Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

I love my PC, but there’s one thing I miss from the Mac

The Apple Mac Mini being used on a wooden desk.
Rich Shibley / Digital Trends

In almost all cases, I prefer to be on a Windows machine. That’s just who I am.

But when I do occasionally switch over to my Mac mini, there’s one aspect of the setup I enjoy the most. No, it’s not a software feature in macOS that isn’t in Windows. It’s not even the hardware itself.

Rather, the missing piece is a peripheral — the fantastic Magic Trackpad 2. The external haptic trackpad accessory doesn’t currently have a replica on the Windows side, and that’s a shame, especially given the larger ecosystem of peripherals and accessories that Windows should have.

The Magic Trackpad 2 is indeed magical

The Apple Magic Trackpad 2 in front of a Windows PC with the Start Menu in Windows 11
Arif Bacchus/Digital Trends

The coolest part of using the Magic Trackpad 2 on a Mac Mini is the gestures and comfort it offers compared to a mouse. The touch surface can sense how hard you click. For example, highlight a word once in Safari, and then “press” a bit harder on it again to look up the meaning of that word with a Force Touch, for example. Of course, there are also a ton of gestures, all customizable in the macOS settings app.

The two-finger pinch-to-zoom gesture helps me read small text on web pages. The two-finger pinch-to-rotate gesture helps me edit photos in the macOS Photos app. The three-finger swipe-up gesture helps me bring up Mission Control to see open apps. Pinching my thumbs and fingers together opens Launchpad to see all my apps.

You might be able to accomplish some of the tasks I mentioned by assigning a button on something like the Logitech MX Master 3S or a keyboard, but the gestures offered by a haptic touchpad accessory like the Apple Magic Trackpad 2 are more natural.

Since the glass touch surface is one piece, my fingers never run out of room when scrolling on the Magic Trackpad 2. I also don’t have to move my hands all over my desk like when using a mouse. Small finger movements do the work. Unlike the feeling of holding a mouse, I almost forgot that the trackpad was sitting there. It feels like part of my desk and boosts my productivity.

Windows Laptops already have cool haptic trackpads

The keyboard and touchpad of the XPS 14.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

There’s no doubt that there is a lot of interest in haptic trackpads in the PC space. It wasn’t always the case, but today, there are a host of excellent Windows laptops with onboard haptic touchpads. Apple pioneered the technology first with MacBooks, and then Microsoft brought it over to Windows PCs for the first time with the Surface Laptop Studio. Now, even the new Dell XPS 14 has one, and so do some niche products like the ThinkPad X1 Fold 16.

This is a great change, too, as, unlike a traditional trackpad, these haptic ones allow you to click anywhere and are smooth to the touch. It is part of what makes me wish that Microsoft or Dell could do what Apple does and pull the trackpad off these laptops and release them as a separate gadget. I’m not always using my laptop as a laptop, and when I’m plugged into a monitor or in clamshell mode, I want the same comfortable trackpad I love, but on my desk.

Can Logitech or someone else deliver?

A photo of the Logitech Casa trackpad
Logitech

And here’s the secret. A lot of what I mentioned works fine on Windows, too. You can actually use the Apple Magic Trackpad 2 with a PC over the USB connection, and it’s just as much as a treat. Downloading third-party drivers, you’re even able to use some of those same gestures from macOS on a Windows PC when it’s docked.

It’s just like I would on a precision or haptic trackpad. A four-finger gesture, for example, opens the Windows 11 Task View mode, and I can swipe back and forth on the trackpad to move between web pages. Apple doesn’t mention Magic Trackpad 2 works on Windows, but if Apple can do this, why can’t an OEM like Dell or Lenovo?

There have been attempts, but it isn’t the same as what Apple has done. ProtoArc makes one, for example. but it doesn’t support Bluetooth. Microsoft has the Arc Touch mouse, but that’s a mouse and not a trackpad. There even was an attempt from Brydge, with the W-Touch Wireless, but the company has since gone bankrupt. The closest thing I can see is the new Logitech Casa Pop-Up Desk, which comes with a wireless touchpad but doesn’t have enough of a “premium feel,” according to early reviewers.

Sensel is the company behind many of the haptic trackpads found today on Windows laptops. Unfortunately, though, the company is just a technology supplier. It doesn’t sell products to everyday consumers like you and me. It gives me hope, though, that if one day there’s a Windows version of the Apple Magic Trackpad 2, it’ll come from Sensel.

Until then, I’ll keep using my Apple Magic Trackpad 2 with my Windows PC and wait for something better.

Editors' Recommendations

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
My hopes for a new iMac Pro have been dashed — for now
An Apple iMac Pro in a dark room flanked by two monitors, one on either side of it.

Apple’s iMac Pro has been shrouded in mystery ever since it was discontinued in 2021. Over the past year, it has swung back into the news as numerous leakers and analysts have claimed a new one is coming soon. But when exactly? That’s far from certain.

Now, though, we might have moved a little closer toward knowing, and it’s not great news if you’ve been hoping for an imminent update. That’s because reporter Mark Gurman’s latest Power On newsletter has outlined Apple’s plans for 2024 -- and the iMac Pro is conspicuous by its absence.

Read more
This simple app changed how I use my Mac forever
The Paste Mac app, with its clipboard bar open and the Paste homepage in Safari.

Every time I sit down and use my Mac, I’m reminded that it’s full of advanced features and clever extras. Yet there’s one place that absolutely does not apply: the clipboard. Copying and pasting in 2023 feels like it’s stuck in the past with no prospect of salvation.

At least, it did feel that way until I came across an app called Paste. This superb utility has taken a knife to copying and pasting and made it… fun? I never thought I’d say that about such a mundane task, but here we are -- it’s true.
Stacked with features

Read more
One of my favorite Mac apps is driving me nuts
A close-up photo of the Shortcuts app on an Apple device, against a red background.

Shortcuts is probably the most frustrating app I’ve used on macOS. Not because it’s a bad app -- it’s actually one of the best Mac apps you can get -- but because Apple gives next to no support on how to use such a powerful part of its operating system. It’s like being given a supercar, but the dealership forgot to include the keys.

Most of the time in macOS, the low level of official support is not a problem. But with Shortcuts, it's detrimental.
Apple needs to do more

Read more