A first look at Apple's new Magic Trackpad which brings multi-touch gestures to your desktop has been posted online by several sites.
MacWorld
The available gestures - helpfully displayed on the back of the Magic Trackpad's box - are identical to those you can use on a MacBook: besides moving the cursor, you can click, right-click, double-click, click-drag, two-finger scroll, two-finger rotate, two-finger pinch and zoom, two-finger screen zoom, three-finger swipe, and four-finger swipe.
The new trackpad software also adds a couple new gesture options, both to the Magic Trackpad and to most recent Apple laptops. You can now opt for scrolling with inertia, and the three-finger gesture, which previously could be used only to navigate, to turn pages, flip through photos, or switch Safari tabs, for example, can now instead be used as a substitute for click-drag.
Engadget
It feels just like using a slightly larger version of a MacBook or MacBook Pro pad. And we mean exactly, right down to the multitouch gestures and whole-pad click. Yes, it clicks. There's also a new gesture, if you're keeping track -- a three-finger move that lets you drag windows around (very helpful), though you give up the functionality of being to navigate stuff like iPhoto galleries with a swipe (it's an option you can toggle in preferences -- you have a choice).
MacWorld
The available gestures - helpfully displayed on the back of the Magic Trackpad's box - are identical to those you can use on a MacBook: besides moving the cursor, you can click, right-click, double-click, click-drag, two-finger scroll, two-finger rotate, two-finger pinch and zoom, two-finger screen zoom, three-finger swipe, and four-finger swipe.
The new trackpad software also adds a couple new gesture options, both to the Magic Trackpad and to most recent Apple laptops. You can now opt for scrolling with inertia, and the three-finger gesture, which previously could be used only to navigate, to turn pages, flip through photos, or switch Safari tabs, for example, can now instead be used as a substitute for click-drag.
Engadget
It feels just like using a slightly larger version of a MacBook or MacBook Pro pad. And we mean exactly, right down to the multitouch gestures and whole-pad click. Yes, it clicks. There's also a new gesture, if you're keeping track -- a three-finger move that lets you drag windows around (very helpful), though you give up the functionality of being to navigate stuff like iPhoto galleries with a swipe (it's an option you can toggle in preferences -- you have a choice).
![Hands On With the Magic Trackpad [Video] Hands On With the Magic Trackpad [Video]](/images/news/10858/37321/37321-64.png)

![Apple to Skip High-End M6 Chips, Fast-Track AI-Focused M7 Line [Report] Apple to Skip High-End M6 Chips, Fast-Track AI-Focused M7 Line [Report]](/images/news/101300/101300/101300-160.jpg)


![Apple Releases First Trailer for 'The Dink' Starring Jake Johnson [Video] Apple Releases First Trailer for 'The Dink' Starring Jake Johnson [Video]](/images/news/101292/101292/101292-160.jpg)

![Amazon Prime Day 2026: Day 3 Deals Now Live [List] Amazon Prime Day 2026: Day 3 Deals Now Live [List]](/images/news/101299/101299/101299-160.jpg)
![Amazon Prime Day 2026: Day 2 Deals Now Live [List] Amazon Prime Day 2026: Day 2 Deals Now Live [List]](/images/news/101285/101285/101285-160.jpg)
![Best Apple and Beats Deals [Prime Day 2026] Best Apple and Beats Deals [Prime Day 2026]](/images/news/101276/101276/101276-160.jpg)
![Best Charger, Cable, and Power Bank Deals [Prime Day 2026] Best Charger, Cable, and Power Bank Deals [Prime Day 2026]](/images/news/101278/101278/101278-160.jpg)