPad and a Magic Mouse.
Scroll down to the mouse gestures and the first thing you see is someone slowly demonstrating the unbelievable feature of a right click on a mouse. With the index finger. Awesome.
I got a Magic Mouse with my last Mac, with the one-piece top shell that rocks left and right depending if you want to left or right click. The very first game I tried with it was Borderlands, but you need to hold down the right-click button to aim and while doing so left-click to shoot. No can do.
I love Macs and really appreciate the attention to detail Apple put into all their products. Except mice. I'd take the cheapest mouse off Amazon over any of the ones from Apple any day of the week.
The Magic mouse surface doesn't "rock left and right". The whole piece clicks, regardless of where you press. What differs is that it is a multi-touch surface and identifies where your finger is at the time you click (or even tap, if you have that enabled).
There is a built-in option in OSX to enable "Secondary click" (aka Right Click, but it can also be swapped to be triggered by a left-side click for Left-Handed users) on a Magic Mouse.
If a piece of third-party software somehow doesn't work with the standard OS pointer system, it sounds like you should be asking them why their software is so terrible.
And the answer is going to be, "Because it's a port from Windows, and the Mac's small user base doesn't justify the effort needed to redo the control scheme." Regardless of whether you find that answer to be acceptable, that's what it will be, and the alternative is not to have it available on the Mac at all.
Not even the Mac's small user base. Out of the number of Mac users, take the very small fraction that play first person shooters, and then take the very very small fraction of those that do it with Apple's mice.
99% of that market is going to have something from Razer, Logitech, Corsair, etc. The other five people can bind zoom to their keyboard.
That's unfair on third party software. Pressing both mouse buttons is common in many situations, and is just something that the magic mouse does not make easy to support (speaking as a long-time magic mouse user btw)
The hardware is actually capable of this. The surface of the mouse is fully multi-touch, it can distinguish 3-4 independent touches, so it could easily support left + right clicks at once. However, that 'gesture' is not one offered by the software.
It's definitely the mouse implementation. The detection mechanics aren't compatible with most of the "gestures" them that gamers require. It is indeed better to avoid Apple's mice and trackpads for gaming.
>If a piece of third-party software somehow doesn't work with the standard OS pointer system...
The previous white plastic Magic Mouse did allow simultaneous left and right clicks, the limitation is specific to this generation of the design, so that argument really isn't going t get you anywhere.
I don't understand how people on a site called HackerNews still somehow aren't aware of what features apple products have, while still feeling obligated to post comments based on their own assumed/misinformed views about the features they believe aren't there.
Every mouse Apple have shipped for the last decade has supported "Secondary Click", and honestly after using a multitouch mouse for about the last 4 years, I don't understand how anyone would use anything else.
I've got one of those button-less trackpads on my work Mac laptop. I can't fucking stand it. The clicking just kinda gradually stops working about halfway up, like the bottom half is clickable and then it slowly fades to a non-clickable surface as you move up. So you have to keep track of where your finger is to know if you can click.
Click-and-drag when you realise you've run out of trackpad space to keep dragging is a mind-bending experience.
The trackpads on Apple laptops prior to the new force touch models are physically clickable only at the bottom because the top edge is basically fixed in place (as the hinge for the whole thing). I don't see how this is any worse than separate buttons - you'd still have the same physically clickable area then (the bottom bit) but you'd have less space to drag the cursor around.
Seriously though, turn on tap-to-click. Never worry about physically clicking it again.
> What's fucking wrong with buttons?
A multi-touch surface such as the MagicMouse or Trackpad on a recent Apple laptop is so ridiculously more customisable than a mere one or two or even three physical buttons + regular trackpad.
Taps, with 1-4 fingers. Swipes in 4 directions with 1-4 fingers. Swipe from the sides. Pinch/Spread with 2 fingers. Pinch/Spread with thumb and several fingers. Rotate.
Seriously, this is just what's available out of the box with OS X, before you look at third-party software to track even more gestures on touch (trackpad/mouse) surfaces.
Edit: clarified that pre-force-touch trackpads are top-hinged.
> I don't see how this is any worse than separate buttons - you'd still have the same physically clickable area then (the bottom bit) but you'd have less space to drag the cursor around.
Sure, but with physical buttons I know if I'm on a physical button. With this thing, sometimes clicking just doesn't work because I'm too far up and I have to move my finger down to where it's magically clickable again.
> Seriously, this is just what's available out of the box with OS X
I dunno, I don't use any of that stuff. I do 90% of my work from the Terminal. I drag windows, scroll, and select text (ugh) and that's about it. For my use case, this thing is no improvement over buttons and often a detriment.
Two-finger drag to scroll.
Three-finger drag to do anything that's normally click+drag.
Doesn't matter where your fingers are on the trackpad, or which direction you need to move, and you can briefly lift your fingers and resume a 3-finger drag.
Unfortunately Apple makes it near impossible to get a middle mouse button effect.
It's absolutely essential to copy-and-paste or to open new tabs. And X has had it right for thirty years. Still Apple can't manage to get a middle button click working.
Again, the benefits of multi-touch (as opposed to reliance on physical buttons) provides an option. Software like BetterTouchTool (or similar, I've not looked for alternatives for a while) can detect a tap in the middle section of a Magic Mouse (and likely a Trackpad too) and map it to whatever you want.
How are you even using the thing? If you had a trackpad with buttons at the bottom, you'd keep your thumb on the bottom and click with it, while using your index finger to point. Just do the same thing! Are you trying to click with your index finger?!
My former roommate has owned a Mac for at least 8 years before I lived with her. She had a Magic Mouse and literally did not know that a right-click existed...it was quite revelatory to her when I was helping her with spreadsheets (it's amazing how pop-up context menus can suddenly open up features that are, technically, already exposed via menubar, albeit buried).
I don't think she's ever used a PC though. And come to think of it, if I had never used a PC, I'm not sure why I would've guessed that there's such a thing as a right click on a Magic Mouse...especially if I grew up in today's iOS world.
I'm on a Macbook now. The trackpad is great. But when I use an external mouse, I use a standard mouse with physical buttons. The Magic Mouse -- like all magic bits of technology -- can misinterpret what I intend to do...the explicitness of the physical right mouse button is just more precise for me.
Apple hides far too many user features e.g. click the top on iOS to scroll back to top.
They may produce beautiful looking things (current iPod Nano excepted) but I think their reputation for usability is over rated (crazy key combinations on laptop keyboard)
The first video about a new generation of apple mice is showcasing a simple right click as Joe User has known it for what.. 20 years? 40?
I acknowledge this masterpiece and say kudos to Apple for pulling that off. Sure, the mouse has other features. But the first one to show? The right click.
Can i left click? I don't know. It's not shown in the videos.
P.S.: I didn't mention multi touch on a mouse at all. Why do you assume i don't like it?
The marketing material is exactly that - it's their job to sell the product, and clearly a large part of the non-tech industry still have some weird notion about Macs not supporting secondary click.
My comment was about people on an explicitly technical news site having the same misconceptions.
> I didn't mention multi touch on a mouse at all. Why do you assume i don't like it?
Your general tone seemed to take the oh-so-common notion that Apple's products are never innovative and often "behind the times". My point was that Apple has been very innovative in terms of things like mice/trackpads.
I remember visiting the brother of my friend quite a few years ago, he had a big iMac in his living room and asked me to put on some music. So I hopped over and was dumbfounded on how to right click. So I asked my friend and he basically said 'there is no right click' (note, both of them were mac users, I wasn't), and then I said surely there must be a right click!? Then he asked his brother and he was like 'don't really know, there's a key combination or something you can press I think'.
Anyway I put on the music and thought for years macs had no right click and never bothered to investigate further. I never had Apple money as a teenager and never used Macs, and given both of them had for years I thought they must've known. I'd been in the back of my mind ever since, hesistant to even consider switching to OS X. Until my early 20s when I needed a mac for work, looked into it and right clicked on my mac ever since.
I wouldn't dare put a number on the amount of users they missed out on, but I'd likely have switched a few years earlier. That, the price positioning and the minor hassle around office as a student were the three biggest things preventing it. The first ended up being totally false, the other two became less important as I stopped being a student and started a career.
As a Windows user for 10+ years before going to Mac, I had always heard people make fun of Mac for having no right click, and thought it was possible. But then I used a Mac and instinctively right clicked because that's what I was used to. Low and behold, right click worked.
If you don't investigate yourself, that's your problem.
The figure I've seen quoted for many Li batteries is 1000 recharges at good capacity. For devices needing a recharge every few weeks, the batteries should last a decade or more.
What's the expected lifetime of a mouse, and what's the expected useable lifetime of a li-ion battery? Yes, it will degrade over time, but you'll continue to get use out of it. I'd peg both at about 4-5 years at this point.
It's not apple that's implementing planned obsolescence. It's the entire industry, and it's defacto obsolescence. Or would you still expect to be using your microsoft ball mouse from 1999 today?
I think I have a trackball upstairs in a box from circa 2000 that I suspect still works fine, with an ADB-USB converter.
The design goals of these two devices are different. Of course, it's perfectly fine for different devices to have different design goals. In fact, they should!
Seriously a Logitech wireless mouse costs £8 here in the UK at the moment. It takes one AA battery a year for me and lasts about 3-4 years before the buttons stop working.
So not the entire industry.
As a side note I have a working Microsoft optical mouse from 1999 that was used for 7 years and is still fine.
It almost killed me when mine broke earlier this year and I found out they don't make them anymore. Best mouse I've ever used, and its corpse still has a place of honor at the top of the pile of old hardware in my closet.
I have an Microsoft Intellimouse from 2001 that I'm still using as my daily mouse at work.
It works flawlessly, and has all the features I want and nothing more. Mouse wheel with click and detents, back/forward buttons and left/right buttons.
I have a fancier mouse at home with a similar feature set and even though it cost 4x as much, sometimes my work mouse feels better.
Yeah, PO is the reason why iOS 9 still supports iPhone 4s.
The new moust is very appealing to me exactly because I won't have to deal with batteries anymore.
My last two Logitech mice have had Li Ion batteries. This isn't new. Also, it fits with Apple's stance on the environment. A lot of people probably aren't using rechargeable batteries in their accessories and this will slow the rate of consumption.
Best Logitech mouse is a the G700s. Wireless/wired hybrid with a NiMH low-self-discharge AA battery included.
When it runs low, you either plug the mouse in to charge from USB (also switches data over to the slightly more reliable wired connection), or you swap in a fresh battery and toss the dead one in a separate charger.
If your AA battery has too much permanent wear, get a new one. No warranty voiding necessary.
The small keyboards without the numberpad have always been pretty on par with a MacBook keyboard. Which is why I love them so much.
Before I went all Mac, I had trouble going from a regular keyboard to a laptop keyboard. Always missing where keys are and that. Once I went Mac with the keyboards almost exactly the same, I don't even notice it anymore.
I'll argue that the battery lid isn't a moving part since it doesn't move in regular use. But I'll agree that the power switch could be one. The new mouse is probably smarter about entering sleep mode and doesn't have a switch (guessing here). So that's 2 moving parts gone.
I guess my Logitech G710 has me so used to piss poor battery performance that the battery compartment seems to me to be very much a moving part that gets moved on a regular basis.
I hope they're not phasing out the numeric keypad versions! I love typing on those. Never understood why Apple didn't make a wireless version with a keypad either.
Exactly my use case too! Blender is unusable without. In case you'd not seen there's a cool iOS app which replicates Blender's keypad functions - great when you're on a Macbook or similar: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/blender-keypad/id430784289?m...
I personally find the force touch trackpad really spooky. It clicks in when I exert force, which is fine, and if I reduce the force without moving my finger, it clicks out, which is also fine.
When I click and drag across the trackpad, the click out force point changes; it clicks when my finger leaves my trackpad, not when my finger removes the force on the trackpad. That hysteresis makes my brain hurt.
Well I use a trackball and an external keyboard so it doesn't really matter. My personal laptops don't have force touch trackpads so it's a non-issue for me.
I paid about $15 for a Microsoft Mouse 3500, which tracks my shiny desk surface (1960s linoleum) whereas according to internet reviews, the Apple Magic Mouse (older version) will not track a shiny or transparent surface.
In the section for the magic trackpad, there is a little animated gif showing how a two-finger swipe animates sliding webpages (presumably emulating "back" and "forward" buttons). The animation in the browser is choppy and there is a visible delay/mismatch between the swipe and the response. Apple's marketing can't even doctor a gif properly.
What are you talking about? It's smooth in the animation, just as it is in reality doing the same thing on a previous-gen magic mouse or MBP trackpad).
Are you confusing the snap at the end with "choppiness"?
I'm not a huge fan of the form factors on Apple's external input devices to begin with, and now that I can't just swap out the batteries and have an instant full charge while on the go... no thanks.
i'm actually excited about the new trackpad. i have some kind of a weird sensation whenever i use a silver trackpad, a sort of tingle in my fingers. this doesn't happen on the magic mouse's white surface... anybody know what i'm talking about? my friends think i'm crazy.
i've been using only the apple trackpad for about 3 years now, and the "sensation" you describe was persistent for the first several weeks / months. the interaction by using the tip of your fingers is a bit wierd at first, but now i could never go back.
trackpad is very superior to a mouse, at least for non-gaming stuff, like coding & browsing the webs
Bringing the laptop interface to the desktop? Not interested.
The desktop is the one place where I don't need wireless, I don't care how big, old, or ugly looking my hardware is, and what I bought 10 years ago still works perfectly fine today.
The Magic Keyboard seems designed for using it from the couch. Any other use case seems better served with a "normal" keyboard.
Amen. I actually built up a stash of the old-style Microsoft ergonomic keyboards shortly before they stopped building them. I cycle through them only when I spill water on them; that is their Achilles heel. I give them Viking funerals.
I've used an Apple Wireless keyboard (I believe the previous generation of the new "Magic" one) for a few years as my primary keyboard, usually at a MBP connected to one or more monitors, sat on a big glass desk. It's small, pleasant to type on, easy to move about, and slips into my laptop bag easily in case I really think I'm going to need it on the road (I rarely do). I replace the batteries maybe as much as twice a year.
It's looking a bit grubby now so I'll probably buy this new one to replace it.
I had much worse experiences with Apple's wireless keyboards when they first came out (pairing problems, latency, etc); but this seems to me like a technology that's pretty mature and "just works" now.
Friend of mine definitely did some couch typing on a TV-connected macbook in his tiny studio. Anyway, I agree that wireless isn't essential but I'd personally prefer it because I tend to use a mouse with my MBP half of the time. Putting a wired mouse in my bag vs just a mouse, then taking it out and connecting it with a cable in a coffeeshop.. it's just not as convenient as just throwing a wireless mouse in your bag and taking it out.
Beyond that it's a bit cleaner on the desktop. I don't mind the look of a wire (actually I've never really used a wireless mouse because I don't care about the look, and the convenience isn't worth the money for me), but for example right now I have a notepad laying ontop of my wire, behind my MBP, behind my mouse, that's weighing down on the cable making it heavier to move the mouse. So I have to put the notepad below the cable, and then grab it from under the cable when I need it and this repeated throughout the day for anything I want to put on my desktop that has a mouse + charger cable crossing it. Ridiculous first world problems that I wouldn't spend money on solving, but if my mouse blew up today and a genie asked me if I wanted a wire on my free replacement mouse or not, it's clear what I'd choose. Another is when I disconnect the mouse on my MBP (hooked up to a keyboard, mouse and screen at home) because I want to plug in my camera or my phone to transfer some files and I only have 2 USB slots.
Anyway again I'm not one to have a wireless mouse but there's definitely people who benefit in a desktop environment and I'd wager to say it's not a small niche, either.
Magic Trackpad 2 is a must buy for me, ever since I bought a new MBP with new touchpad that allows to click anywhere on a surface - I can't get used to old way of clicking only at the bottom of a trackpad, I want to click anywhere now and with consistent pressure
Well, the newer Macs have limited USB ports so you have to either do a lot of switching around, or have a USB hub on your desk. Now you have 3 or 4 cords laying around which look ugly and, worse, usually end up getting hung up on my mouse and causing me to rearrange stuff. It's not the end of the world, but I really, really enjoy my wireless keyboard/trackpad and am looking forward to getting the new ones (at least the trackpad 2).
>This solid but lighter build, along with an optimized foot design, results in a smooth, superior glide with less resistance.
That's exactly my issue with the mouse. It glides to easily. The touch is pretty much useless because I end up moving the mouse instead. I'm probably holding it wrong.
While I love the current trackpad, I'm not sure that I really believe that much in force touch, it seems like a very undiscoverable interface design. Some people are still struggling with single vs. double click, I don't feel that it helps them that they now also have to think about how hard they press.
You know what is far more eco-friendly than not having to replace batteries on keyboards, mice and touchpads?
Cables.
Lithium-ion batteries are not necessarily clean to manufacture. And, eventually these things are going to end-up in a landfill somewhere.
I truly don't understand this push to de-cable keyboards, mice and touchpads that will be attached to something on your desk. Every single one of our workstations, Mac or PC, has cabled keyboards and trackballs. I can't remember one single instance --in decades and hundreds of workstations-- of anyone, including myself, expressing any degree of inconvenience or any problem whatsoever related to cabled input devices.
The way I see it, adding batteries --of any kind-- to a device that could very reasonably be plugged in and forgotten about is the exact opposite of eco friendly.
The funny part you still have to have cables laying around because there will be a monthly two hour charging ritual --times N devices. At least with disposable batteries one could pop in new batteries and get going. Now, if you forget to charge, you'll have to attach the cable for a couple of hours. My guess is eventually people are going to leave the keyboard and touchpad plugged-in, again negating the reasoning for both non-eco-friendly lithium-ion batteries and wireless.
This is a design choice made purely for design and presented with a very twisted justification of eco-friendliness when, in reality, the opposite is true. Outside of a few corner cases cabled devices would do just as well and be far more eco-friendly by a long shot.
There are many articles out there on the issues surrounding the production of lithium-ion chemistry cells. Of course, as with anything on the web, it is important to understand the interests and bias behind who publishes the article and why. With that, I grabbed a couple to post the links here. I leave it to the reader to explore further.
For years now I have a TrackMan Wheel by Logitech, but it's starting to slowly dissolve after years of continuous use.
Unfortunately, they don't make that one any more - only its successor which is wireless for some inexplicable reason (you don't move a trackball around - why do you care about wires?).
As such I'm on the lookout for a replacement. I've tried the old Apple Trackpad, but it doesn't feel as comfortable as the trackball - likely because it has a way too steep angle for me - also it is in need of constant battery replacement which just doesn't make sense for a stationary object on the table.
Maybe the new trackpad is a solution for this: The angle looks less steep and it can presumably be used in wired mode or at least it doesn't need new batteries as it comes with a rechargeable one.
I'm used to Force Touch from a 15" retina macbook pro and I like it very much on that machine, so that's probably ok.
Or you could upgrade to a full-on trackball. I've been using Logitech Trackman Marbles for the past 8 years or so but a few months ago I upgraded to a Kensington Slimblade which is amazing.
The lightning port to charge all of your devices is interesting. I kind of like the idea that the phone charger you have laying around anyway[0] can be used to charge all of your battery powered devices. The new Siri Remote for Apple TV has the same thing, and it surprised me at first, but it actually makes sense to do that rather than a USB connection for most of their customers.
I agree they don't have it quite figured out though. The Apple TV developer kits came with two cables: You get a lightning cable to charge the remote and a USB type-C cable to connect to the Apple TV itself.
[0] I think its safe to assume that the average person buying an Apple keyboard also has an iPhone in their pocket.
The built-in batteries feel like a step back. If you use the current crop of mice and keyboards with rechargeable AAs, you get the same benefits but can swap to a full set in seconds and recharge the old ones at your leisure.
103 comments
[ 558 ms ] story [ 4561 ms ] threadIt would be awesome to have a mouse for Citrix/VMWare terminal access.
Edit: There it is: https://www.apple.com/media/us/accessories/2015/e137bcd8-687...
I could watch this masterpiece all day.
I love Macs and really appreciate the attention to detail Apple put into all their products. Except mice. I'd take the cheapest mouse off Amazon over any of the ones from Apple any day of the week.
There is a built-in option in OSX to enable "Secondary click" (aka Right Click, but it can also be swapped to be triggered by a left-side click for Left-Handed users) on a Magic Mouse.
If a piece of third-party software somehow doesn't work with the standard OS pointer system, it sounds like you should be asking them why their software is so terrible.
99% of that market is going to have something from Razer, Logitech, Corsair, etc. The other five people can bind zoom to their keyboard.
The hardware is actually capable of this. The surface of the mouse is fully multi-touch, it can distinguish 3-4 independent touches, so it could easily support left + right clicks at once. However, that 'gesture' is not one offered by the software.
BTW, a great program to visualize the touch capabilities of the mouse is downloadable here: http://www.makeitgo.ws/articles/fingermgmt/
The previous white plastic Magic Mouse did allow simultaneous left and right clicks, the limitation is specific to this generation of the design, so that argument really isn't going t get you anywhere.
It is however not a gaming mouse. I'd gladly trade you a $10 mouse for your Magic Mouse.
Every mouse Apple have shipped for the last decade has supported "Secondary Click", and honestly after using a multitouch mouse for about the last 4 years, I don't understand how anyone would use anything else.
Click-and-drag when you realise you've run out of trackpad space to keep dragging is a mind-bending experience.
What's fucking wrong with buttons?
Seriously though, turn on tap-to-click. Never worry about physically clicking it again.
> What's fucking wrong with buttons?
A multi-touch surface such as the MagicMouse or Trackpad on a recent Apple laptop is so ridiculously more customisable than a mere one or two or even three physical buttons + regular trackpad.
Taps, with 1-4 fingers. Swipes in 4 directions with 1-4 fingers. Swipe from the sides. Pinch/Spread with 2 fingers. Pinch/Spread with thumb and several fingers. Rotate.
Seriously, this is just what's available out of the box with OS X, before you look at third-party software to track even more gestures on touch (trackpad/mouse) surfaces.
Edit: clarified that pre-force-touch trackpads are top-hinged.
Sure, but with physical buttons I know if I'm on a physical button. With this thing, sometimes clicking just doesn't work because I'm too far up and I have to move my finger down to where it's magically clickable again.
> Seriously, this is just what's available out of the box with OS X
I dunno, I don't use any of that stuff. I do 90% of my work from the Terminal. I drag windows, scroll, and select text (ugh) and that's about it. For my use case, this thing is no improvement over buttons and often a detriment.
All of which is easier because of multitouch.
Two-finger drag to scroll. Three-finger drag to do anything that's normally click+drag.
Doesn't matter where your fingers are on the trackpad, or which direction you need to move, and you can briefly lift your fingers and resume a 3-finger drag.
It's absolutely essential to copy-and-paste or to open new tabs. And X has had it right for thirty years. Still Apple can't manage to get a middle button click working.
Otherwise the Magic Trackpad is excellent.
And it's not really clicking so much as pressing until you receive haptic feedback which feels like the surface "clicked".
- you can do click and drag with 2 fingers, don't have to slide the clicking finger
I don't think she's ever used a PC though. And come to think of it, if I had never used a PC, I'm not sure why I would've guessed that there's such a thing as a right click on a Magic Mouse...especially if I grew up in today's iOS world.
I'm on a Macbook now. The trackpad is great. But when I use an external mouse, I use a standard mouse with physical buttons. The Magic Mouse -- like all magic bits of technology -- can misinterpret what I intend to do...the explicitness of the physical right mouse button is just more precise for me.
They may produce beautiful looking things (current iPod Nano excepted) but I think their reputation for usability is over rated (crazy key combinations on laptop keyboard)
I acknowledge this masterpiece and say kudos to Apple for pulling that off. Sure, the mouse has other features. But the first one to show? The right click.
Can i left click? I don't know. It's not shown in the videos.
P.S.: I didn't mention multi touch on a mouse at all. Why do you assume i don't like it?
My comment was about people on an explicitly technical news site having the same misconceptions.
> I didn't mention multi touch on a mouse at all. Why do you assume i don't like it?
Your general tone seemed to take the oh-so-common notion that Apple's products are never innovative and often "behind the times". My point was that Apple has been very innovative in terms of things like mice/trackpads.
I wonder how many windows users this cost them.
Anyway I put on the music and thought for years macs had no right click and never bothered to investigate further. I never had Apple money as a teenager and never used Macs, and given both of them had for years I thought they must've known. I'd been in the back of my mind ever since, hesistant to even consider switching to OS X. Until my early 20s when I needed a mac for work, looked into it and right clicked on my mac ever since.
I wouldn't dare put a number on the amount of users they missed out on, but I'd likely have switched a few years earlier. That, the price positioning and the minor hassle around office as a student were the three biggest things preventing it. The first ended up being totally false, the other two became less important as I stopped being a student and started a career.
If you don't investigate yourself, that's your problem.
A very Apple move, to change to hardware with more planned obsolescence.
It's not apple that's implementing planned obsolescence. It's the entire industry, and it's defacto obsolescence. Or would you still expect to be using your microsoft ball mouse from 1999 today?
The design goals of these two devices are different. Of course, it's perfectly fine for different devices to have different design goals. In fact, they should!
So not the entire industry.
As a side note I have a working Microsoft optical mouse from 1999 that was used for 7 years and is still fine.
It works flawlessly, and has all the features I want and nothing more. Mouse wheel with click and detents, back/forward buttons and left/right buttons.
I have a fancier mouse at home with a similar feature set and even though it cost 4x as much, sometimes my work mouse feels better.
When it runs low, you either plug the mouse in to charge from USB (also switches data over to the slightly more reliable wired connection), or you swap in a fresh battery and toss the dead one in a separate charger.
If your AA battery has too much permanent wear, get a new one. No warranty voiding necessary.
Before I went all Mac, I had trouble going from a regular keyboard to a laptop keyboard. Always missing where keys are and that. Once I went Mac with the keyboards almost exactly the same, I don't even notice it anymore.
It had like .. 1 moving part before - the switch when you depressed it.
http://i.imgur.com/zDdbrER.png
It's what I use on my laptop, but I still prefer the keypad when I can have a full keyboard.
When I click and drag across the trackpad, the click out force point changes; it clicks when my finger leaves my trackpad, not when my finger removes the force on the trackpad. That hysteresis makes my brain hurt.
£109 vs £65 for the new mouse.
There's not that much extra value in it.
Are you confusing the snap at the end with "choppiness"?
i'm actually excited about the new trackpad. i have some kind of a weird sensation whenever i use a silver trackpad, a sort of tingle in my fingers. this doesn't happen on the magic mouse's white surface... anybody know what i'm talking about? my friends think i'm crazy.
i've been using only the apple trackpad for about 3 years now, and the "sensation" you describe was persistent for the first several weeks / months. the interaction by using the tip of your fingers is a bit wierd at first, but now i could never go back.
trackpad is very superior to a mouse, at least for non-gaming stuff, like coding & browsing the webs
The desktop is the one place where I don't need wireless, I don't care how big, old, or ugly looking my hardware is, and what I bought 10 years ago still works perfectly fine today.
The Magic Keyboard seems designed for using it from the couch. Any other use case seems better served with a "normal" keyboard.
I widlarize mine though :)
It's looking a bit grubby now so I'll probably buy this new one to replace it.
I had much worse experiences with Apple's wireless keyboards when they first came out (pairing problems, latency, etc); but this seems to me like a technology that's pretty mature and "just works" now.
Beyond that it's a bit cleaner on the desktop. I don't mind the look of a wire (actually I've never really used a wireless mouse because I don't care about the look, and the convenience isn't worth the money for me), but for example right now I have a notepad laying ontop of my wire, behind my MBP, behind my mouse, that's weighing down on the cable making it heavier to move the mouse. So I have to put the notepad below the cable, and then grab it from under the cable when I need it and this repeated throughout the day for anything I want to put on my desktop that has a mouse + charger cable crossing it. Ridiculous first world problems that I wouldn't spend money on solving, but if my mouse blew up today and a genie asked me if I wanted a wire on my free replacement mouse or not, it's clear what I'd choose. Another is when I disconnect the mouse on my MBP (hooked up to a keyboard, mouse and screen at home) because I want to plug in my camera or my phone to transfer some files and I only have 2 USB slots.
Anyway again I'm not one to have a wireless mouse but there's definitely people who benefit in a desktop environment and I'd wager to say it's not a small niche, either.
Also small arrows is a great idea: you can navigate through code without moving your hand to the right.
That's exactly my issue with the mouse. It glides to easily. The touch is pretty much useless because I end up moving the mouse instead. I'm probably holding it wrong.
While I love the current trackpad, I'm not sure that I really believe that much in force touch, it seems like a very undiscoverable interface design. Some people are still struggling with single vs. double click, I don't feel that it helps them that they now also have to think about how hard they press.
Cables.
Lithium-ion batteries are not necessarily clean to manufacture. And, eventually these things are going to end-up in a landfill somewhere.
I truly don't understand this push to de-cable keyboards, mice and touchpads that will be attached to something on your desk. Every single one of our workstations, Mac or PC, has cabled keyboards and trackballs. I can't remember one single instance --in decades and hundreds of workstations-- of anyone, including myself, expressing any degree of inconvenience or any problem whatsoever related to cabled input devices.
The way I see it, adding batteries --of any kind-- to a device that could very reasonably be plugged in and forgotten about is the exact opposite of eco friendly.
The funny part you still have to have cables laying around because there will be a monthly two hour charging ritual --times N devices. At least with disposable batteries one could pop in new batteries and get going. Now, if you forget to charge, you'll have to attach the cable for a couple of hours. My guess is eventually people are going to leave the keyboard and touchpad plugged-in, again negating the reasoning for both non-eco-friendly lithium-ion batteries and wireless.
This is a design choice made purely for design and presented with a very twisted justification of eco-friendliness when, in reality, the opposite is true. Outside of a few corner cases cabled devices would do just as well and be far more eco-friendly by a long shot.
There are many articles out there on the issues surrounding the production of lithium-ion chemistry cells. Of course, as with anything on the web, it is important to understand the interests and bias behind who publishes the article and why. With that, I grabbed a couple to post the links here. I leave it to the reader to explore further.
http://phys.org/news/2014-10-li-ion-batteries-toxic-halogens...
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/01/19/tesla-motor...
Unfortunately, they don't make that one any more - only its successor which is wireless for some inexplicable reason (you don't move a trackball around - why do you care about wires?).
As such I'm on the lookout for a replacement. I've tried the old Apple Trackpad, but it doesn't feel as comfortable as the trackball - likely because it has a way too steep angle for me - also it is in need of constant battery replacement which just doesn't make sense for a stationary object on the table.
Maybe the new trackpad is a solution for this: The angle looks less steep and it can presumably be used in wired mode or at least it doesn't need new batteries as it comes with a rechargeable one.
I'm used to Force Touch from a 15" retina macbook pro and I like it very much on that machine, so that's probably ok.
Really looking forward to trying this one out :-)
I thought we were all going to start standardizing on USB type-C?
www.apple.com/shop/product/MD820AM/A/lightning-to-micro-usb-adapter
I agree they don't have it quite figured out though. The Apple TV developer kits came with two cables: You get a lightning cable to charge the remote and a USB type-C cable to connect to the Apple TV itself.
[0] I think its safe to assume that the average person buying an Apple keyboard also has an iPhone in their pocket.