Apple to fully phase out MacBook's butterfly keyboard by 2020

Cal Jeffrey

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It's about time: Apple is finally fixing its problems with the butterfly keyboard on its laptops for good. Not with a rubber membrane — not with free repairs. No, it is finally doing away with the mechanism altogether and going back to scissor switches.

MacRumors notes that Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says that starting with the 16-inch MacBook Pro to release this September, Apple will phase out the butterfly switch from all laptop keyboards. This year’s 13 and 15-inch Pro and the 13-inch MacBook Air will still have the troublesome mechanisms, but by 2020 all models will have scissor mechanisms.

The switches are a slightly different design from Apple’s previous scissors. Glass fibers reinforce the new mechanisms for extra strength and have slightly more travel. They are also reportedly cheaper to make. All-in-all the upcoming keyboards should be more comfortable and durable.

Earlier this month Kuo had forecast that it would be this year’s MacBook Air that got the new keyboard with the rest to follow in 2020. It seems that it will be the 2019 16-inch Pro instead.

Users should be happy with this news. Apple faced a lot of criticism over the problem-prone keyboards for well over a year culminating in three class-action lawsuit. As long as there are no inherent problems with the new scissor design, the outcry should die down as the newer models filter into the market.

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...was there any particular reason they switched to the butterfly keyboard to begin with?
Probably the same reason they were putting FireWire ports on their computers and now ThunderBolt ports. They want to be "different' because, you know, different is ALWAYS better.
 
Probably the same reason they were putting FireWire ports on their computers and now ThunderBolt ports. They want to be "different' because, you know, different is ALWAYS better.
hehe nice try, FireWire was put in order to hook up AV stuff in studios (some still using it) same happened with ThunderBolt 2, now AV can't live w/o TB2...but Apple moved to TB3 and everyone else probably will now Intel integrate TB3 controller into their CPUs, more device will implement TB3/USB-C.
 
Smart move .... too bad that on this one they were on the bleeding edge rather than the cutting edge ....
 
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