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The good news is that both appear to be multi-touch. The bad news is that on a Windows laptop, the touch screen appears to be more of a gimmick than a feature. When I opened a JPEG file with the Windows 10 "photos" app, I could zoom in and out using two fingers on the screen. And, if I disconnected my mouse to enable the touchpad, the touchpad could do the same, except less precise and more awkwardly. I use a touch screen all the time on my cell phone, and that's fine, But, these laptops are different. The rule is you don't buy a computer for its nifty hardware gimmicks, you buy it for the software it runs. For me, that's the same application software I was using on Windows 7, and it runs best with a keyboard and mouse.
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