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224 points cspags | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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doublextremevil ◴[] No.46177977[source]
the whole pc laptop industry really is an embarrassment right now. It has been 5 years since the M1 Macbook release, and there is no real equivalent. I'm on a thinkpad x9, which might be the closest I've seen, but the cpu performance just isn't as good.
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cesarvarela ◴[] No.46178731[source]
The industry also didn't keep up with the trackpad, which should be simpler.
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morshu9001 ◴[] No.46179885[source]
Apple trackpads are so good that I prefer that over a full mouse for work
replies(2): >>46180750 #>>46180774 #
JodieBenitez ◴[] No.46180750[source]
I actually looked for a desktop trackpad for my desktop pc that is on par with my macbook trackpad. Didn't find one available.
replies(1): >>46181149 #
vladvasiliu ◴[] No.46181149[source]
Apple sells an external trackpad. But AFAIK it requires the computer to have Bluetooth. Not sure how well it works with a non-apple os, though.
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aorth ◴[] No.46181981[source]
The Apple Magic TrackPad works well on Linux, both via Bluetooth and USB-C. I used one for a few years.
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1. JodieBenitez ◴[] No.46182108[source]
Interesting. Are multi-touch gestures supported ?

(like these: https://support.apple.com/en-us/102482 )

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2. vladvasiliu ◴[] No.46183081[source]
I don't know about the magic trackpad specifically, but on my HP Elitebook I can use gestures. I'm running i3 and it doesn't support much out of the box, but I was able to configure stuff using libinput-gestures.

More info: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Libinput#Gestures