New MacBook Air Quietly Fixes This Decades-Long Design Oversight

In a move that probably won’t make headlines but should delight detail-oriented Mac users everywhere, Apple has quietly corrected a 26-year-old design inconsistency on its keyboards.
The Mute key, a staple on Mac keyboards since the PowerBook G3 ‘Lombard’ debuted in 1999, has finally received a logical redesign on the new MacBook Air with M4 chip. As spotted by iCulture, the key now displays a speaker with a strike through it – matching the actual on-screen indicator that appears when you press it in macOS.
For over two decades, the Mute key has confusingly shown just a speaker icon, providing no obvious visual indication that it silences your Mac. Meanwhile, pressing it would display a completely different but more accurate symbol on screen: a speaker with a line through it. To be fair, it is a toggle key that both mutes and un-mutes audio, but the new mute icon more recognizably informs what the key does – just like on the Apple TV Remote.
This small but meaningful correction resolves a surprising design inconsistency that has persisted through countless keyboard iterations across dozens of Mac models.
The redesigned Mute key isn’t limited to the MacBook Air, either. The new iPad Air‘s Magic Keyboard also incorporates the corrected icon. In fact, you could call this a “double upgrade” for iPad Air users, as previous Magic Keyboard models have lacked function keys entirely.
The keyboard change is typical of Apple’s meticulous attention to detail, even if it took more than a quarter-century to implement.
It seems likely that all future Mac models will adopt this revised Mute key design. The next expected release, a MacBook Pro with M5 chip anticipated around October, will presumably incorporate the updated key icon.
This article, “New MacBook Air Quietly Fixes This Decades-Long Design Oversight” first appeared on MacRumors.com
Discuss this article in our forums