Apple researching retractable keyboards to keep future MacBook Pro thin

Posted:
in General Discussion edited July 2020
To balance its systemic need for thinness against its customers' need for something they can actually type on, Apple is researching a keyboard that can fully retract into a MacBook Pro enclosure.

The butterfly keyboard certainly looked great.
The butterfly keyboard certainly looked great.


Apple has been careful to not say that the butterfly keyboard is gone, but that turns out to be more than because the lawyers tell it to. It's true that if Apple ever actually said it was rubbish, there would be a cascade of lawsuits over it selling a keyboard that it knew didn't work. But it looks as if Apple is also simply not willing to give up this fight for a thin keyboard yet.

"Retractable Keyboards" suggests that while Apple may move away from the specifics of its keyboard, it's looking to take some inspiration from IBM's old butterfly keyboard.

That wasn't a butterfly one in the sense that Apple's was. With Apple, the butterfly description was to do with the way each key was mounted on the keyboard, and how it reacted when pressed. With IBM, it was more about the positioning of the entire keyboard.

On certain models of the IBM ThinkPad laptop, opening the lid would cause a squashed-in keyboard to move outwards, to spread it wings. By the time the lid was fully open, the mechanism would have transformed the laptop-sized keyboard out into the equivalent of a full desktop one.

IBM ThinkPad 701's Butterfly keyboard moved outwards when the lid was open. (Source: Mikebabb on Wiki Commons)
IBM ThinkPad 701's Butterfly keyboard moved outwards when the lid was open. (Source: Mikebabb on Wiki Commons)


Apple's new proposal doesn't mention IBM, and it isn't concerned with a keyboard spreading out to be the width of a full-size one. But it is about what can happen when the lid of a MacBook Pro is opened or closed.

There is a kind of acknowledgement that users reacted badly to the butterfly mechanism, that they did not find its thinness outweighed other factors. "Users expect devices to have a button or key size that is well-suited for a finger to press," it says, "and users generally have a preference for buttons or keys that provide audible and tactile feedback when pressed."

"Thus, user interfaces such as keyboards and other buttons are designed to have a predetermined size and amount of perceived deflection when pressed," it continues. "These constraints can make devices larger than needed for some tasks, such as when the user interfaces of the devices are not being used or are stored."

So what Apple wants is a keyboard that users like, but which does not mean having to stem this decades-long move to thinner and thinner devices.

"Keyboards are... made with internal empty space within their structures to accommodate keycap movement," explains the patent application. "Reducing that space or more efficiently using the space can reduce the overall thickness of a device."

Apple's proposal concerns different ways of "selectively reducing the thickness of a keyboard by selectively retracting or extending the keys of the keyboard relative to an internal keyboard mounting or support layer."

The application talks about how the keys can be moved between a neutral position and a retracted position," or vice versa. That movement is via "movable magnetic or mechanical linkage elements [that] are configured to reposition keycaps and stabilizers between different relative positions."

Detail from the patent application showing space beneath a key mechanism
Detail from the patent application showing space beneath a key mechanism


Central to the different methods Apple outlines are a series of "stabilizers to move the keycaps." Significantly, those stabilizers are chiefly the elements that control what happens when a user presses a key.

"The stabilizers can be scissor mechanisms, butterfly mechanisms, and similar devices," says Apple. Before anyone gets too relieved that "scissor mechanisms" are mentioned, note that they are referred to four times in the application's 12,000 words. And "butterfly" is mentioned 15 times.

The application is credited to five inventors, including Houtan R. Farahani, who has a previous related patent regarding "Enclosure features for a portable computing device."

This is far from the first patent Apple has applied for to do with reducing keyboard thickness, and it has even investigated keyboards that feature no physical or mechanical keys at all.

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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 19
    anantksundaramanantksundaram Posts: 20,404member
    Great. Why not just paint on some pretend keys for a pretend keyboard for us to pretend type. They’ll save a lot of money too. 
    elijahgwilliamlondonBeatsmuthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 2 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    This is one invention I really hope doesn't see the light of day. I really don't understand Apple's obsession for even more thinness. When thinness compromises the user experience you know you've gone too far. No one is complaining about any Apple product being too thick.
    mwhite
  • Reply 3 of 19
    williamlondonwilliamlondon Posts: 1,324member
    Great. Why not just paint on some pretend keys for a pretend keyboard for us to pretend type. They’ll save a lot of money too. 
    Seriously? [rolls eyes]
    Beats
  • Reply 4 of 19
    Eric_WVGGEric_WVGG Posts: 968member
    There are benefits to an approach like this beyond thin-ness. In fact, I think it would have the opposite effect.

    Every Macbook I've owned, after a few years, develops faint scrapes on the screen where the edges of the keys are. This is due to keys rubbing against the screen while being moved around. If the keys recessed into a "pressed" position when the screen was closed, the screen would stay pristine over time.

    If this means using magnets to pull keys down, that's more hardware in the keyboard; if it means moving the entire keyboard "down" while the screen is shut, that means a new recess under the keyboard which would take more space. Neither of these approaches would make the laptop more thin.

    This sounds to me like one of those cool speculative patents that never goes anywhere.
    caladanianBeatsdoozydozen
  • Reply 5 of 19
    henrybayhenrybay Posts: 144member
    No more thin keyboards please! Apple didn’t you learn your lesson with the ridiculous butterfly keyboard? Your laptops are thin enough already. Stop shaving more millimetres off them. It causes too many compromises, such as shallow keyboards with insufficient key travel, overheating, small batteries and fewer ports. 
    elijahg
  • Reply 6 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    Eric_WVGG said:
    There are benefits to an approach like this beyond thin-ness. In fact, I think it would have the opposite effect.

    Every Macbook I've owned, after a few years, develops faint scrapes on the screen where the edges of the keys are. This is due to keys rubbing against the screen while being moved around. If the keys recessed into a "pressed" position when the screen was closed, the screen would stay pristine over time.

    If this means using magnets to pull keys down, that's more hardware in the keyboard; if it means moving the entire keyboard "down" while the screen is shut, that means a new recess under the keyboard which would take more space. Neither of these approaches would make the laptop more thin.

    This sounds to me like one of those cool speculative patents that never goes anywhere.
    Apple wouldn't use that extra space for screen protection, they'd use it to shave off another millimetre and the screen would get scratched by the aluminium instead.
  • Reply 7 of 19
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 2,727member
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    randominternetpersonBeatsdoozydozen
  • Reply 8 of 19
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 2,727member
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 

    But the idea of a retractable or any kind of transforming keyboard is terrible and needs to go away. 
    edited June 2020 Beats
  • Reply 9 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    They have been trying since 2016. How much more time?
    williamlondon
  • Reply 10 of 19
    Rayz2016Rayz2016 Posts: 6,957member
    elijahg said:
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    They have been trying since 2016. How much more time?
    Well by the looks of it … until they get it right. 

    I don’t think this sliding keyboard idea is going to see the light of day though. 
    edited June 2020 Beatsdoozydozen
  • Reply 11 of 19
    lvega71lvega71 Posts: 1member
    Uhhh... Lenovo has had this invention already for a number of years:  

    netrox
  • Reply 12 of 19
    BeatsBeats Posts: 3,073member
    lvega71 said:
    Uhhh... Lenovo has had this invention already for a number of years:  

    What a blatant Macbook knockoff with gimmicks that aren't functional.

    Did you read the article BTW?
  • Reply 13 of 19
    eriamjheriamjh Posts: 1,646member
    Retractable keys that don’t touch the screen when the lid is closed are really extendable that give more travel when the MacBook is open. 

    I like it. 

    Apple Silicon will help make laptops thinner.  Unless Apple cranks up the power so the Bionic processors (my name for them) can really outshine intel CPUs.  

  • Reply 14 of 19
    morkymorky Posts: 200member
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    I own a 2017 MBP, and the spazzing is justified. TG I have AppleCare. It would have been a $700 repair for a crumb (guessing) that got under the space bar. I have some other wonky keys and will need to take it in again before the warranty runs out. BTW, Apple has abandoned the idea already, admitting that is was a failure. Worst hardware in Apple's history. Apple silicon in Macs will be great, hope the keyboard is on par with the rest of the system.
  • Reply 15 of 19
    MisterKitMisterKit Posts: 496member
    It seems like a lot of engineering hours and money wasted when the Magic Keyboard seems to have hit the sweet spot.
  • Reply 16 of 19
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,420member
    morky said:
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    I own a 2017 MBP, and the spazzing is justified. TG I have AppleCare. It would have been a $700 repair for a crumb (guessing) that got under the space bar. I have some other wonky keys and will need to take it in again before the warranty runs out. BTW, Apple has abandoned the idea already, admitting that is was a failure. Worst hardware in Apple's history. Apple silicon in Macs will be great, hope the keyboard is on par with the rest of the system.
    You don't need AppleCare; all of the butterfly keyboards are covered for 4 years after purchase.

    I got the last rev of the butterfly keyboard on my 2018 MBP and it works great.
  • Reply 17 of 19
    Rayz2016Rayz2016 Posts: 6,957member
    morky said:
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    I own a 2017 MBP, and the spazzing is justified. TG I have AppleCare. It would have been a $700 repair for a crumb (guessing) that got under the space bar. I have some other wonky keys and will need to take it in again before the warranty runs out. BTW, Apple has abandoned the idea already, admitting that is was a failure. Worst hardware in Apple's history. Apple silicon in Macs will be great, hope the keyboard is on par with the rest of the system.
    You don't need AppleCare; all of the butterfly keyboards are covered for 4 years after purchase.

    I got the last rev of the butterfly keyboard on my 2018 MBP and it works great.
    Didn’t AI say that the failure rate wasn’t outside the norm for Apple keyboards (scissor or butterfly)?

    They’ll correct me if I got that wrong. 
  • Reply 18 of 19
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,420member
    Rayz2016 said:
    morky said:
    I don’t think that the butterfly mechanism is the problem at all. 

    So peopledont need to spaz every time it’s mentioned m

    its a great idea that needs a little more time in development. 
    I own a 2017 MBP, and the spazzing is justified. TG I have AppleCare. It would have been a $700 repair for a crumb (guessing) that got under the space bar. I have some other wonky keys and will need to take it in again before the warranty runs out. BTW, Apple has abandoned the idea already, admitting that is was a failure. Worst hardware in Apple's history. Apple silicon in Macs will be great, hope the keyboard is on par with the rest of the system.
    You don't need AppleCare; all of the butterfly keyboards are covered for 4 years after purchase.

    I got the last rev of the butterfly keyboard on my 2018 MBP and it works great.
    Didn’t AI say that the failure rate wasn’t outside the norm for Apple keyboards (scissor or butterfly)?

    They’ll correct me if I got that wrong. 
    Something like that, but the point was that theirs did fail, and they were thanking god for AppleCare when they didn't actually need it.
  • Reply 19 of 19
    crowleycrowley Posts: 10,453member
    Beats said:
    lvega71 said:
    Uhhh... Lenovo has had this invention already for a number of years:  

    What a blatant Macbook knockoff with gimmicks that aren't functional.

    Did you read the article BTW?
    What about that demo is a MacBook knock off?  The MacBook hinge doesn't do that, and the MacBook keys don't do that.  Moreover, the MacBook doesn't have keys like that, or a trackpad like that, or a pointer like that.  And it looks functional to me, unless you're using another source which you haven't given.
    edited June 2020
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