Wednesday, December 4, 2024
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Miss Apple’s Touch Bar? Check out the Kickstarter campaign for the Flexbar

I was a fan of the late, lamented (well, by some, anyway) Touch Bar. Now there’s a Kickstarter campaign to introduce its kinda-successor.

I was a fan of the late, lamented (well, by some, anyway) Touch Bar. Now there’s a Kickstarter campaign to introduce its kinda-successor.

Here’s how it’s described in the Kickstart campaign: The discontinuation of the original Touch Bar didn’t mean the concept was flawed—it simply wasn’t taken far enough to reach its full. There’s something undeniable itself: the potential for a customizable, adaptive interface that could streamline workflows was immense.

We start by tackling usability and enhancing the physical experience to make Flexbar a joy to use in every way. Its compact, sleek, and portable design ensures plug-and-play seamlessly with desktops, laptops, iPads, phones, and even MacBook Pro.

Flexbar isn’t just a static strip of keys—it’s a fully customizable tool adapted to fit any scenario. From content creators managing Adobe Premiere timelines to streamers controlling OBS layouts or gamers executing complex in-game macros, Flexbar adapts to you.

Yet, Flexbar is more than just a shortcut keypad—it’s a deeply integrated extension toolbar for your most-used apps. With its third-party API support, Flexbar provides advanced, native-like controls for those highly interactive professional software applications. Using our JavaScript-based plugin SDK, you can easily implement almost any functionality on the Flexbar with your own integrated third-party APIs.

Flexbar learns to automatically switch between relevant interfaces according to your current task window. You can record and recreate your favorite layout with the Workspace function—getting started in a blink.

About the Touch Bar

In case you’re not aware of the history of the Touch Bar, Apple added it to its laptops in 2016, specifically the 13 and 15-inch MacBook Pros. The hardware feature was introduced as a sort of 21st-century replacement to the familiar row of function keys that exist on almost all laptop and desktop computers. It was a controversial feature that Apple removed when it debuted its 2021 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros.

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.

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