Since my 'esc' button is in the damn touch bar, I also changed my keyboard settings to use my 'caps lock' as 'esc' button.Alternatively, one can also use: killall -STOP "ControlStrip" This will suspend the touch bar, which will now become unresponsive. Open the terminal and type kill -STOP pidnum.Find the touch app process in the "Activity Monitor", in my case named "Control Strip".The way I solved the issue was less gentle than some of the options suggested here (but I didn't want to download a new app to deal with the touch bar): While changing the Touch Bar options to "Expanded Control Strip" gave me the option to empty it, the 'esc' button was still there, randomly being pressed and driving me insane. Restarting the computer or killing the process did not solve the problem. My Touch Bar was going cuckoo, and it would randomly press the buttons in it for no reason. The ones I used were measured with a caliper. And if eventually in some future I might have the need for that touch bar I can pull the cover off and store it aside.įor another MBP (elder one or different size) you need to adapt the sizes. You can rest your fingers on the strip and to actually press a key you need some explicit force inside the holes. For now this thingy converts that nonsense-bar into something more like a "keyboard". It fits snugly (at least for the over-extrusion my DIY Prusa creates). This is a cover for the touch bar you can create with OpenSCAD. Translate() RoundRect(w, d, h+1, 2) įor (x = ) translate() RoundRect(holeW, d-6, h+1, 1) For my 2019 16" MBP I ended up with this: $fn = 20
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