^^^ don't say "double click" unless you mean "clicking twice", which is what it's meant for 30 years. just say "two finger click" if you're talking about 2 fingers
10/15/2008 11:33:14 AM
^i thought he actually meant double click and not two fingers. Its always been two finger clicks...so thought maybe they changed it
10/15/2008 11:38:34 AM
aside from being a seperate button combination, being able to press both buttons independent of the other makes for superior ergonomics. The "right click" on the mightmouse is fustrating as hell because it only works about 50% of the time. Any one of logitech's mouse designs from the last 10 years is superior in every possible way. As for right click on the pad, if they could distinguish between my two fingers so that pointer was always mouse1 and middle was always mouse2 that would own. But have to use two fingers to right click sucks.
10/15/2008 11:42:41 AM
10/15/2008 11:44:07 AM
10/15/2008 11:48:38 AM
10/15/2008 12:01:58 PM
10/15/2008 2:12:19 PM
10/15/2008 2:14:16 PM
10/15/2008 2:38:28 PM
Why can't they be "innovative" while still being "current"?Seriously, for the several extra hundred dollars in price you'd think they could put another piece of plastic in there that's sole purpose is to right click. I'm sitting here looking at the Powerbook on my desk (and really, any Mac laptop up to the just released one) and I can't for the life of me see what the computing benefit of having a left-click mouse button as wide as the trackpad is.[Edited on October 15, 2008 at 3:15 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 3:13:43 PM
FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, STFU ABOUT THE LACK OF A FUCKING BUTTON
10/15/2008 3:23:25 PM
you know what would be awesome?A BUTTON.that'd be great.
10/15/2008 3:24:34 PM
10/15/2008 3:35:55 PM
So what you're saying is that the trackpad is too small for you to properly operate with one finger, but using two fingers on it would be easier?That doesn't make any sense.On top of that, I'm not saying other implementations are perfect or even good, but this whole "look, we're going to stick with one mouse button rather than admit we're wrong" stuff is ridiculous.
10/15/2008 4:03:25 PM
no, he's saying the Dell pad is a POS all around. Same on my ThinkPad T60 - the pad is literally <2" wide and <1.5" tall. it sucks. With the huge, multi-touch trackpad, Apple is moving away from the historical laptop mouse paradigm altogether. You can drop the "one button mouse" idiocy. Apple has moved beyond that. Let's see how many years it takes for PC makers to catch upThink of it this way:No button Multi-touch is the new two-button.
10/15/2008 4:08:03 PM
10/15/2008 4:14:52 PM
10/15/2008 4:18:19 PM
10/15/2008 4:23:48 PM
10/15/2008 5:31:33 PM
I can't believe that anyone can possibly complain about the distinct button vs no button.I can think of a very simple analogy for this:Regular fucking buttons:Works fine. No major complaints, but it's just okay.Making the entire trackpad the button:Holy shit that's so much better. I had no complaints about the regular buttons, but holy fucking god this is going to be the default setup for the next 5 years for every fucking device on the planet.And we didn't even have to suffer through the terrible, horrible, oh-my-god-that's-the-worst-idea-ever intermediary:You can complain about the right click thing if you want. I mean, you'll be a douche for doing so, but people have been complaining about that for 20 years and will continue to complain about it, so whatever.But complaining about the lack of a discrete button means you're just a retard.
10/15/2008 6:45:03 PM
10/15/2008 7:08:51 PM
blah blah blah. The only way to know is to do user testing. Apple obviously did and liked the value proposition -- same thing they did with one-button mouse and the no-button mouse. They are also used to and don't care about faggots whining.It's ok to not like any of these things, but don't pretend you know fuck all about what will sell or what works if you haven't actually researched the usability.^And the response to that would be that most Apple apps and Mac apps, by influence, are designed to be perfectly usable with one mouse button. If you are sophisticated enough to be using right-clicks, you can handle two fingers.[Edited on October 15, 2008 at 7:40 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 7:14:45 PM
And so again, it's still a weak argument to make.
10/15/2008 7:37:04 PM
10/15/2008 8:21:06 PM
^What, where did you ever read that?If they are the best designers in the world, they DEFINITELY did user testing and lab studies. Great designers do not follow their instincts, they follow the data that supports their instincts.
10/15/2008 9:08:23 PM
not sure.... i can't find it. so I can't back up that assertion. maybe the point, though, is that Apple doesn't make design decisions "by committee". I think it's undeniable that they put huge amounts of trust in the design decisions of Jobs and Johnathan Ives and their other lead designers
10/15/2008 10:10:21 PM
Doing user testing does not equate to design by committee. Users are very poor at knowing what the want, but they are pretty reliable about evaluating something put in front of them. Great designers propose the ideas, user testing proves those ideas.
10/15/2008 10:59:08 PM
^obviously they don't because their designs are right on point and are intuitive enough for anyone to use without much effort or 'training'i mean hell...we spent a few minutes today trying to figure out how to disable the trackpad's tap feature in vista today and never did find it in the settings. It used to be under the 'mouse' settings in the control panel but isn't anymore. another reason why windows = FAIL[Edited on October 15, 2008 at 11:04 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 11:02:04 PM
obviously the design team failed this round. they're ugly as sin.
10/15/2008 11:07:04 PM
I mean.2000 is a lot of cash.way better spent towards other shit, when I have a vaio that is just fine.
10/15/2008 11:12:46 PM
ugly != usabilityso, again, I still can't back up the statement that they don't do "any user testing"But I think it's undeinable that Apple takes certain concepts that are out of the box and "forces them down our throat". There was almost universal recoil and horror about the iPhone not having a real keyboard when it was released, because that was soemthing nobody had ever seen in a similar product. Likewise, it probably would have failed miserably in focus group testing. But Jobs or Ives or someone in Apple had the vision of what they wanted the iPhone to be like, and they were relentless in making it so. i can actually imagine this happening inside Apple, as Fake Steve Jobs described it 6 months before it iPhone was announcedhttp://fakesteve.blogspot.com/2006/09/tabula-rasa.html
10/15/2008 11:14:12 PM
10/15/2008 11:18:13 PM
^ dude, what are you talking about? i'm on "your side", more or lessI'm not saying "force down our throats" is necessarily a bad thing. I'm saying that at Apple, they get ideas that they are very adamant about that may be very unpopular at first blush with the public at large. For example, the onscreen keyboard on the iPhone, and now the "buttonless", multi-touch trackpad. If they were designing products by popularity contest, they would have added a physical keyboard to the iPhone and a 2-button trackpad on the Macbooks. But I'm saying that they advocates for these features are unwillingly to compromise on what they believe is the best idea, and it comes down to what your parents always told you - "i'm doing this for your own good. You'll thank me for it later", which is what I think the attitude Apple has for a lot of their design features. Now some see that as condescending, but overall, I think they (Apple) are proved right in the long run. When he iPhone was announced, countless analysts sided with conventional wisdom that a smartphone could not be successful without a physical keyboard. They are eating their words, as Apple approaches something like 11-12M iPhones sold in 2008. I think the same think will be true for the multi-touch, buttonless trackpads. You see there are plenty of people slamming it now, but I think in another year or two, PC users will start clamoring for them on Dells and HPs. [Edited on October 15, 2008 at 11:26 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 11:24:42 PM
10/15/2008 11:26:54 PM
^^perhaps you shouldn't have used the phrase... "forced down our throats" because that is something Microshaft would do with piss poor design/usability. If its innovative and progressive then its more of a welcomed changed then anything else.^ok. Trolling is for shit shat.[Edited on October 15, 2008 at 11:27 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 11:26:57 PM
10/15/2008 11:33:38 PM
no right mouse button = failure. end of story. You can come up with as many defenses of the gimmick two finger + click system as you want, but it still just a gimmick. The reason every single mac users in history goes and buys a third party mouse is because the default offering is garbage. The context menu is a requirement for usability, even more so on the mac than that PC because the mac's keyboard shortcuts are severely limited. If i want to delete a file in explorer, i just click delete. In Finder delete doesn't do anything. And the fastest way to delete something is to right click -> move to trash. If you're stuck with one button you have to either go up to the menu or drag it to the trash. Its shit design.
10/15/2008 11:36:11 PM
command + delete?
10/15/2008 11:37:16 PM
10/15/2008 11:45:42 PM
What about games? 2-button mouse will always win. I can't imagine trying to play a FPS with this design. I guess an external mouse always wins anyway.[Edited on October 15, 2008 at 11:54 PM. Reason : .]
10/15/2008 11:54:18 PM
i like to do more with my computer than click on the web browser and click on links. If I want to delete a file, the delete button should do it. if you argue anything else you just have jobs's cock so far up your ass its talking for you. AgainYou are defending a delete button that does not delete.Can you read that?a DELETE button. That when you press it, does not delete. If you still want to defend this i dont know what to say.using 2 fingers + click is not superior to single click with one finger on the right mouse button. Hell, even two fingers for scroll sucks compared to one finger for scroll. And the thing is, if you want two finger scroll on a pc you just need to get a different driver for your trackpad. If you want a second mouse button on your mac you are sol. And the reason i brought up the third party mouse is because everyone loves a second mouse button on their mouse, why wouldn't they want it on their laptop? If the gimmick pad were so great you wouldn't need another mouse. Its less functional than 2 mouse buttons and thats it. Its a great sales gimmick for morons with more money than sense.
10/16/2008 12:00:10 AM
If you have difficulties using a new concept then thats fine...but don't shit on it because you're incompetent.
10/16/2008 12:02:45 AM
10/16/2008 12:09:12 AM
10/16/2008 12:13:11 AM
10/16/2008 12:15:06 AM
I thought they got an external mouse because it's better than a trackpad. Higher resolution and much more precise. I can't imagine doing actual design/cad work with a trackpad.
10/16/2008 12:18:18 AM
10/16/2008 12:21:57 AM
10/16/2008 1:13:43 AM
10/16/2008 1:29:14 AM
Does anyone know how the video card in the new macbook performs compared to say, a mobility radeon 256mb X1600 (I have this in my macbook pro). Same for the new macbook pro card?I have a Macbook Pro now and am thinking of selling and downgrading to the smaller Macbook as I would like a smaller portable machine.
10/16/2008 1:36:10 AM