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Apple patent filing hints at the return of the controversial Touch Bar to Mac laptops

Apple has filed for a patent (US 20230229252 A1) for that hints at future Mac laptops with a force sensitive 3D Touch screen — and possibly the return of the controversial Touch Bar.

About the Touch Bar

Apple added the Touch Bar 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.

About the patent filing

The patent relates to electronic devices, and particularly electronic devices having a display with a force sensor positioned at least partially around, and coplanar with, the display. In other words, the Mac laptops screen would be the primary display. A Touch Bar would be a secondary display. 

This graphic shows a Mac laptop with the return of the Touch Bar.

According to Apple, the secondary display may function as an additional or ancillary input mechanism and may, in some embodiments, extend a functionality of the primary input mechanism. It may also change one or more elements, icons, graphics, or the like shown on the display as a context of the user’s interaction changes in order to provide content-sensitive inputs to the user.”

Apple says that, for example, as the user changes focus to, or otherwise selects or initiates, a program, application, or the like. the secondary display may change one or more user-selectable graphics, buttons, icons, soft keys, and so on to ones that are specific to the program, application, or other context.”

A Touch Bar with Apple Pencil support

What’s more, in June 2022 Apple filed for a patent for “mountable tool computer” that hinted at a Touch Bar with support for the Apple Pencil.

The graphic shows a Touch Bar with Apple Pencil support.

The patent filing involved input devices incorporating a stylus that’s removably mounted to a keyboard or similar device. The tech giant notes that a variety of handheld input devices are used to detect user input.

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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.