It worked OK, but still felt a little awkward. That meant I could pinch, zoom, swipe and tap directly on the laptop display, as if I were using a tablet, smartphone or any number of Windows PCs and Chromebooks. It's a thin and light $99, brushed-aluminum strip that converted my 13.3-inch non-touch MacBook Air display into a touch-screen computer. Rather, I’ve been testing the AirBar sensor from Sweden's Neonode. Nor did you overlook a new product announcement from Apple, which despite all the company has done to popularize multi-touch on the iPhone and iPad, has long resisted the urge to put touch screens on its Macintosh computers. No, you didn’t misread the previous sentence. NEW YORK-I used a touchscreen MacBook Air to write this column. Watch Video: Neonode AirBar touchscreen for MacBook AirĬorrections & Clarifications: An earlier headline on this story referenced the wrong MacBook model.
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