Magic Trackpad

Apples Magic Trackpad

Having used a Macbook pro for the last year and a half I have grown to love the way the trackpad works. Coming from a PC background I found it really hard not to use a mouse with a laptop. So I brought a Magic Mouse without any hesitation. The versatility of the swipes and gestures make the device a wonderful thing to use. But then after a while I started to find that I was using the trackpad, one because it was there, and two because it actually really works well with OSX. It wasn’t long before the magic mouse became somewhat obsolete and was collecting dust and begging for more double AA batteries, its only draw back!

I also own an iMac, and whenever I am working on that I was finding that I was looking for a trackpad that wasn’t there and was having to use my other Magic Mouse. I had grown accustomed to working different ways on each machine, and was fairly happy in doing so.

I then started to use the Developer Preview of OSX Lion; and its use of gestures is now even better and the poor little magic mouse doesn’t have the real-estate to perform all the lovely new features! Well it doesn’t at the time of writing; maybe the final release of Lion will change things? Anyway I should stop rambling and get on with a review.

Trackpad next to its box
One of the first things you notice is its size; its much bigger than a trackpad on a Macbook/Pro. This isn’t a bad thing, in fact its a great thing I sometimes find that performing a complex rotate, pinch and zoom on a laptops trackpad can be a bit unforgiving as you reach the edge and it all goes wrong! This is big enough to perform all the swipes and gestures without having to contort your hand into (even) stranger positions than you could imagine.

The device itself oozes typical Apple minimalist design. It’s a sheet of aluminium that sits on your desk at a slight angle waiting to be touched, and coated with a wear-resistant glass surface. The angle is created by the battery tube at the top, which takes two AA batteries. Apple claims this will be enough to power it for around 2 months. That tube houses the power switch and the gubbins to make it all work. Aside from a green light that only lights up when it is pairing, there is very little to report here.

While the top is metal the underside is white plastic – identical to the Apple Bluetooth keyboard. In fact design-wise it is identical in its approach. It’s the same brushed metal on top, the same angle, the same depth, the same height, in fact you can put the two together and pretend they are one piece.

Unlike most other computer peripherals, the surface is free from buttons. But you still get the ability to left or right click, thanks to the small feet on the leading edge of the underside. It’s an incredibly simple and clever idea that works just like the MacBook Pro’s system – you just click on the trackpad without realising there is no button.

The Magic Trackpad is connected to your Mac via Bluetooth, and the only other requirement here is that you are running OSX 10.6.4. Connect the device to your Mac and at first you’ll believe that you’ve bought a rather uninspiring and expensive trackpad that doesn’t do much.

Just perform a software update (if you haven’t already) and empower your Magic Trackpad to deliver on its promises. A quick restart later and you’re ready to tinker if you so wish, although for the most part you won’t have to.

The new software gives you the power to scroll, rotate, pinch, open and close, screen zoom, and secondary click when using two fingers.

Trackpad preference pane in action

Add a third finger and you can swipe to navigate and drag windows around, while four fingers up and down opens Expose and swiping left and right gives you the ability to change applications.

Don’t panic you can just use the one finger. The travel of your finger on the trackpad is more than enough to cover your screen within a single motion and that saves you having to keep lifting your finger.

There are other options with your single finger; i.e. tap to click (which can be turned off) and secondary click zoned into the bottom right corner, for example: we found a two finger click was easier, but there are choices so you can set it to your preference. You can adjust tracking, double-click and scrolling speed as well.

In practice, and it really is the same as the MacBook Pro trackpad, although we found it easier to use three and four finger movements due to the increased real-estate. The glass is beautifully smooth on your fingers and the click, which can be done from anywhere with very little effort, is responsive and you don’t really have to press that hard.

With the resting feet responsible for the clicking part of the trackpad you will have to have it on a level surface. I tried balancing it on a leg – it just doesn’t work – but you can use it up to 10 metres away.

Verdict

So desktop users should you ditch your mouse? The mouse might be ugly but it will allow you to whizz around the desktop quickly and it is what you are used to. This brings with it a host of new functions and we feel it is better than the company’s Magic Mouse offering.

At £59 you really want to make sure this is magical enough to replace your current mouse and we would have to say this comes down to how much you enjoy using a trackpad. For MacBook users wanting to bring that touch experience to their desktop Mac, or if dock your MacBook at your desk, then you probably don’t need convincing. For us, this gives you the chance to break the excellent touchpad experience out of your notebook and get it on your desk.

If you spend most of your time on the road, with a MacBook Pro in tow, you probably don’t need to lug around an extra trackpad and you won’t be able to use it fully without a surface to put it on.

For me this is a mouse replacement, but it’s worth heading down to your local Apple Store and trying it out for yourself.

Rating: ★★★★½

 

More and more realistic headlines sources affirm that the supposed mini chronicle of the iPhone is the actual deal.

This time, Wall Street Journal, citing “sources shut to Apple, reports that the arriving iPhone Nano would not usually be lighter and smaller, but would moreover have an edge-to-edge screen. This means that the Home symbol would be separated in preference of a more gesture-oriented navigation.

Also in the inform is a gossip that Apple would be waiving its US$99 annual MobileMe service price and give it giveaway free of charge. Apple has nonetheless to reply to any of these speculations.

 

A Logo of an Apple :-)Apple might have only grabbed onto a obvious concerning touchscreens that might start the entire touchscreen smartphone market. The creator if the renouned iPhone has only been awarded the US Patent No. 7966578 . It deals with technology at the back touchscreen displays that might spell bad headlines for other touchscreen smartphone makers in the market. Many people say that mentioned obvious might give Apple the top palm and presumably even serve take up the touchscreen smartphone market.

For those who similar to to read a few technical jargon, the obvious states of a unstable device with “a computer-implemented method, for use in conjunction with a unstable multifunction device with a hold shade display, comprises displaying a part of page content, inclusive a support displaying a part of support calm and moreover inclusive other calm of the page, on the hold shade display”.

The difference might be a bit difficult to the common layman similar to many of us. But interpretations of the mentioned obvious might casing all unstable gadgets that use a multi-touch screen. Or it can even only be paltry to casing Apple’s own technology range when it comes to touchscreens. If it is the former, then it might be a means for Apple to pull competitors out of the touchscreen device marketplace and settle a corner for itself. This might be a few result in of regard for many device makers indeed. But fortunately, it might be deliberate as a worst box scenario.

But for whatever reason, having a hold of such a obvious would certainly give any firm an top hand. How Apple would use it in the future would be something to look deliver to. It might only conclude the citation of where the touchscreen device marketplace might be headed. But then again, it might not.

 

Is Apple is planning to release an iPhone 5 as early as September?

The model is likely to include a faster processor, the A5  and a more advanced camera.

The company is also reported to be testing a version of the iPad with a higher resolution screen.

The release of the iPhone 5 in just a few months could add millions more sales to the technology firm’s range of smartphones. The iPhone is Apple’s top seller.

When the iPhone 4 was launched in June last year, stocks ran out within hours and demand crashed the Apple website.

Technology experts are also adding a cheaper version of the iPhone range which will be aimed at boosting its market share in developing countries.

The new phone could be called the iPhone 4G or 4S, with many similarities to the £500 iPhone 4.

An 8-megapixel camera would be an update on the 5-megapixel camera currently used in the iPhone 4.

The faster processor will allow programs to load quicker and the phone will be able to better compete against the BlackBerry and Samsung handsets that use Google’s Android software.

Experts have said that if Apple introduced a more basic mid-range phone the computer giant’s share of the the smartphone market could explode as the number of users grows this year and in 2012. Details were made public in San Francisco by Apple’s chief executive Steve Jobs.

Two industry sources later said that the screen resolution on the updated iPad will be a third higher than that of the iPad 2.

The firm has traditionally been highly secretive about products that are being developed. However, details have tended to leak out in the months before their release.

Sources also said that the new phones will include Apple’s recently released iCloud software.

They added the phones will include iCloud software, which lets the company store customers’ purchases on its servers – the cloud – instead home computer hard drives.

THE NEW FEATURES

● High resolution 8-megapixel camera

● A5 processor chip for faster loading time

● Fewer visible buttons on the side of handset

● iCloud software to connect Apple devices

Second mid-range phone with basic features

Updated iPad2 with more responsive touch screen

This year, Apple is predicted to account for 18.2 per cent of the global smartphone market, trailing behind Google.

In future, users will then be able to access anything from their own library of music, films, TV programmes and podcasts via any Apple device.

This will do away with the need to synch an iPhone, iPad, or iPod to the home PC via either a cable or a wi-fi link.

Details were made public in San Francisco by Apple’s chief executive Steve Jobs, who was making his third  public appearance since he went on sick leave in January.

Mr Jobs, who has been battling a rare form of cancer, last stood on an Apple stage in June to OS X Lion, iOS5 and iCloud.

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