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roofgram t1_j42taj3 wrote

My friend just returned her new laptop because it wasn't a touch screen and that was a dealbreaker. Some people are very accustomed to using the screen to scroll and hit buttons on web pages.

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dark_rabbit t1_j42x407 wrote

I disagree. When I pack my bags for a work trip, it feels like I’m packing every device under the sun into my bag. iPads can almost be used as MacBooks, but not quite. MacBooks don’t have touch or flexibility to fold back, so they’re not as nimble for flights. So as a result I need all the devices and their cables and their protective cases.

Like c’mon, merge them already.

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dirtyshits t1_j42xtd5 wrote

If apple was to(and I don’t trust them at all) to create a touchscreen macbook that can fold over and be used as a tablet as well for under $1500 it would sell like bananas.

I trust them to get the hinges and the flexibility right(form factor/durability). I don’t trust them to have a decent price point. Would probably be a MacBook Pro max or whatever and be priced at $2500

Basically a baby of the iPad Pro and MacBook Pro.

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Shewsical t1_j43l2bi wrote

What's the use case here? I either want the convenience of a touchscreen (so the iPad will work fine), or I need the power the MacBook Pro provides (and if I need that computing power, the touchscreen is an annoyance, not an asset).

Really, it just feels like people want to be able to run OSX on their iPad?

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dirtyshits t1_j43m4fp wrote

I like the laptop form factor for when I’m actually working working but in travel mode or for entertainment stuff the touch screen would be nice.

Harder to use a laptop on flights than a tablet for me and I fly fairly often. There’s a ton of great games made for iPads as well.

Would also be nice to use a pen on the touch screen for graphic design and other random stuff I work on.

Essentially reducing the amount of stuff I need by combining them.

I think the downside is that it could hurt iPad sales. They might actually want people to buy both even if they lose some customers because of it. Business wise I’m guessing that’s one of the reasons they haven’t done it.

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ThePhantomTrollbooth t1_j4544ed wrote

I think running full Photoshop (and other media editing) on an accurate, pressure sensing display will appeal to a lot of creative pros (many already love the pencil for the iPad). We’re also seeing the first generation of kids raised on tablets start to hit adulthood. Old people and others will have their own interest in it. I think it’s something that has been long-awaited.

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natethomas t1_j472xg9 wrote

A lot of people use MacOS on MacBook Airs that have literally the same compute power as iPad pros: The M1 chip. These days you can ALMOST accomplish everything such a person might want on an IPad Pro with the Smart Keyboard, but not all. I personally need terminal and non-mobile web browsers for my work. But I don’t need a ton of compute power, and when I do, I normally remote into a desktop PC that has a beefy chip you won’t find in most laptops.

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Shewsical t1_j47od9d wrote

I think this was more or less my point. Functionally, a touchscreen Macbook already exists in the iPad pros. So, it doesn't make sense to me to make the Macbook a touchscreen, when that essentially already exists.

Do people just want to be able to run MacOS on their iPads?

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natethomas t1_j47prz0 wrote

Personally? Yes. If my iPad Pro could plug into a thunderbolt port at my desk and become a desktop running MacOS, unplug and turn into an iPadOS device, and then turn back to macOS when attached to the keyboard, it’d be amazing for me

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Chester8765 t1_j42yfj7 wrote

You could also get a surface pro 8 that does all of that, for significantly less.

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natethomas t1_j473suk wrote

If surface pros had MacOS and terminal , you’d be right. Doing the work I do on a Windows PC would be somewhere between impossible and very difficult.

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