MacOS Finally Gets Native Touch Support From Alogic Displays

What You Need to Know
- Alogic fills Apple’s gap by offering touchscreen displays with custom macOS software enabling touch gestures and drawing.
- FOKUS series includes 43″, 55″, and 65″ 4K displays for conference rooms, priced $2,799 to $3,999, launching September.
- Aspekt Touch 27″ features 4K panel, USB-C docking, and optional Omni Fold Stand with built-in Mac mini mount.
- Folio portable 16″ display offers 2560×1440 resolution at $899.
Alogic has been quietly building a niche that Apple has left open for years: touchscreen displays that actually work with macOS. This week the company expanded that lineup at InfoComm 2026 with three product families covering everything from conference room walls to a folding dual-screen travel companion.
The most interesting piece of the announcement is not the hardware itself but the software layer underneath it. Because macOS does not natively support touch input, Alogic ships its own software to enable touch gestures, navigation, annotation, and drawing on connected Macs. The company used the same approach with its earlier Clarity lineup, which means this is now an established, tested stack rather than a first attempt. That direct touch interaction on a Mac remains a third-party workaround in 2026 says something about where Apple’s priorities have been.
The flagship addition is the FOKUS series: 43-inch, 55-inch, and 65-inch 4K displays aimed at conference rooms and classrooms, priced from $2,799 to $3,999 and launching by September. They support multitouch and pair with Alogic’s Active Stylus, which offers 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity.
A Smaller Screen With a Mac Mini Surprise
The Aspekt Touch 27″ is a scaled-down version of the existing 32-inch model, with a 4K panel, 600 nits of brightness, and integrated docking via USB-C, USB-A, Ethernet, and audio. One stand option, the Omni Fold Stand, includes a built-in mount for a Mac mini at the base, which is a practical detail for anyone building a compact all-in-one style desk setup. It starts at $1,799 and arrives next month.
The Folio portable displays round out the lineup, with a standard 16-inch 2560×1440 single-screen model at $899 and a Folio Duo at $1,299 that stacks two of those panels and rotates 90 degrees to place them side by side. Both connect over USB-C and fold into their own cover stands.
All of this arrives while a touchscreen MacBook remains a rumor pegged to late 2026 or early 2027 at the earliest. Until then, Alogic is the market.
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