Another day, another “X is/can be/will be C’s replacement”.
That’s configurable. That’s default on haptic-enabled Macs, but you can enable tap to click very easily.
I’d say 100% with a fair share of confidence since Apple’s magic lies both in hardware AND software (as usual). The hardware is already phenomenal (and far above anything else in the market) but the Mac makes fantastic…
True, I don’t think people care since Apple’s non-haptic trackpad is still far (and I mean FAR) better than anything else in the market. People who eventually move on to a higher priced Mac with a haptic trackpad will…
> Why would ? I only own a little IT company and hang around on HN. Something’s not quite right here. If you hang around HN you have absolutely heard of the Neo. And I’d be downright frightful to have anything to do…
Another day, another “X is/can be/will be C’s replacement”.
That’s configurable. That’s default on haptic-enabled Macs, but you can enable tap to click very easily.
I’d say 100% with a fair share of confidence since Apple’s magic lies both in hardware AND software (as usual). The hardware is already phenomenal (and far above anything else in the market) but the Mac makes fantastic…
True, I don’t think people care since Apple’s non-haptic trackpad is still far (and I mean FAR) better than anything else in the market. People who eventually move on to a higher priced Mac with a haptic trackpad will…
> Why would ? I only own a little IT company and hang around on HN. Something’s not quite right here. If you hang around HN you have absolutely heard of the Neo. And I’d be downright frightful to have anything to do…