Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Portables (Apple) Intel Apple Hardware

Apple Launches MacBook 2016 With Intel Skylake Processor, Longer Battery Life 179

Apple, on Tuesday, announced a refresh for its 12-inch MacBook laptop. The 2016 MacBook comes with an Intel Skylake processor -- sixth-generation dual-core Intel Core M model, offering up to 1.3 GHz clock speed with Turbo Boost speeds of up to 3.1 GHz, faster 1866 MHz memory, and a 'rose gold' color variant. Apple assures 10 hours of wireless Web browsing time, or 11 hours of movie playback on a single charge. The new model will hit retail stores on Wednesday. It starts at $1,299 for the 256GB SSD and 8GB (up from 4GB) version, and goes all the way up to $1,599 for the top-of-the-line model which offers 512GB SSD.

A couple of points: the first-generation MacBook didn't fare well with reviewers and plenty of users alike. Second, today's announcement also hints that the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro lineups won't be getting the Intel Skylake upgrade for at least a few more months -- which is really sad, because, at present, they come equipped with almost three-year-old processor and graphics chips. No wonder, Oculus executive made fun of Apple's computers.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Launches MacBook 2016 With Intel Skylake Processor, Longer Battery Life

Comments Filter:
  • more ports, please (Score:3, Interesting)

    by j2.718ff ( 2441884 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2016 @09:16AM (#51939733)

    Just a single USB-C port. While I like the magsafe charging connection of older macboks, I can support charging via USB-C - the more devices that can charge via the same standard connector, the better. While I like having the USB-A plugs, I'm willing to bet peripherals will transition with time to USB-C, and I can even deal with needing a dongle until that happens. What I find unacceptable is the fact that there is only a single USB-C port.

    This makes me think of the early days of USB -- it was assumed people would chin their devices, as was common with SCSI. But then, peripheral manufacturers stopped including the pass-through connector. At first, this was annoying, but the fact is, it would be annoying to have to disassemble a chain of devices because you want to remove one from the middle.

    • I keep wondering why USB-C power bricks aren't built as USB hubs.

  • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2016 @09:16AM (#51939739) Homepage Journal

    I jumped over to TonyMacx86.com and as of 4/12/16 they have moved the recomended CPU from Haswell/Broadwell to Skylake.
    http://www.tonymacx86.com/buil... [tonymacx86.com]

    For those that like to tinker and build your own Hackintoshes.

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2016 @09:20AM (#51939783)
    why

    the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro lineups won't be getting the Intel Skylake upgrade for at least a few more months

    Technical or commercial reasons?

    • Commercial Reasons probably. They need something to show off at their June conference. I almost bought a new pro at the beginning of the year, but held off to see if i could get one with the skylake in June.
    • The whole Mac side of their business seems to be getting very little attention, which is rather sad. The current offerings were overpriced and used less than stellar hardware when they were first shipped, and mostly that was a looong time ago. Beautiful cases, but mobile grade guts with integrated graphics (or massively marked up GPU's).

      My wife has 2 macs, and I would kind of like to have one on my desk too (grew up on macs BITD), but every time I take a look at the offerings I see a bunch of machines at

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        The whole Mac side of their business seems to be getting very little attention, which is rather sad. The current offerings were overpriced and used less than stellar hardware when they were first shipped, and mostly that was a looong time ago. Beautiful cases, but mobile grade guts with integrated graphics (or massively marked up GPU's).

        Reasons are varied.

        1) Apple doesn't make much money off it - Apple's record is traditionally to concentrate on the money makers. The other products they don't spend much R

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Both.

      Apple plays the long, long, long game with their supply chain and they probably had plenty of existing inventory. (Look how long apple kept selling the optical drive sporting non-retina MBP)

      Sure it makes them sluggish but they enjoy profit margins that are 1000% better than their competitors. - Fun fact. Despite Apple not being the biggest PC maker in terms of units sold.. They make more money at it than anyone else by a HUGE margin. Quality over quantity.

      Lenovo, Dell, HP, Microsoft. They all wish they

    • I don't have an internal information, but when internal information has been leaked, the general answer has tended to be "it's complicated". It could be that they're planning a major redesign that will require retooling their factories, and they were more focused on that. It could be that the new chipsets don't have adequate support for some feature or port that Macs rely on. It could be that the new chips change the heat dissipation profile, requiring a redesign of the internal systems of the device. I

  • I'm considering upgrading my 2013 model. Should I wait a couple of months?

  • But if you follow that link to Apple and click "Buy" it 404's.
  • A couple of points: the first-generation MacBook didn't fare well with reviewers and plenty of users alike.

    My 2006 Black MacBook was useful for eight years until developers followed Apple's lead and started dropping support for 32-bit programs. Never mind that it runs 32-bit Windows 10 and Mint Linux without problems. I have yet to find a true successor to this great laptop.

  • 12" really..... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2016 @09:37AM (#51939971) Homepage

    the 15" line needs a refresh badly, and we need the return of the 17" with a 4K display.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      My 2011 17" is still chugging along, and it's been through a lot, including being dropped on a corner that slightly dislodged the video cable. I put in 16GB RAM years ago (try that with the 8GB soldered-RAM models they are selling now!) and only recently did the trackpad start to get flaky. Fortunately I had just picked up a first-gen unibody 15" a month before and found out about the problems with old trackpads, so I already knew about the adjustment screw.

      At least they still sell the 13" with optical dri

  • No wonder, Oculus executive made fun of Apple's computers.

    They weren't even focused on the laptop platform (Since the vast majority of PC laptops can't effectively run VR), but on the mac pro, which is actually a quite powerful system - albeit not suitable for VR since it is focused as workstation platform and not a gaming one. If you're going to slight apple, at least make it generally relevant. Granted, I'm still not sold on the 12" models.

  • " they come equipped with almost three-year-old processor and graphics chips"

    That must be a joke, right? Apple computers are expensive, but at least they give you the latest technology, isn't it?

    • I'm not sure what the article submitter is smoking. According to this: http://www.everymac.com/system... [everymac.com] the current Macbook Air has a "Core i7 (I7-5650U)" processor which per Intel's own website http://ark.intel.com/products/... [intel.com] debuted in Q1 2015.
    • " they come equipped with almost three-year-old processor and graphics chips"

      That must be a joke, right? Apple computers are expensive, but at least they give you the latest technology, isn't it?

      It's not quite that bad, but it's bad. Apple hasn't even kept up with yearly updates on the Mac side of things. The Mac book was over a year old when this came out. The Mac Book Air is 407 days since last revision. Mac Mini is getting close to two years and the Mac "Pro" is close to three years old.

    • Its not actually that bad, period. All Intel consumer cpus since Haswell have roughly the same cpu performance. Only power consumption and GPU performance have steadily improved since then. So frankly it isn't much of an upgrade unless your old Macbook is going dead on you from battery drain.

      If you still have an old Macbook with a HDD in it, then an easy mini-upgrade is to replace that HDD with a SSD. Poof, it will feel like new even with relatively limited ram. I did the 'ol switch-r-roo on my wife's

What sin has not been committed in the name of efficiency?

Working...