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Portables (Apple) Intel Apple

No New MacBook Airs as Apple Instead Makes Lower-End, $1,500 MacBook Pro (arstechnica.com) 191

Alongside the two new MacBook Pros, Apple also unveiled a refresh for its popular MacBook Air lineup. The company is calling this: the MacBook Pro, same branding as the other two MacBook Pros. It's a lower-end version of the new MacBook Pros, with no "Touch Bar" (or the Touch ID) and is powered by a slightly slower processor. Starting at $1,499, this MacBook Pro model is slightly cheaper too, though. From an ArsTechnica report:Apple said it will continue selling the existing 13" MacBook Air, but the company made a point of comparing that model to this new lower-end Pro, putting it somewhere between the Air and the other Pros in the lineup. The new 13" MacBook Pro starts at $1,499 and will begin shipping today. The new higher-end Pros will start at $1,799 for the 13" model and $2,399 for the 15" model while shipping in two to three weeks. If you don't select any hardware upgrades, the low-end 13" Pro has a sixth-generation Intel Core i5 processor with dual cores clocked at 2.0GHz, Intel Iris Graphics 540, 8GB memory, and 256GB SSD. It is available in space grey and silver, and it can cost up to $2,599 if you select the highest CPU, memory, and storage upgrades. Those available upgrades include a 2.4GHz Core i7 processor, 16GB of memory, and 512GB or 1TB of SSD storage. The new 13" laptop has a 2560x1600 Retina display, two Thunderbolt 3/USB-C ports, and a headphone jack. It has the same Force Touch trackpad and redesigned keyboard as the higher-end models despite not integrating the Touch Bar and Touch ID.
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No New MacBook Airs as Apple Instead Makes Lower-End, $1,500 MacBook Pro

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  • I hope Apple knows (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:16PM (#53163643)

    As of the latest surface announcements, Microsoft is ahead of them hardware-wise in everything except for the iPhone.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      That doesn't matter at all. The vast majority of people don't buy electronics based on the hardware. The Surface is DOA. They are on version 4 and LITERALLY no one is buying them. Even the NFL doesn't want them, and they are getting $100 of millions to use them.
      • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:45PM (#53163843) Homepage

        ^This.

        Any new computer hardware on the market these days is plenty powerful enough to handle anything a typical user might ever want to do.

        That means that unless you're a power user (or video game or VR enthusiast), there's going to be very little difference between your experiences using a modern low-end vs a modern high-end system; either one will work just fine for you.

        So the remaining criterion (other than purchase price) is the quality of the user-experience -- i.e. how much of your time at the computer is spent getting accomplished the things you want to accomplish, and how much is spent dealing with computer problems?

        Minimizing the latter is what Mac users are willing to pay extra for.

        • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @04:29PM (#53164127) Journal

          The last two places I worked, Windows and Mac were the allowed, supported desktop operating systems. Everyone in my group would much prefer Unix over Windows, and Mac is certified Unix.

          My employer before these last two supported one desktop environment, CentOS. It was a security company with a lot pf access to customer networks, so Windows wasn't allowed on the company network.

        • That means that unless you're a power user (or video game or VR enthusiast)

          Yes, the sort of person who would choose the "Pro" model over the standard or low end models. What exactly is the Pro model supposed to be for if not exactly these people?

        • But do they get it? I support both, and in my experience Macs minimize neither task time nor trouble time.
      • perhaps you live in a different universe to the rest of us. Surface Pro's and Surface books have been a massive sales success for them. The NFL issues have nothing to do with Surface devices and everything to do with the application and network connectivity provided to teams.
      • My father got a Surface fairly early on and has been happy with it. He wanted a lightweight device with a long battery life that ran Word, PowerPoints, Outlook, and a web browser. The Surface was precisely that and that also appealed to a lot of other corporate types. Now Office works on Android and iOS, it's not clear that the Surface will continue, but in a lot of places it's seen as the tablet for real work.
    • by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:32PM (#53163761)

      Maybe they can work on the OS next.

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

        Maybe they can work on the OS next.

        Maybe that highlights the real problem here. Just as Microsoft was able to grow lax and fail to deliver products because of their monopoly in OS usages in the 90's, Apple, being the sole provider of legitimately supported MacOS machines, is under no pressure to make computers that have the features consumers want.

        "Maybe Apple can work on their hardware next" -- why should they with their captive audience?

  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
    And the crowd goes mild.
  • Bye, MagSafe (Score:5, Interesting)

    by beckett ( 27524 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:25PM (#53163721) Homepage Journal
    they removed one of the biggest selling features for me: MagSafe. That one connector has saved my notebook's ass many times, and it's a sad day to see it disappear off notebooks until Apple's magsafe patent expire someday. PreviouslyApple claimed the macbook air was too light for the magnets to separate, but i don't think that argument applies for the heavier macbook pro.

    jerks.
    • Re:Bye, MagSafe (Score:4, Insightful)

      by j-beda ( 85386 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:40PM (#53163813) Homepage

      they removed one of the biggest selling features for me: MagSafe. That one connector has saved my notebook's ass many times, and it's a sad day to see it disappear off notebooks until Apple's magsafe patent expire someday. PreviouslyApple claimed the macbook air was too light for the magnets to separate, but i don't think that argument applies for the heavier macbook pro.

          jerks.

      I like MagSafe too. Looks like Griffin (and others?) are selling magnetic couplers for USB-c ports:

      https://griffintechnology.com/... [griffintechnology.com]

    • PreviouslyApple claimed the macbook air was too light for the magnets to separate, but i don't think that argument applies for the heavier macbook pro.

      The new Macbook Pro is about 0.06 lbs heavier than the Macbook Air.

      Still, I essentially agree with you. Magsafe is great, and If they're going to make the Macbook Pro so it only has 3 ports on it, I'm not sure I like the idea of using one of them for power.

      • Still, I essentially agree with you. Magsafe is great, and If they're going to make the Macbook Pro so it only has 3 ports on it, I'm not sure I like the idea of using one of them for power.

        I particularly like being able to wave the connector somewhere near the port and have them pull together. Even when I'm drunk. It's pretty classy.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You just lack courage!

    • they removed one of the biggest selling features for me: MagSafe. That one connector has saved my notebook's ass many times

      I think it's a great design that should be replicated on all laptops... but I've never once had anything bad happen to one of my Windows laptops because someone tripped over the cord. When people say this, and talk about all the times the MagSafe saved something, I wonder what kinds of environments they're using their laptops in.

      • I tripped over the charging lead to my ThinkPad (R31) while it was on the top of a chest of drawers doing a big compile job. The machine flew across the machine and landed on its corner, with the edge of the case popping off. The compile paused for a few seconds and then continued and I was able to pop the case together, but I was very glad that it was my cheap laptop! I've kicked the charging cable for my MBP a few times (I often leave it by or on the sofa, plugged into the wall) and had the cable pop o

    • Re:Bye, MagSafe (Score:5, Insightful)

      by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @04:59PM (#53164301) Journal

      It makes sense for Apple: one MacBook saved is one less sale for them.
      And I'm not even joking - I would not put this past them.

    • by Nemyst ( 1383049 )
      While MagSafe's gone, the Surface line uses the exact same principle in their connectors, providing the same advantages. I think the biggest difference is that they are somewhat bigger and carry more than just power.
    • I don't get magsafe. I try to sit with my laptop in bed and my lap pushes out the connector. I move my laptop across the room, the connector comes out. It is very annoying. It is so much simpler to just have a well made cable with a durable connector. I abuse Thinkpad connectors all the time and have never lost one.
    • If you ask me, good riddance of this annoyance that gets disconnected every time I twitch the machine on my lap. BUT I have no less than eight magsafe 90 W power supplies installed: 5 in different rooms of my house, 1 in office and 2 in the lab at work. The moment I upgrade to the new Mac all that goes to trash, and in case of the lab will have to be duplicated (as several of my students use older Macs).

      Now, it has 2 TB SDD which I want, but no word if the SDD is sold separately and is backwards-compatib
  • Only from Apple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:32PM (#53163759)
    is a $1500 notebook considered "lower end."
    • It's not their low-end laptop. On the other hand, their low-end laptop is $999 (or $1300 if they discontinue the Air), which still isn't cheap. On the third hand, shop out a similarly spec'ed laptop (with of a similar size, weight, screen quality, etc.) from other vendors, and if you can find something, it'll probably be similarly priced.

      • It's not their low-end laptop.

        I didn't say it was their low-end laptop.

        .
        I was citing the summary title which said it was Apple's lower-end laptop.

        • The title says, "Lower-End... Macbook Pro".
          • Yup. Lower-end. Just as I said.
            • You: "Only from Ford is a $27k car considered 'lower end'."

              Me: "Yeah, but that's the lower-end *Taurus*. Ford sells cheaper cars. You can get a Fiesta for $14k"

              You: "I didn't say that the Taurus was their low-end car. I said lower end."

              Me: "Yeah, but lower-end *Taurus*."

              You: "Exactly. Lower-end."

              Me: "What the hell are we talking about now?"

    • Just about everyone else is selling a laptop with the latest i7 processor, 256GB SSD, 16 GB DDR4 RAM, and even a 17 inch screen for quite a bit less than Apple's 'lower end' laptops.
  • 2 ports and one needs to to be used for power. How much for a power + TB 3 / USB 3.1 gen 2 pass though dongle? Or even a power + usb A 3.1 + e-net one?

  • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:57PM (#53163927)

    I've got a mid-2012 13" MacBook Pro that's been my workhorse. Between media files and virtual machines, I'm using about 850 GB of a 1 TB hard drive. At my current rate of data expansion, I'll probably break the 1 TB barrier in the next year or so.

    After seeing today's product announcements, it looks like I'll be buying a Samsung 2 TB SSD for my current machine instead, given that the cheapest 2 TB configured MacBook Pro would be a 15" edition at $3800. There is no longer a 13" model to replace what I have.

    I've been a loyal Apple laptop buyer for 15+ years, but the wheels have finally fallen off the wagon for me. I don't need a laptop thin enough to shave with. I want something that will allow me to upgrade the SSD at the very least. And no more Magsafe adapter? I can't count the number of times the Magsafe has saved me from damaging my laptop, not to mention the insanity of having only USB-C on a supposedly professional model.

    So what's the alternative? A Dell? An HP? A Surface? Every bit as bad, or worse. Who would have ever imagined that the entire laptop market would have either cost-cut or over-specialize itself into irrelevance for professional users?

    All I can do is wait and hope that the next iteration of MacBooks will provide a return to sanity.

    • All I can do is wait and hope that the next iteration of MacBooks will provide a return to sanity.

      Don't hold your breath.

      • Don't hold your breath.

        Yeah, I know. I'm not particularly hopeful either.

        On the other hand, in two to four years we may be seeing Micron's 3-D Xpoint memory moving into the high-end prosumer market. So maybe, just maybe, Apple will market a 13" laptop with several TB of memory before the end of the decade. If I can just keep the current laptop going with an SSD upgrade, I may be able to make it.

    • by ELCouz ( 1338259 )
      Thinkpad... the new P70 workstation is a delight... forget Dell, HP
      • Thinkpad... the new P70 workstation is a delight... forget Dell, HP

        Nope, I am not going to replace my 13" MBP with a 17" behemoth that weighs 7.6 pounds. Size and portability do matter to me, just not to the insane extent that Apple tries to push it.

        • by ELCouz ( 1338259 )
          Maybe because i'm used to the weight but 7.6 lbs is nothing... I move on the field all the time with this "behemoth", plenty of screen estate , color accuracy is very good plenty of storage bays if you are looking for storage space... very comfortable on the lap since the weight is spread on a large surface. But it doesn't show-off as macbook would.
        • Fuck me you're easy to please. I want everything, I want it all powerful, and I want it the size of a tablet?

          Your big problem is you think professional laptops include a use case which they simply don't do. 13" "professional" laptop? Hell no. You'll alienate more users with than then not.

          • by chihowa ( 366380 )

            Fuck me you're easy to please. I want everything, I want it all powerful, and I want it the size of a tablet?

            Your big problem is you think professional laptops include a use case which they simply don't do. 13" "professional" laptop? Hell no. You'll alienate more users with than then not.

            This [lowendmac.com] is a reasonable professional laptop, and what I've been using for coding and data analysis for the last few years. Tons of ports, upgradable SSD/RAM, and easy to constantly lug around at 4.5 lbs. I don't need a huge monitor in the field and just because someone doesn't want to drag one around doesn't mean that they're not doing real work on the laptop.

            If Apple refreshed this system, I'd stay with them. That model is also the last system that is easily upgradable, too.

    • I posted pretty much the exact same comment, including current laptop model, earlier this week. I'm leaning System 76 [system76.com] at this point. At bare minimum, while the hardware isn't quite as nice as Apple's, I can configure a real MBP replacement for half the cost of the current generation of MBPs with 2x the hardware capacity. And ports galore. And a real battery. And a matte screen.

    • I just had the same discussion with a friend. Between Microsoft's shittastic Windows 10, and the joke that Apple insists on becoming, we're at a loss as to what to do. The entire playing field has gone to crap.

      I have a 2011 MBP that I upgraded the memory on and HDD on, and it's pretty much 'good enough'. I would like to upgrade, but the options available seem to be getting worse each year.

      Dell's Ubuntu XPS machine looks interesting, but there's just no equivalent to Parallels for linux. VirtualBox works

  • by firebeaker ( 52242 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @03:59PM (#53163937) Homepage

    ... no magsafe, no headphone jack, no optical out.

    Not excited.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @04:23PM (#53164079)

      It has a headphone jack.

      Literally the only good announcement here is that they didn't remove the one thing they stripped from their other flagship device. What a frigging joke. It's good now that I can't connect my phone to my laptop without an adaptor, can't connect my laptop headphones to my phone without an adaptor, and best of all both adaptors are different so I get to pay twice as much for the privilege of nothing being inter-connectable all brought to you by a company who used to have inter-connectivity of their products be a number one selling feature.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        Even better, like every recent MacBook Pro, the headphone jack has optical outputs. The only thing correct in that post was the amount of RAM.

        • But what has optical at the other end? I don't know of anything and I have my share of musical equipment to support my guitar and recording habit.

          • But what has optical at the other end?

            Everything since the last 90s? Computers, walkmans, home theaters, digital radios, cdplayers, md recorders, dacs, DATs, ....

      • No headphone jack would have tipped the scales. I never put headphones in my phone, but I live with my bose noise cancelers plugged into my computer all days at work and when I'm on planes.

        I swear that all the manufacturers are going to follow the no headphone jack meme in the next couple of years because they can't help themselves and the world will hate them for it and then they will slowly come back after a new generation of management gets to power and decides to undo the errors of the past.

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Thursday October 27, 2016 @04:09PM (#53164001)

    mini, imac, mac pro still same price and same old hardware configs.

  • Apple is becoming the girlfriend who you started becoming disenchanted with a year ago, but keep seeing because you know each other and have relationship inertia, and it's easier to coast than the scary challenge of starting over.

    So, Apple continues to offer less value to consumers yet demands the same, or higher price points. With customers locked into iTunes, locked into iMessage, locked into the app ecosystem on both mobile and desktop, this is a calculated gamble that they can put ho-hum parts in a box

  • You have to scroll to the bottom of their "MacBook Pro" page, click on the lower-end 13" laptop (e.g. the one this submission is talking about), and then scroll down again... but Apple is still listing and selling the previous version [apple.com], complete with MagSafe, two full-size USB 3.0 ports, two Thunderbolt 2 ports, and an SD card slot. The base price ($1299) has a 128GB drive, but you can configure it with more storage.

  • Dang..my current one is getting dull. What am I going to shave with now?
  • Perhaps Apple wants people to remember tricks.

  • You can't replace your low end option with one you still call "Pro" and have it mean anything. Not that calling a 13" laptop "professional" makes any sense anyhow.

    At least they're using the latest hardware for once, lending some credence to their pricing. What, really? These aren't using the latest hardware? Well shit, that's a ripoff.

    That touchstrip is pretty cool though. Not sure that justifies the price though. Aside from the SSD (which were too expensive at the time) and display resolution,

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