If you're taking the Bar Exam in North Carolina next month and are bringing your new 2016 MacBook, you will have to disable the new Touch Bar just to gain entry according to an announcement from the state.
Before the start of the exam, a proctor will ask if anyone is using the laptop and have either another proctor or an ExamSoft technician ensure the feature is disabled, the state's Board of Law Examiners said. The Touch Bar must already be off prior to entering the examination site.
Instructions note that the feature can be disabled by going into the Keyboard menu under System Preferences, clicking the drop-down for "Touch Bar Shows," then picking Expanded Control Strip.
The board didn't explain its policy, but it's presumably concerned about cheating. The Touch Bar is designed to replace physical function keys with context-sensitive touch commands —a programmer could, however, conceivably write software that would display test answers.
The Touch Bar is so configurable that people have managed to get games such as Doom running on it, even if they're not playable in any practical sense.
Removing the technology can make a Pro more difficult to use, forcing owners to click through menus to accomplish common tasks.