Image credit: Microsoft

Touchscreens are so integral to modern technology that my toddler daughter used to touch the television screen expecting the Netflix icons to respond. I even sometimes touch old PCs thinking they'll register the input. Sadly not all PCs, not even modern MacBooks and iMacs, are created equal. Apple's CEO Tim Cook adamantly asserts that bringing touch to its PC platform is like merging a refrigerator and toaster. Still, while touch is common on tablets, smartphones, Windows PCs and many modern computing UIs, Apple's touch philosophy seems paradoxically rooted in the past. Particularly since Apple's iPhone mainstreamed touch mobile computing. Can't touch this

Apple's Chief Design Officer Jony Ive said, that the company explored putting touch into a Mac but rejected that idea "many, many years ago." Apple execs further assert "it doesn't feel natural to reach out to touch a computer screen." The argument is that one's arm would get tired due to frequently interacting with the display. Best VPN providers 2020: Learn about ExpressVPN, NordVPN & more This is an odd stance since Apple's touch-centric, iOS-powered iPad Pro paired with a keyboard is aggressively positioned against Windows PCs as the computer redefined. Ironically, Apple doesn't apply its "arm getting tired" concern to the mouseless, iPad Pro which demands to be touched while it pretends to be a "computer." In fact, iPad Pro users must use touch more frequently than Windows 10 users, who can choose between touch or mouse and trackpad to navigate the OS. Guess whose arm is more likely to tire? When it comes to cognitive dissonance, Apple is "touched"

There's a fundamental conflict in Apple's touch philosophy. For Mac and MacBook, Apple claims touch in desktop scenarios isn't ideal. For touch-centric iPad Pros in the same context, the purported shortcomings of touch are ignored as iPad Pro with a keyboard is pushed as a superior "computer" to a Windows PC. For the company whose former CEO, Steve Jobs, lauded the benefits of touch as a natural way of interacting with technology, Apple's conflicting positions on touch are confusing. Apple's Phil Schiller, senior vice president of worldwide marketing, provided the following context for what some consider a woefully inadequate concession by Apple to bring touch to MacBook Pro, via a touch strip: What we wanted to do was bring all this advanced technology of multitouch and Retina displays down to where your hands can take advantage of them on a laptop. The "convenience" of a narrow strip on the keyboard introduces the inconvenience of requiring that users look away from the display and at the keyboard to get things done. Reaching out to the screen one is already looking at is less disruptive to one's workflow and a more natural experience. It's also consistent with the touch philosophy that helped propel iPhone's success. For Microsoft, touch is natural and immersive