If plugging in directly causes interference, but using your monitors USB hub doesn’t that’s contradictory to your theory of hubs introducing lag, in fact the opposite the hub here fixed your lag. Also it’s important to note that lag, latency, and interference are all different things. It sounds like you have an interference problem with the dongle close to the mini but not the monitor, which introduces lost packets which behave differently than lag or latency.
The pictures in the article do not reflect an inch in growth. Are we sure the title is translated correctly? I think they just mean the cutout is now an inch long, not that the lenses are now more than 1 inch sensors each.
And if you want to stay with macOS there’s always the mini. Just upgraded my aging 2012 with an M2, idle even when powered on and not in sleep mode is like 2-4 watts it’s amazing. Not that the 2012 was that bad at 7-10w idle
Be cautious, I was using one as a server and my power bill sky rocketed. The idle consumption of these things is like 100w+, so I wouldn’t use it in an always on situation more of a workstation for artwork stuff like that.
Yeah I have to use a HP laptop for work periodically, I would nnnneeevvveeerrr use the trackpad on that thing. OOF! Mouse all the way, I don’t even know if the issue is hardware or software or both but the experience is awful. Windows seems to have ripped off some of macOS’s trackpad gestures and are just awful in comparison, and the mouse acceleration is horrible for general computing.
So far no wrist pain issues! 🤞 I do get some pain in my thumb if I’m not careful to click lightly (I tend to slam it if I’m getting frustrated 😂 and could also be double duty with thumb stick usage when gaming after work) I use it 8+ hours a day 5 days a week for work and have been for ever a decade
I exclusively use a trackpad for all my computing, laptop and desktop work and personal. I absolutely love it, and maybe I’m just used to it/grew up with it but I am so much faster on a trackpad than a mouse. All the gestures, the ability to drag things around easily, and not having to move my arm around are great.
That said, I do struggle with the Magic Trackpad in terms of where to place it. On the sides of the keyboard feel awkward, and I’m used to having modifier keys at my reach so I usually end up placing it below my keyboard to emulate a laptop but then the slanted nature of the trackpad is awkward when typing as it’s taller than my keyboard.
So these days I usually just end up using my built in MacBook’s keyboard and trackpad in a vertical setup with my external monitor and it’s honestly the best solution I’ve come up with so far.
Because apples goal is to sell you hardware. Privacy sells hardware. Googles goal is to have manufacturers use their OS for free so they can harvest and sell data, and maintain control of the mobile ad space.
I’m not saying Apple is a moral company far from it, but it has business incentive to build with privacy at the core, Google has the opposite.
Funny, I had to use windows for the first time in a while for work recently and the first thing that annoyed me was clicking a window to make it the active one actually pressed the button too, so now I have to aim and be extra careful when putting a window in the forefront that I don’t click anything I don’t want to. It’s like a minefield! I mostly “overlap” my windows so I can see pieces of them all at once and rarely use things side-by-side, so I can see your frustration and why it works for my flow. I think the only solution for you is to make your side-by-side windows full screen so they are on the same z level
Isn’t this type of tech how Apple was able to get no chin on the iPhone X? Cause the screen rolls around to the back and tucks the controller behind the screen instead of below it
How is Apple TV not on this list? It’s miles ahead of the competition in every way