It seems that there is no product that has been written twice. When I first got the "Dragon Edition" MacBook Pro without Touch Bar after the press conference at the end of October, my heart was getting grass, after all, this time. The biggest point of the upgrade is Touch ID and Touch Bar. After more than half a month, I finally got the "armed" 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Pro. Compared to the last evaluation product, look at the performance. In addition to the upgrade, many people have high hopes that the Touch Bar is a gimmick? How practical is it? How is the performance in the commonly used software? In a word, the value is not worth the extra money to buy this new TouchBook version of the MacBook Pro. Evaluation walks.
Touch ID is very naturalLet's talk about fingerprint recognition. Although Apple has been the Touch ID for the fourth year, but in addition to the iPhone and iPad, it has never been used on a device as large as the MacBook Pro, so the experience is still a bit different.
When you get a new notebook activation, you will be asked to register your Touch ID like the new iPhone. Don't think that the power button/fingerprint button hidden in the upper right corner of the dark piece is invisible, whenever you need to unlock it. There will be a line on the Touch Bar, and the arrow points to the right button, as if to say "point me, point me."
Registering the fingerprint is exactly the same as the iPhone. It is also a two-step process. First, it refers to the abdomen, then enlarge the area of ​​the finger pad, and only need to touch and never press the button. In short, if you are familiar with the iPhone Touch ID, then you can't spend this process. It can be completed in 30 seconds.
The only difference is that there will be a vibrating alert when the iPhone registers fingerprints, but the MacBook Pro will not. In addition, there is a difference, that is, the iPhone can hold up to 5 fingerprints, and the MacBook Pro can only record up to 3, in fact, think about it, the two most commonly used thumbs on the iPhone, you will not use it in your notebook at all. The most common unlocking gesture for the MacBook Pro is to put two index fingers, and you subconsciously extend your index finger to press that button, so 3 records are enough.
I also abused the Touch ID. First of all, there are a few metamorphosis angles, including 90° horizontally, and 180° from the opposite side of the screen. It can be unlocked, although I don’t think anyone will use it. It also shows that this Touch ID chip is the same as the iPhone, and the recognition ability of the fingerprint reaches the level of “arbitrary abuseâ€.
The second is the unlock speed. I figured it out. It is not in the same position as the iPhone 7 I have. I basically put my finger on it and unlocked it into the system, which is faster than the iPhone 5s/6 with the first generation Touch ID chip.
As for the use of Touch ID, in addition to the Apple Pay shopping that we can't use on the Internet, unlocking the computer and purchasing the app in the Apple Store are all possible, basically the same as the iPhone. But certainly not as often as the iPhone, because the iPhone needs to be unlocked hundreds of times a day, and buying an app is a common occurrence. These two scenes don't happen very often on the MacBook Pro, but when you need it, It is very convenient to feel that the finger is completed, and the security is higher than the password.
In addition, when you install the software or modify the settings, you need to enter the password, you can also verify by Touch ID, this scene still happens frequently.
In fact, you don't need to say that you also know that the Touch ID logic on the MacBook Pro is the same as the iPhone, that is, its important level is lower than the password. When you fail to unlock or re-enter the system, you still need to enter the password. When you turn off the password, the Touch ID is turned off. In this way, Touch ID simply simplifies password entry, but it cannot be completely replaced.
Wait, see you here will ask me, restart, sleep need a password, I do not buy an app every day, then this Touch ID is useful? Good question!
Apple changed the power button logic from the previous MacBook (is it really because Jobs doesn't like the power button?), even if it is turned off, when you turn on the screen, it will automatically turn on, basically no need for the power button. And our most convenient use habit is to use the cover directly to leave the bag, that is, basically do not shut down like the iPhone, this time you open the screen, then you need to enter the fingerprint to log in, so Apple added Touch ID In the most common scenarios, entering the system on the MacBook Pro takes only two steps: first to open the screen, and second to press the power button to unlock, safe and fast. As for restarting the computer, you need to enter the password. Doesn't the iPhone do the same? Let's say that for the MacBook Pro, it needs to be restarted several times a year...
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