The MacBook Neo

(daringfireball.net)

190 points | by etothet 8 hours ago ago

366 comments

  • KingMachiavelli 13 hours ago ago

    IMO the consumer PC industry is near an existential crisis. The big players are just awful at marketing; too many SKUs and models - it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ. The exact same specs will be in two different chassis designs.

    Additionally, you can’t count on the basic being correct. It takes a hour of research to know if the trackpad is not-awful, keyboard doesn’t suck, and display isn’t a 300nits POS unusable even in a bright room.

    You want the same performance as a MacBook Air without one of these fatal flaws? You’ll hand to spend $1500+ anyway so you save nothing. Then the OS is full of ads and pre-installed garbage “gaming-optimization-tool” or driver tools taking up 99% of a single core while being riddled with security holes.

    • cannolicannon an hour ago ago

      The big players are just awful at marketing; too many SKUs and models - it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ.

      Just hired a new colleague who prefers Windows. Dell seemed like a reasonable option for a good laptop. Here is Dell's current lineup:

      - Dell Laptop (with 14, 15, 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Plus (with 14, 15, and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell XPS (with 13, 14, and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Premium (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Essential (with 14 and 15 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Plus (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Premium (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Max (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Max Plus (with 14, 16, and 18 inch variants)

      - Dell Pro Max Premium (with 14 and 16 inch variants)

      It's maddening trying to sift through the differences at this level. Then when you select a model, there can upwards of 8 different pre-built options to review.

      • Reason077 an hour ago ago

        Apple isn’t this bad, of course, but they’re slowly heading in that direction.

        The number of overlapping iPad models and variants, for example, is getting kind of crazy these days.

        Now there’s the MacBook Neo and a rumoured new MacBook Ultra in the pipeline. The easy days of “pick standard or pro, select a display size, select RAM & storage” are starting to fade.

        • SllX 22 minutes ago ago

          The iPad line makes a lot more sense when you’re just shopping and realize you’re just on a price ladder. Start from the bottom and climb up picking up features along the way until you reach the point where you’ve got what you want or you’re not willing to spend more money.

          The Neo is either easy to recommend or rather easy to not recommend. It has a fixed 8GB of RAM. I think that’s too little for a modern Mac operating on the modern web. Others… disagree. Either way, it might entice some schools and school districts assuming they can volume discounts where 8GB is probably enough and it fills the spot in the Walmart part of the sales channel previously occupied by an 8GB RAM M1 MacBook Air Apple hadn’t sold itself in years.

        • calf 20 minutes ago ago

          It is giving me choice paralysis, last week I made a mental graph of the ones I wanted and went over all node pairs choose 2, now it's down to waiting for a fall M5 Mac mini paired with either: a MacBook Neo, or an iPad Air 13"; both options are very attractive for my intended usage though the latter seems higher risk since I've never used a 13 inch tablet before.

        • enraged_camel an hour ago ago

          >> The number of overlapping iPad models and variants, for example, is getting kind of crazy these days.

          One of the first things Steve Jobs immediately did after returning to Apple in 1997 was to kill most of Apple's product line-up, which had exploded in his absence.

          Too bad he's not around to save them from the same over-segmentation anymore.

          • thewebguyd 28 minutes ago ago

            The goal is different. Jobs wanted to make the product spread simple to understand.

            Apple's current method is a pricing ladder, make it simple to spend $200+ more than you planned.

            MacBook Neo, $599. Great but maybe I want Touch ID & more storage, ok $699. Well at this point now it's "only" $300 to get the air which is much better. Well, now that you're already spending $1000, might as well just do the extra $500 and get the pro..."

            Every product lineup is designed that way. It gets you thinking "eh, what's an extra $200" and slowly moves you up until you land at the highest tier.

            Now that everything is using the same silicon, it costs Apple very little to maintain all these variants (that are mostly binning), so there's little reason not to.

      • gib444 5 minutes ago ago

        > Dell Pro Max Premium

        > Dell Pro Essential

        At least they have a sense of humour

        Pro... Essential?! If the sold hotel rooms they'd offer a Deluxe Economy ??

      • asimovDev an hour ago ago

        at our company we just pick the most current X1 13in Thinkpad 32/1000 for the windows preferrers.

    • mikestew 2 hours ago ago

      Then the OS is full of ads and pre-installed garbage “gaming-optimization-tool” or driver tools taking up 99% of a single core while being riddled with security holes.

      But inevitably, some chucklehead comes along "wut? I can get <proceeds to type spec sheet> for half that! Have fun paying the apple tax, lol." Someone posted that on Ars yesterday, with a random Amazon link from Naikan, your name for quality computing. Or rather, "Naikan, your name for a quality trackpad, screen, and high-quality ABS case! Be sure to check out the $12,000 of 'bonus' software add-ons, no extra charge!". It's amazing someone can post that without the slightest hint of self-awareness.

      • bigyabai 2 hours ago ago

        > It's amazing someone can post that without the slightest hint of self-awareness.

        It's amazing that people attribute it to lacking self-awareness. You can spend $400 on a laptop and have a perfectly fine experience. There are damn good Chromebooks in the $200-300 territory that I can genuinely recommend to people. If you just need to do your taxes or answer a Zoom call, why would you get a Macbook Neo?

        macOS itself has been declining in quality since at least Mojave; people don't rave about it anymore. The Macbook Neo will 100% continue the trend of people showing up at Best Buy and comparing the Lenovo machine to the Mac that costs 3x as much. This will not sway the average Joe any more than the Macbook Air did. It's not even seriously competing with the iPad price bracket that might tempt students.

        • Aurornis an hour ago ago

          > You can spend $400 on a laptop and have a perfectly fine experience.

          Or you could spend $200 more (or $100 more with edu pricing) and get a MacBook Neo which has significantly higher build quality, a much better screen, a great trackpad, and amazing performance.

          Seeing how college students throw laptops in backpacks, that extra $100 (edu pricing) could very easily save them money in the long run.

          > There are damn good Chromebooks in the $200-300 territory

          Every once in a while I go looking for a Chromebook-level laptop for some extra purpose and I am never impressed by anything. The current selection is all ancient processors, bad screens, creaky build quality. If you must stick to a strict budget then these can work, but I wouldn't call them good.

          • bryanlarsen 42 minutes ago ago

            First impressions can be a very poor judge of build quality. If you pick up a mil-spec laptop it'll feel a lot more like the $200 Chromebook. Yet it'll survive endurance tests that neither the Chromebook nor the Macbook will.

        • poulsbohemian an hour ago ago

          >If you just need to do your taxes or answer a Zoom call, why would you get a Macbook Neo?

          Because it's a Mac. Maybe not to you, but to many people Apple signals luxury. It signals trust. You have an iPhone, an iWatch, and AirPods in your ears, why wouldn't you also buy a Mac? And at that price point, mom and dad don't think twice about buying one for the kids anymore where previously they might have gotten by without.

          >macOS itself has been declining in quality since at least Mojave; people don't rave about it anymore.

          Maybe because computing devices overall are just so good. The gains are to be had in services that are part of the Apple ecosystem, not the OS alone (for the most part).

          >The Macbook Neo will 100% continue the trend of people showing up at Best Buy and comparing the Lenovo machine to the Mac that costs 3x as much. This will not sway the average Joe any more than the Macbook Air did. It's not even seriously competing with the iPad price bracket that might tempt students.

          In the 2000s, Apple has not cared about competing at Best Buy. That isn't their customer. If anything though, the Neo is more of a foray into that wider market. Anyone with kids lugging home a crappy school-issued Chromebook though took one look at this device and knew this is a device Apple can position into schools -- a market they once dominated and lost. There are lots of markets where this will be a great device, where the customer wants a Mac and not "just" an iPad. In those cases, it isn't the end consumer buying this device, it's an IT manager - who can likely be tempted by that Mac ecosystem and a better grade of device relative to competition.

          • Aurornis 42 minutes ago ago

            > Maybe not to you, but to many people Apple signals luxury. It signals trust.

            In some countries Apple is (or was) a status symbol of luxury, but I haven't observed that much in the United States. Macs and iPhones are both mainstream and affordable. AirPods can be bought for $100 on sale. These are commodity items now, not symbols of luxury.

            Now, most people go to Apple because they see it as a premium option, not a status symbol or luxury. If you get AirPods or an iPhone you know what you're getting. If you buy those $50 wireless earbuds on Amazon your expectations are lower.

          • fragmede 42 minutes ago ago

            For me, the one feature that sells having an iphone and a Mac laptop to me is copy and paste between the two devices. I spend way more time on my phone than I should, but being able to go from my phone to my laptop and back is what has me in Apple's ecosystem (for now). MacOS and iOS feel like they are buggier than they used to be, (don't get me started on 26) but framing it purely as a luxury and brand identity thing, without looking at usability details like battery life is an oversimplification.

          • allarm an hour ago ago

            > Apple signals luxury

            Oh gosh that's just depressing.

          • zepolen 33 minutes ago ago

            > Apple signals luxury

            Today, Apple to me signals idiot. This was not always the case.

        • hitekker an hour ago ago

          I beg to differ on "damn good chromebooks for the $200-$300 territory."

          I had a phase 2 years ago where I tried many cheap Chromebooks. I initially liked the stripped down experience and "value for dollar" hardware.

          But ChromeOS UX gaps, bad keyboards, and a litany of other issues wore me down and I gave up on the "second computer" quest.

          I look back now and see many of those Chromebooks don't even exist anymore.

        • mikestew an hour ago ago

          You can spend $400 on a laptop and have a perfectly fine experience.

          Again, the trackpad will suck and the screen will be a dim, binned display panel, etc. If that works for you, fine, but that's not the conversation. The conversation everyone else is having is that your plastic $400 laptop with the bargain-bin components isn't the equivalent of $MACBOOK, no matter what the spec sheet says.

        • oompydoompy74 an hour ago ago

          I have a relatively recent expensive gaming laptop from Asus for the occasional LAN party with friends. I hate it and it’s a huge piece of shit. Windows 11 is necessary for anti-cheat shenanigans. Apple could change the Mac OS wallpaper to a permanent photo of a turd and it would still be better than Windows 11. Also the trackpad and keyboard suck.

          • mietek 42 minutes ago ago

            FYI, the very recently released Marathon with the BattleEye rootkit works fine on a maximally trimmed down Windows 10 LTSC, which is what I'm running on my PC (personal console).

        • syntheticnature an hour ago ago

          The Macbook Neo is $599. Looking at my local Best Buy and dividing by 3, the laptops below $200 are all HP Chromebooks:

          Chromebook/N4500 (2021!)/4GB RAM/64GB eMMC, $149 white $179 in grey Windows/N150/4GB RAM/128GB, $219 (first Windows machine)

          The first Lenovo is a Chromebook that's $299, and it's got a MediaTek processor from 2022 and is supposedly on a $100 sale.

        • rjrjrjrj an hour ago ago

          Better integration with your iPhone is a very compelling reason to buy a Macbook Neo.

          The edu price is $499. Of course that seriously competes with the base iPad ($329 without keyboard).

        • jitl an hour ago ago

          $300 to thread the eye of a needle through a field of dogshit, that can only run Google Chrome, or $500 for something entry level but very high quality that can run Google Chrome but also a vast library of well-designed native software that doesn't use garbage collection.

          macOS isn't the power user focused, extra high polish OS it was in Snow Leopard era, but it's still the best UX and energy management in operating systems out of the box

          • xp84 an hour ago ago

            > $500 for something entry level but very high quality that can run Google Chrome but also a vast library of well-designed native software

            A vast library? With 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage you're not going to be running much, nor storing many files created by that library of software. Also, the only well-designed truly native software I have on my Mac, which I use daily, I can count on one hand. The vast majority of the apps most people use outside of "Pro" video and image editing, are in a browser, or are Electron apps that are exactly the same on a Mac as they are on a Chromebook.

            And those "media" people using Premiere or Final Cut would never buy a computer that maxes out at 512GB SSD.

            This is a pretty Chromebook substitute, which is cool, but it's obvious Apple doesn't want it to compete with the rest of their computers which start at $1,099.

            • tock 34 minutes ago ago

              It's a M1 Macbook Air substitute with significantly better single core performance. Any comparison with a chromebook is just hilarious.

      • izacus an hour ago ago

        Please don't call people chuckleheads while licking a boot of a single corporation.

        What triggers you so much about someone prefering a different electronic device that you need to insult them?

        • mikestew 34 minutes ago ago

          Please don't call people chuckleheads while licking a boot of a single corporation.

          C'mon, you can make a better counter-argument than that. People can prefer what they like as far as I'm concerned, but poorly-thought arguments and narrative-supporting go straight to the "chucklehead" bin. Perhaps you can do a better job describing how a $300 plastic laptop is superior to a MacBook Neo than OP did, I'm willing to listen.

    • ho_schi 2 hours ago ago

      The last competitor remaining is Lenovo with the ThinkPads and pre-installed Linux [1].

      But even Lenovo cripples them:

          * You need to be very careful. Select alwaysCTO build with the best available display. But even then, Lenovo *removed* the HiDPI display from the X13. The only actual competitor to the MacBook Air is the ThinkPad X13.
          * Lenovo added useless camera humps protruding out of the panel. There is a thick bezel and enough space for a much better camera. And for opening the laptop used to be a dent in the (round!) palmrest, nothing protruding.
          * AMD, Intel and Lenovo fail to ship a fanless X13 and T14. I would happily keep same performance for two years, just getting rid of it.
          * Lenovo is drowning us in Yogas, Z13 or whatever Legion. 
      
      
      They still have huge advantages (keyboard, maintenance manual, replacement parts, Linux compatibility, much more ports in case of the X14 and T14). Apples keyboards are nowadays “acceptable” but not even comparable to a good ThinkPad keyboard.

      [1] By the love of god. Don’t order them with Windows! You are putting 80 to 130 euro right into Microsoft’s stock owners. And they will use it to harm Linux. And of course, making Windows even worse. They use it to harm you. Select Linux. Donate the rest (Fasst, GNOME, KDE…) or use it for the better display.

    • whycome 2 hours ago ago

      I had a Microsoft surface book 2. The provided charger could not provide enough power to the device when it was under heavy load and there was no higher charger option either. That shit should be illegal. And if the battery for the base/GPU died? You can't use the computer w the gpu even with a charger attached. The device itself could have been a dream and something i could have seen Apple doing : a touchscreen monitor that was also a computer and could be detached from the keyboard/gpu.

      • pier25 2 hours ago ago

        For a couple of days I had a Surface Book 1 before returning it. The keyboard was really good but otherwise just a terrible device and experience.

        The touch screen was completely useless. Super laggy and sometimes the pen would still believe it was touching the screen even at like 1cm away. Windows 10 had almost no features for touch based interaction. It was just regular Windows with the same microscopic buttons for mouse.

        Plus a ton of display ghosting, GPU glitches, etc.

        • keeda an hour ago ago

          I still have a Surface Book 1 that I occasionaly use and I never encountered any of those issues. I even used it for some sketching and there was no lag or spurious touching from the pen. In fact, sketching was why I was "drawn" to it (heheh), largely influenced by this review: https://www.penny-arcade.com/news/post/2015/11/16/surface-bo...

          My big problem with it is that the battery got swollen a few years ago, pushing out the bottom panel, and the device is way our of warranty to get it replaced. I'm waiting to find time to get that replaced.

    • everdrive 2 hours ago ago

      This is my advice anyone asks me about a laptop. The specs don't matter (at least if you're asking me, it means you don't know computers and will mostly just use a web browser, and therefore nearly any specs on the market will be fine) and the things that do matter are just never on a spec sheet -- keyboard, trackpad, speaker, screen quality. Some stuff won't be discovered until years later: for instance I had an Acer laptop in 2007 which was designed with insufficient cooling, and cooked its thermal paste in about a year or two. Once it was cooked, you couldn't play games or do anything intensive without rebooting the machine. I hadn't thought to research that issue since I figured cooling was a solved problem. But, I'm sure Acer saved a few dollars per unit. (and of course, the screen, trackpad, speaker (yes, singular!) and keyboard were all awful as well.)

      • basch 18 minutes ago ago

        Specs only really matter to many relative to battery life. A higher specced system may unnecessarily burn energy.

      • whilenot-dev 2 hours ago ago

        I bought my last Acer around 2010 (Aspire 4820TG I think, good machine). Their notebooks were always on the cheaper side, where its price just sat right with the offered value. Cooling issues were always present and weren't a big problem as long as the machine was maintainable. Unfortunately maintainability in notebooks (and electronics in general) all changed around 2015-ish and from there on it was used ThinkPads only for me.

    • giancarlostoro 3 hours ago ago

      Yeah, for a while my favorite laptop was the Surface Book 2. Decent specs, does what I want it to. Then Microsoft started going through "Marketing Driven Development" for Windows and its just been downhill for my experience with that laptop. It's not just the marketing trash, the OS has gotten noticeably slow despite me keeping it pretty vanilla. It's downright insulting. As for my desktops, I just smoosh over Windows and install Linux over now, I don't care about anything on Windows enough to keep it. I can play all my games on Linux just fine. I can do all my dev stuff on Linux too.

      • whycome 2 hours ago ago

        lol i just posted about how I was also scorned by MS/Surface Book 2. What a potentially amazing device. I hated that if you were playing a game or doing many video encodes, the charger (100w?) could not provide enough power -- so your battery drained. And make sure you don't let your base drain completely after being stored for a while -- the main computer won't be able to recognize it to even charge it again. And these were all known faults with no solution for the consumer other than to "buy the newer model." And you could never disable the damn windows update nag screens entirely. And you knew that you'd lose functionality if you upgraded something.

      • AnishLaddha an hour ago ago

        an underrated reason for the decline in windows is that it went from a core product focus to being crowded out. I wouldn't be surprised if azure, sharepoint, office 365, devices, GH/Linkedin, bing/copilot, etc are all more important to msft leadership than windows.

      • brewdad 2 hours ago ago

        I put Linux on an old Surface tablet. Works better than Windows on the same device. The only thing that isn't working under Linux is the camera. Built in extra privacy as a bonus!

    • Someone 2 hours ago ago

      > IMO the consumer PC industry is near an existential crisis. The big players are just awful at marketing; too many SKUs and models -

      I see your point, but as a counterexample, look at the TV industry, at PC monitors, at washing machines, etc. There manufacturers have, for decades, created SKUs left and right, sometimes only so that a large dealer can offer to match lowest prices because no other dealer has access to the same SKU.

      > it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ. The exact same specs will be in two different chassis designs.

      I don’t know how they do things nowadays, but it used to be the case that the same SKU didn’t even guarantee you the same hardware. Two machines of the same order could even be slightly different, requiring different drivers.

      • pxeboot 2 hours ago ago

        > I don’t know how they do things nowadays, but it used to be the case that the same SKU didn’t even guarantee you the same hardware. Two machines of the same order could even be slightly different, requiring different drivers.

        Apple is guilty of this too. For example, two iPhone's purchased at the same time can have displays from different manufactures, with noticeable quality differences between them.

        • mikestew 2 hours ago ago

          And unless you looked it up, you'd never noticed the difference (save comparing the two side-by-side). Whereas the cheap laptop requires one to know the difference so you can get the right driver, or other jackery because your WiFi card was a mid-year change. It reminds of me of mid-year production changes on cars, where VINs XXX-YYY need part number ZZZ, but VINs AAA-BBB need part number CCC.

          • doubled112 an hour ago ago

            What colour is the stripe on the spring? I can't look this up, not even by VIN.

            Wore off eight years ago. Can we guess?

      • philistine 2 hours ago ago

        Washing machines and the others don't have a company like Apple that is so differentiated that customers love their products so much they get to own something like 80% of the profits of the biggest personal computing market.

        • andyclap2 25 minutes ago ago

          I know a few Miele fanboys...

      • dylan604 2 hours ago ago

        Creating SKUs to avoid price matching is still just having one product coming out of the factory. It's just extra space in a database somewhere, so it costs nothing. The PC makers do have to create new physical products for each of those SKUs though. So it's apples and oranges here

      • imglorp 2 hours ago ago

        The epitome of "sku engineering" is mattresses, to keep consumers from comparison shopping. Retail HATES competition and informed shoppers.

    • kwanbix an hour ago ago

      As much as I like the performance and the power consumption of the current apple lineaup, the problems is I can not install Linux on the Neo. I can beraly install it on the M1, M2, and M3. And not everything works. If I could install Linux and have everything working, I will buy a Macbook (not a Neo) right away.

      • lordgroff 34 minutes ago ago

        Linux will always be a second class citizen on Apple hardware. I have the M1 and have tried Linux a few times at different stages of maturity. As it is right now, it's still a far cry from the experience of a Linux on x86 hardware, and specifically Thinkpads. Bottom line is, even though I really like my laptop, I do NOT like Mac OS (and with every update I like it _less_) and will probably go back to a thinkpad for my next laptop. It's a big shame.

    • jclardy an hour ago ago

      In addition to your research categories - is the fan going to sound like a jet engine when just opening slack? Is the case going to wobble and creak after a few weeks? Is it going to tank performance when unplugged? And if not - is battery life going to be a concern?

      • cosmic_cheese an hour ago ago

        In low price brackets those awful barrel jack charger ports that get loose at record speeds still appear too, which isn’t something people necessarily think about but will end up dragging down the user experience.

        • fragmede 35 minutes ago ago

          How they're still selling laptops with those in this age of usb-c is criminal.

    • asdff 42 minutes ago ago

      Is the laptop market even choosy or discerning? Very few people I know would actually understand specs. Especially when you step outside people who majored in fields that require some programming. I assume they must buy laptops, if they still even buy laptops, based on things like yearly sales periods at retailers, since you do see a surprising amount of square footage reserved for laptops to sit open on tables (not just apple's) in places like best buy, costco, target, etc. So there must be buyers. Maybe their comparison only goes as far as whatever bullet points Costco highlights on the price tag I suspect, in a "bigger number is better for the price" sort of way vs understanding a persons own compute needs.

    • izacus an hour ago ago

      After growing up in eastern Europe it's still wild to see young Americans stupidly demand less choice and more monopolies in their market.

      Like seriously, having laptop choice is causing you crippling issues? Is other people having a laptop to choose based on preference causing you distress when you go to Apple store?

      • lurking_swe 14 minutes ago ago

        I don’t think you fully understood their argument.

        The problem is not that other manufacturers offer choices – the problem is that for a typical consumer it’s IMPOSSIBLE to really understand which computer in the lineup is appropriate for their needs. It seems most of them are focused on B2B sales.

        Of course, if you are a gamer or a nerd like myself, you don’t mind spending a week finding the perfect computer. But that’s an exception.

    • cromka 12 hours ago ago

      > It takes a hour of research to know if the trackpad is not-awful

      This, so much this! I run Asahi on M1 Air but wanted to upgrade to something with fuller Linux support. After trying Thinkpad T14s, trackpad quality has rosen to my attention, something I never thought about before. Turns out glass, haptic trackpads are still only available in probably about a dozen laptops on the market and it's not easy to actually know which ones are these!

      • ZiiS 3 hours ago ago

        To me clear the Neo dose not have a glass, haptic trackpad.

        • selectodude 2 hours ago ago

          It’s glass but not haptic. Honestly the fact that they figured out how to make the entire pad clickable without haptics is pretty impressive.

          • philistine an hour ago ago

            Their trackpads were that way since the move to aluminium for the chassis until the release of the 2017 Macbook.

            Apple had solved the issue around 2012 and still PC manufacturer refuse to spend on trackpad quality.

            • Kirby64 an hour ago ago

              Not really, not exactly. The older “clicky” MacBook trackpads couldn’t quite be “clicked” anywhere. They were levered at the top of the trackpad, so if you tried to click on the very top edge then they wouldn’t really click. Anywhere else, it felt fine, but maybe the top inch didn’t feel good. Not really a problem in normal use cause most people don’t try to click on the very top edge, but perhaps this new trackpad fixes that (I haven’t tested one myself). The current gen haptic ones have the same exact click feeling no matter where you press, of course.

      • teaearlgraycold 2 hours ago ago

        I exclusively use the trackpoint on thinkpads, to the point that I disable the trackpads in the BIOS or disconnect them from the motherboard entirely.

      • bigyabai 2 hours ago ago

        You can buy a Magic Trackpad and pair it with your Thinkpad no problem. It's much more comfortable to use it side-by-side with your keyboard, most of the time I'm reaching for the Trackpoint if my hands are on home row.

        • mikestew an hour ago ago

          You can buy a Magic Trackpad and pair it with your Thinkpad no problem.

          Yeah, that works great on the bus. It's one more thing to tote around to meetings, but hey, at least I didn't have to buy a MacBook!

          Or I could just buy a Mac and not have to resort to hacks to get a decent trackpad.

    • randusername an hour ago ago

      > The big players are just awful at marketing

      Apple is great at marketing to consumers. The other big players, I have to assume, are more focused on B2B where the threshold for UX acceptability is lower.

      The only ads I ever hear from them are on economics podcasts ostensibly aimed at business owners. For "Copilot+ AI PCs" no less, whatever that means. They're chasing a target audience of approximately 3 people in the world that are improbably held back from achieving their wildest AI dreams by not having a commodity laptop with an NPU.

    • hutattedonmyarm 13 hours ago ago

      I recently helped a friend picking a new laptop. Just going through the options at the websites of manufacturers was a nightmare. Huge amount of choices, shitty filtering, separated into multiple product lines were I often enough had no idea what separated the lines from each other

      • drcongo 3 hours ago ago

        If they're your friend, why didn't you just tell them to get a Mac?

        • ryandvm an hour ago ago

          Cute, and while I will agree that Apple hardware is generally superior or at least an excellent value, and OS X is miles beyond Windows in usability, I can't in good conscience recommend a Mac on principle.

          They impose obsessive control over their walled garden, constant pressure to use Apple ecosystem products, and they are staunchly opposed to interoperability regardless of it being an obviously anti-consumer tactical moat.

          Buying a Mac in spite of such anti-consumer behavior reminds me of voting for a bad person because you like their policies.

          • retired 25 minutes ago ago

            A Mac isn’t really a walled garden though.

            You don’t even need an Apple account to use one. Unlike Windows.

          • Kirby64 an hour ago ago

            As opposed to Microsoft, the good guys right now? I don’t see how incessant privacy violations, selling your data, and general shovelware behavior of Windows 11 is better. In many ways, it’s much worse in my view.

          • bell-cot 35 minutes ago ago

            > voting for a bad person because you like their policies.

            These days, you're lucky if you get to pick from "Bad", "Very Bad", and "Worst".

            (BTW, does Mr. Bad look like he'll competently implement and honestly administer his policies? 'Cause without those, "good" policies ain't worth squat):

        • retired 2 hours ago ago

          15 years ago this comment would have been a troll.

          Nowadays it’s solid advice. The current Mac line-up is a step ahead of the competition. App compatibility is hardly an issue anymore with the exception of some very niche software.

          • ecshafer an hour ago ago

            Niche software, and almost all video games.

            • drcongo 27 minutes ago ago

              A laptop is for getting work done, I'm not a child.

        • gabrielhidasy 2 hours ago ago

          Why would I inflict that to my friends?

    • mastermage 13 hours ago ago

      Inarguably one of the great things done by apple is the rather easily overseeable models. And no mattter the processing power in the models you get a rather great experience from the haptics, audio and visual in all of them.

      And I would be very much in the Apple Camp for personal laptops, if Gaming was in any way shape or reasonable. Thats the only downside of apple. They tried to fix this before but that really did not work out.

      • officeplant 2 hours ago ago

        At the same time with effort they can run a surprising amount of games. Heroic Launcher makes it a bit easier to wrangle the game dev toolkit (riding off the back of work from the whisky dev before they quit dev work from all the complaining users).

        I had Cyberpunk 2077 running on a M1 Macbook Air almost two years before the MacPort came at a very playable 30fps (900p Medium settings). Although I did have to use thermal pads to heatsink it to my metal laptop stand and added a slow spinning fan for good measure.

        It's not perfect, but I've also spent a lot of time only buying games with no road blocks to running on Mac/Linux.

      • remuskaos 12 hours ago ago

        I've only recently gotten a MacBook after using Linux Pretty much exclusively for over twenty years. And I have to say I'm really surprised how much I like it. For gaming it's all right, but not great. Factorio works but not much else.

        But for that I still have my Bazzite or Steam Deck. I really encourage you to try Linux for gaming. It's incredible what Valve has achieved on that front.

        • deaux 9 hours ago ago

          > Factorio works but not much else.

          Currently looking at the top 20 Steam games [0] for today, excluding non-games like Wallpaper Engine. 8 out of 20 work on Mac natively. Out of the remaining 12, 3 of them work with Crossover, so that makes it 11 out of 20. Almost all of the remaining 9 are competitive FPS games that don't work due to their kernel-level anticheat, almost all of which AFAIK won't work on Linux for the same reason.

          [0] https://steamdb.info/charts/

        • mastermage 12 hours ago ago

          Oh i have a steam deck and am in the process of migrating to linux latest when Win 12 hits. Just some problems with some software like Fusion 360. I do like Linux alot.

          • mdhen 2 hours ago ago
          • fxtentacle 9 hours ago ago

            It really is a pity that there’s no working business model around open source maintenance for software like wine. I’m the guy who fixed the wine bug that blocked new iTunes versions, because I like to keep my music in iTunes for easy iPhone sync. I also have Fusion 360 working flawlessly in wine, but the setup process required multiple sessions stepping manually with a debugger to avoid crashes and packaging that as scripts and/or just documenting all the little issues and their fixes and keeping that up to date with fusion updates would be serious work. So nobody is doing it.

            • jitl an hour ago ago

              CrossOver sells WINE and WINE consulting; I've been a happy customer on and off for about 20 years. If you're bothered by open source WINE i'd say give them a shot. In my experience it's worth the $70 or whatever to get a well-paved GUI path and support.

    • ngrilly 2 hours ago ago

      Exactly. PC manufacturers have so many SKUs and are changing so many things from one model to another that their brand doesn't mean anything anymore. Buying a Dell, HP, Lenovo or Asus branded laptop doesn't say anything meaningful about what you're actually going to get. Unlike Apple (or Framework) where the brand still means something.

    • ryandrake 6 hours ago ago

      > it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ.

      Don't forget, one is going to be the "Business" version and the other identical one is going to be the "Consumer" version. God help whoever buys a "business" category laptop for personal use. The world will come to an end!

      • syntheticnature an hour ago ago

        Or, in actuality, the Dell business model will be designed for repairability. I tend to always advise friends who want Windows/Linux laptops to buy from the business lines, especially if a 1- or 2- year refurb will work.

    • timcobb 2 hours ago ago

      > The big players are just awful at marketing; too many SKUs and models

      and as far as I know, they do this on purpose!

    • softfalcon 3 hours ago ago

      This... so much this.

      > too many SKUs and models - it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ.

      And yet, I just watched a YouTube video where a "PC guy" was like, "adding the Neo just completely confuses the Apple product line. Are we heading towards having too many Apple options that confuse the buyer here?"

      I get it, other than price, the Neo and Air are a bit confusing product wise. Have they looked at how Asus, Lenovo, and Dell are doing their products though? It's absolutely wild the disparity between PC and Apple for laptops.

      I run both PC's and Mac devices in our house, we use what fills the job. Recommending PC laptops for family members feels like a total crapshoot though. Every time, I do all I can to find the right device for their needs and there are just so many trade-offs. Maybe I get all the right specs, ensure it doesn't thermal throttle, keyboard/trackpad are A-OK... but the webcam is trash. Ooof... now Mom is complaining about how no one can see her properly at bridge club call.

      I brought up how the Neo might do to the PC industry what the Air did to Ultrabooks back in the day. The amount of hate I got on YouTube/Verge with copy-paste, "hahaha, wut, with 8 GB of RAM? lmao, lol, you Apple bot?!" was expected, but also disappointing. There is clearly a market segment happy to continue to put up with the mess that Dell/Lenovo are selling (anything but a Mac).

      Wild how tribal we are to our corporate computer overlords.

      The era where something like Framework with its fully customizable, repairable, modular laptops becomes the standard can't come soon enough.

      For the time being, I'll let Apple/PC continue to duke it out. Hope some competition helps in the long run. :shrug:

      • hackyhacky 3 hours ago ago

        > I get it, other than price, the Neo and Air are a bit confusing product wise. Have they looked at how Asus, Lenovo, and Dell are doing their products though? It's absolutely wild the disparity between PC and Apple for laptops.

        Yep.

        I'm a long-time ThinkPad user, but I have no idea how Lenovo's ThinkPad T series differs from the ThinkPad E series or ThinkPad L series or ThinkPad X series, and their website certainly isn't going to tell me. I keep on buying T series because I'm honestly afraid of trying anything else.

        To say nothing of Lenovo's non-ThinkPad laptop brands, including Ideapad, Legion, Yoga, ThinkBook (!), and LOQ.

        I really don't know what laptop to recommend to a friend. One friend showed me specs for an Asus they found at Best Buy, and it looked okay, so I said "It's probably fine." Turns out it was shoddily made and overpriced: they had to sent it back not once but twice because the wifi and then the camera didn't work out of the box, then a few months later the hinge broke.

        I am not a Mac fan, but it's easy to recommend them because you at least know they are universally well-built machines.

        • officeplant 2 hours ago ago

          > I have no idea how Lenovo's ThinkPad T series differs from ...

          My personal rundown and how they get assigned:

          E - Educational / Lower office personnel spec

          L - Office personnel you hate spec, but don't offer the E because they might complain.

          T - Give this to all the technicians because they can't take care of anything and it will survive typically.

          P - Give this to the engineers who believe having an RTX gpu will actually help them so that they are happy, and to the CAD operators who actually need it.

          X - Smaller/Ultrabooks before the term got started, now somewhat a blurry line because T series have gotten lighter/thinner. But the X1 Carbon sure is a great way to spend a ton of money for a light laptop when a T-series would suffice.

          Personally I stick to older used X series (currently x250) because I just enjoy a small laptop and they are dirt cheap now.

          • mmcnl an hour ago ago

            This still doesn't tell me how they differ. What are the factual objective measurable differences between E/L/T/P?

            • hackyhacky an hour ago ago

              Spoiler: they are all identical hardware, but marketed differently.

      • jclardy an hour ago ago

        Neo and Air are quite simple when looking at it from the bottom up. Air is the "nice" Neo for basically $500 more. Backlit keyboard, MagSafe, Thunderbolt 4, M5, way faster SSD speeds, double the RAM, larger display, Force Touch trackpad.

      • thewebguyd 2 hours ago ago

        > "hahaha, wut, with 8 GB of RAM? lmao, lol, you Apple bot?!"

        And it would seem they never learn either. I saw the same comments when the M1 Air came out, then they quickly shut up when people were pushing those little base model airs well beyond what anyone thought they were capable of.

        The same thing is happening with the Neo now. It feels like an M1 moment all over again for the PC OEM industry.

        If you aren't a gamer, there is zero reason at this point to consider any other laptop besides a macbook. Apple now has one for every price point. This neo is going to destroy the consumer PC space. Dell, HP, Acer are probably sweating right now.

        • philistine an hour ago ago

          They're not sweating at all; they'll do what they always do. They'll release a new model to compete in time for Christmas 2026. They'll call it the ASUS Nuevo X856G-L or the Acer Nova 9500X or the Alienware Morpheus ZS and that will be it. They won't even consolidate their line at the 600$ price point; just one more model, bro!

          Their sales will continue tapering off and they'll do what they always do; reduce investments, fire some designers and engineers, keep old models out even longer, and move out of Apple's way by selling even more 380$ laptops for 400$ while Apple siphons even more profits by selling a 400$ laptop at 600$.

          That's how PCs die.

        • izacus an hour ago ago

          Your comment is equally generalizing and being facetious like the ones you're criticizing.

          These brand fanboy wars you're all playing are just pathetic.

    • varispeed 2 hours ago ago

      In my opinion PC industry is also cooked because of fans. I simply cannot use any recent PC laptop, because the moment you do something it engages fans in the most obnoxious way.

      Every time someone turns on their PC laptop next to me, my ears feel assaulted.

      My Mac does engage fans from time to time, but I never notice the noise.

      • cosmic_cheese an hour ago ago

        How little attention cooling gets in the laptop industry outside of expensive gaming laptops is crazy. I have a ThinkPad that gets huffy when I plug it into a 2560x1440 external display while otherwise idle (yes, under Linux too) which shouldn’t even be possible.

    • rramadass 12 hours ago ago

      > The big players are just awful at marketing; too many SKUs and models - it takes a paragraph to figure out how 2 Dell laptops from the same release year differ. The exact same specs will be in two different chassis designs.

      > Additionally, you can’t count on the basic being correct. It takes a hour of research to know if ...

      Truer words were never spoken!

      I gave up on PCs years ago because of this very reason. The irony is that it is well known from psychology that giving consumers too many choices is actually counter-productive. Most people do not have the time nor the knowledge to research and configure their "perfect" PC. They just know their usecase and want the best for their money.

      I had hoped Microsoft Surface series would become the standard in the Windows world (i still have a 1st gen model) but they don't seem to read the market.

      • mmcnl an hour ago ago

        I had high hopes for Surface as well, but the pricing is ridiculous. The Surface Laptop 7 is more expensive than a MacBook Air, with the added benefit of having worse battery life and performance. Pricing hasn't come down in almost 2 years either. Availability is almost 0, I've never seen one in real life.

    • whalesalad 2 hours ago ago

      It gets worse when you look at Intel/AMD's CPU naming schemes. Ryzen AI 9 HX 370, Intel Core Ultra 9 285H. Clown show all around.

  • efficax 2 hours ago ago

    Calling this a "content consumption" device seems wrong to me. Sure, it's not a professional laptop. You're going to have a bad time trying to run more than one Adobe creative suite app at once, or running the iOS emulator, but the chip in it is very powerful, and you can do real work on this laptop. I was even thinking of snagging one to use as a kind of thin client for dev accessing my big linux box via tailscale. It might be worthwhile to ensure that a web app you're developing will work on a less powerful machine without killing the browser, for example.

    • nottorp 2 hours ago ago

      If you ask me, all web devs should be forced to work on 4 Gb machines.

      This way you'll be able to run more than one "web app" at the same time on your devices.

      • whynotmaybe an hour ago ago

        Should be forced to Test on a 4gb machine.

        A few years ago, I had two computers on my desk, my beefy dev with double screens and some good specs for the time and my test machine which was the standard given to every non dev, with a 1024x768 screen.

        I couldn't say to the boss that the code was ready until I tested it on that machine, which was sometimes eye opening and why a 2Mb HTML page wasn't a good idea.

      • dangus 32 minutes ago ago

        That's dumb. You can hardly even buy a machine with 4GB of memory on sale, at any price.

        If you are making products that depend on people spending money on them, you generally don't have to care about broke people with 15 year old computers.

        • sonofhans 15 minutes ago ago

          I must say, the irony of this comment in a thread about Apple moving down-market without losing quality is … well, it burns. Along with the arrogance: “Anyone who can’t afford 8GB isn’t worthy of being my customer,” is literally the opposite of what Steve Jobs always said.

          I was stuck once in a cabin in the woods with an old Android phone. I’m glad it still worked, and that people curating software experiences for it had more empathy — and more business sense — than this comment displays.

        • BugsJustFindMe 21 minutes ago ago

          Not caring makes the world worse for everyone. All of us. Including you.

    • faitswulff an hour ago ago

      There are multiple videos out there of reviewers running multiple “Pro” apps at the same time on the Neo. It’s an impressive machine.

    • kccqzy 2 hours ago ago

      > It might be worthwhile to ensure that a web app you're developing will work on a less powerful machine

      If that’s your goal this machine is still too powerful. Web apps generally care about single thread performance. The machine has a single thread performance that exceeds any and all Intel/AMD processors, according to Geekbench (A18 Pro: 3445; Ryzen 9 9950X: 3385). My own test for ensuring my web app performs well involves a machine less than half as fast, and my web app runs with all assertions turned on.

    • nicole_express 2 hours ago ago

      I can definitely see why the Asus CEO would want to put it in that box, though.

    • whycome 2 hours ago ago

      I have a macbook pro m1 with 8gb ram and it has been surprisingly good for all kinds of work. And I've had it since about 2020.

    • solarkraft 2 hours ago ago

      It’s not even a less powerful device. It has the same performance as the M1, which is still a beast.

    • thesuitonym 2 hours ago ago

      Content consumption definitely seems like the wrong term, it seems perfectly cromulent for let's say a college student, or an executive.

  • drnick1 2 hours ago ago

    > You cannot buy an x86 PC laptop in the $600–700 price range that competes with the MacBook Neo on any metric — performance, display quality, audio quality, or build quality. And certainly not software quality.

    I would argue the opposite: while Apple hardware is generally excellent, it is the software that leaves to be desired. Apple has also been consistently pushing the industry in a dangerous direction (walled gardens with app stores, excessive power over developers and users). MacOS is also very behind Linux these days in terms of app compatibility (especially games).

    I won't be buying a Neo before a compatible Linux distro is confirmed. If the stock OS can't be replaced for one reason or another, it's dead on arrival as far as I am concerned.

    • Aurornis 38 minutes ago ago

      > MacOS is also very behind Linux these days in terms of app compatibility (especially games).

      For the average consumer looking for a $599 MacBook Neo, Mac is the better choice for apps they actually use.

      Linux can be used for gaming with a lot of titles, but both Mac and Linux are too far behind Windows or consoles to be considered as gaming machines.

    • mmcnl an hour ago ago

      Agreed, macOS has hardly improved in the past decade. The only improvements are about ecosystem integration, which I don't really care about. Everything else is stuck in the 2010s. UI has regressed if you ask me.

      • madeofpalk 16 minutes ago ago

        What improvements has Windows made in the last decade? I think what you're describing is a symptom of modern software development as a whole.

      • jeremycarter an hour ago ago

        The tab key doesn't even work consistently across apps and screens.

    • dagmx 37 minutes ago ago

      How do you quantify that macOS is very behind Linux for games?

      Proton has a direct counterpart in Crossover (whose components are open source) and has roughly the same compatibility as Linux via Proton. It’s less convenient I grant.

      Then you also have the slew of iOS games that can also be played too.

      If you’re talking convenience for specifically using Steam, then yes Linux has a lead. If you’re talking pure number of games, I don’t think you can actually quantify that argument.

    • ezst 2 hours ago ago

      Same here, MacBooks are decent hardware but nowhere near so superior as to justify all the downsides and increasingly dark patterns Apple has been pushing left and right.

      • gehsty 41 minutes ago ago

        I agree that it isn’t as good as it was but compared to windows (with adds in the start menu, and two different settings menus for a decade as examples) it’s still better. More of a glass of warm cheap whiskey, than a glass of cool ice water in hell.

    • intrasight 34 minutes ago ago

      > it is the software that leaves to be desired

      That is how I had interpreted "And certainly not software quality" - that the PC not only competes but crushes the Mac.

    • magic_hamster 12 minutes ago ago

      I fully agree. My use case sees a fairly intensive use of MacOS, Linux and Windows, and out of all these, MacOS is the worst experience for me, and that's saying a lot when I prefer to use Windows 11 over MacOS.

      Macs have very strong advantages but the software, the OS is absolutely infuriating. There's so many annoyances over regular use. You can remedy some of them with third party software (which should have been just system settings), but not all, and by the way some of these cost money for stupidly basic settings.

      Finally and probably most painful, is Apple's constant push to update your software stack and things just stop working, and they expect you to keep chasing their decisions. You can't really build anything for Apple that's meant to last. It's exhausting. Meanwhile Windows can run programs from 30 years ago and Linux has extremely efficient, beautifully implemented software from all eras probably already installed in your Distro.

    • pa7ch 2 hours ago ago

      Its a shame there isn't more goodwill for some companies to bankroll a project like asahi linux. Keeping up with reverse engineering apple silicon seems like a very large task.

      • nektro an hour ago ago

        asahi is great and i hope they keep going but i can't help but wonder why apple appears to be fully singular in their arm dominance

      • gedy 29 minutes ago ago

        My hope is they can extend support for the A chips as Asahi Fedora has been splendid for my M1 Pro

    • insane_dreamer 27 minutes ago ago

      Most consumers don't use Linux, and MacOS is far ahead of Windows IMO -- and I use all three OSs (and have for 30 years)

      I disagree that the software leaves to be desired

      Just an example, I'll take Apple's Office suite (Pages, etc.) over MS Office any day - or LibreOffice.

    • carabiner an hour ago ago

      Is 2026 the year of the linux desktop?

      Can I update video drivers in Linux without seeing a console? OS X updates them automatically where it's a non-issue.

      • magic_hamster 8 minutes ago ago

        In some distros you have rolling updates where it happens for you and you're always on cutting edge.

      • Certhas 31 minutes ago ago

        Updating video drivers in Ubuntu is so so so much easier than under Windows it's ridiculous.

        Windows has more drivers for more things, but if Linux has drivers (e.g. you buy a Laptop with Linux support) then driver management is massively easier.

        I spent god knows how many hours getting the windows drivers for my last self built gaming PC working. Linux I just installed and was done. In reality the Windows experience was also a lot worse than having to drop to the console occasionally. It definitely required more in depth knowledge, even if everything was UI driven...

      • jitl an hour ago ago

        It's been Year Of The Linux Handheld for gaming since 2022, the best platform to play games is Steam Deck where updates are clicking "Update" in the System panel. You can run either Bazzite or SteamOS on your own hardware, although I haven't tried that.

    • Teever 2 hours ago ago

      How do you reconcile the fact that that Apple will sell millions of these devices without a compatible Linux distribution shipping for years if ever with your claim about it being DOA?

      Like sure it’s DOA to you, but in what world does that really matter when it’s going to sell so well?

      • bigyabai an hour ago ago

        The same way I reconcile the fact that the 11" Macbook sold millions of devices; consumers don't care. They don't buy Macs as a conscious evaluation of what the device is capable of or how well it was made. Even the 2019 16" Macbook Pro, arguably the worst Mac ever sold, has millions of units floating around in Obsoleteland.

        Personally I agree with the parent's comment. I used to buy Macs, but nowadays Apple alienates me. I'm one of the millions that don't buy a Mac because the hardware is gimped by arbitrary software limitations. Unless Apple changes that stance, I'm a lost customer. Cupertino has the market share statistics, they know where to find me.

  • saagarjha 2 hours ago ago

    > The Neo doesn’t have a hardware indicator light for the camera. The indication for “camera in use” is only in the menu bar. There’s a privacy/security implication for this omission. According to Apple, the hardware indicator light for camera-in-use on MacBooks, iPhones, and iPads cannot be circumvented by software. If the camera is on, that light comes on, and no software can disable it. Because the Neo’s only camera-in-use indicator is in the menu bar, that seems obviously possible to circumvent via software.

    iPhone and iPad does not have a hardware indicator light

    • zarzavat an hour ago ago

      Arguably with SIP a hardware indicator light is not strictly necessary, the OS could force the indicator pixels to be lit.

      • madeofpalk 14 minutes ago ago

        Isn't the argument that a hardware indicator light is (more) immune to bugs? If its just software, you're a software exploit/bug away from finding a way to access the sensor without tripping the software light.

  • cryptos 12 hours ago ago

    Windows reputation is declining, so the operating system might be the actual crisis. Linux with modern desktops (e.g. Gnome 3) might fill the gap, but the market is far from broad adoption. Promoting and improving Linux desktop and apps would be a long endeavour, but betting only on Windows which degrades to a cloud and AI advertising surface might be fatal.

    • p_ing an hour ago ago

      Windows 11 has 1 Billion+ installs. That's not a decline and hardly a crisis. That's a huge install base.

      • fsloth 31 minutes ago ago

        This.

        Ofc a huge chunk of that is in companies but I'm fairly sure there are at least two windows 11 machines per one mac in consumer segment as well.

  • NoPicklez 14 hours ago ago

    As someone who buys Asus motherboards when he builds PC's, it hasn't been a shock for me as an owner of a Macbook for the last 18 years.

    I've been of the firm opinion for a very long time that Macbook's are the best productivity laptops and now even more so once Apple moved from Intel to their own M chips. Their entry level Macbook before the Neo you could buy and it would be a laptop that would see you for many many years.

    • vrighter 13 hours ago ago

      all of my normal pcs served me well for many many years. They don't get slower naturally, it was windows getting ever more bloated. I put linux on an 8 year old computer and it just flies again

      • fxtentacle 9 hours ago ago

        Fully agree. When I have to use Windows from time to time, I’m always surprised by how laggy the cursor feels even on hardware that can do 8K VR just fine.

  • rconti 15 minutes ago ago

    > because the key caps are brand new, it feels even better than the keyboard on my own now-four-years-old MacBook Pro, the most-used key caps on which are now a little slick

    Honestly, I have a hard time typing on a new Apple laptop; it doesn't feel right until the keycaps are a bit worn.

  • GeekyBear 14 hours ago ago

    PC Magazine came to the same conclusion:

    > Apple pulled off what I thought wasn't possible. The MacBook Neo is poised to set the budget-laptop world on fire as a $599 system that's better-built and sharper than anything else at or below its price.

    https://www.pcmag.com/reviews/apple-macbook-neo

    Similar to the Verge:

    > even the cheapest MacBook Neo is good enough to be the go-to Apple laptop for a lot of people. Actually, not just the go-to Apple laptop; the Neo’s hardware simultaneously embarrasses an entire class of affordable (and even far pricier) Windows laptops, as well as just about any Chromebook. And the thing runs on an iPhone chip.

    https://www.theverge.com/tech/891741/apple-macbook-neo-a18-p...

    • dang 3 hours ago ago

      (We've since merged the threads, but the pcmag.com link is in the toptext above)

      • GeekyBear 27 minutes ago ago

        The comment was originally in a thread discussing Engadget's take:

        > MacBook Neo review: Apple puts every $600 Windows PC to shame

        https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/macbook-neo-revie...

      • cromulent 27 minutes ago ago

        I understand the need to join the conversations about the same topic. Thanks for keeping the URLs separate. Reading Gruber's long form considered article is very different to reading some second hand Asus executive "shock" comments.

    • hulitu 13 hours ago ago

      > MacBook Neo Review: No Other Budget Laptop Can Compete

      > PC Magazine came to the same conclusion:

      > Similar to the Verge:

      Apple pays well. Budget laptop at 600 Euros ? And can't compete having a tablet processor, 8 MB RAM, 256 MB SSD. 2 USB ports (one i presume used for charging) ? Yeah. It really can't compete with better options.

      • akagr 12 hours ago ago

        Go beyond the specs, though. Which windows laptops have similar combination of all metal build with tight tolerances, a display hinge that doesn’t wobble, a nice keyboard and even close to similar feeling trackpad at this 600 dollar price point? Most non haptic trackpads are dive board designs where you can only press the lower part of it because they hinge from the top, whereas as Neo’s trackpad is completely floating and can be pressed even on the very top. Also, one of main target audiences - students - can have this for much cheaper with education pricing.

        If quality and in-hand feel matters to you at all, you’ll be hard pressed to find a more well rounded laptop than a MacBook at any price point.

        • p_ing 39 minutes ago ago

          An all metal build doesn't stand up well to abuse versus higher quality plastics.

          Looks nicer. For a time, or if taken care of.

        • lostmsu 8 hours ago ago

          As I said in another thread $650 HP OmniBook 5 on Ryzen is faster, more RAM, feels great to use, and I don't have to deal with MacOS!

          • scottyah an hour ago ago

            Not liking interacting with an OS is a fair choice to make, but don't be fooled by the bolted-on specs like "more RAM" when less of it is available to the user due to the built-in software and driver compatability issues. It's almost always slower, older, and less quality. They do Product Binning and give the worst quality leftovers to the built-in machines where people are less likely to notice and because it won't change the brand's reputation. The difference between i9, i7, etc are just how many defects there are- they're printed identically on the same wafers.

            Even IF the processor and RAM combined with Windows and bloatware is faster, you know they're going to have to cut corners on things like keyboard, trackpad, monitor, battery, webcams, heatsinks, etc.

          • tuesdaynight 7 hours ago ago

            IMO, there's nothing comparable to MacBook Air in its price range if you are an average user. Neo is even better in that aspect. The model you cited sounds better if you are planning to use Linux and are computer literate. But if you just want something that is good (not perfect) at everything usual, a MacBook is a no-brainer.

            • lostmsu 5 hours ago ago

              I don't think MacOS is better than Windows, so I disagree with that take.

          • wlesieutre 2 hours ago ago

            To save anyone else trying to figure out what computer lostmsu is talking about, at least going by the current prices on HP's website (not MSRP):

            HP OmniBook 5 Laptop Next Gen AI 16-fb0037nr

            If I were shopping for a cheap laptop I would have given up and bought a Macbook Neo before I found that one.

          • iknowstuff 2 hours ago ago

            lol $150 more for a crappy low res display etc. So bad.

      • stetrain 2 hours ago ago

        It definitely would have competitive issues with 8MB RAM and a 256MB SSD.

        Knocking it for having a tablet processor means you haven't actually been paying attention to Apple's in-house processor development.

      • lukevp 13 hours ago ago

        What better options?

      • bdbdbdb 13 hours ago ago

        *Gb not Mb

  • MarkusWandel 3 hours ago ago

    "It's a real Mac" - I get that!

    I remember a whole slew of inexpensive netbooks and the like that were technically Windows XP or Windows 7 machines, but came with a dumbed-down "starter" OS, not enough RAM, only a 32-bit CPU in an era were 64 bits were already becoming standard - the sum of which amounted to a barely usable imitation of a real Windows machine and as a result most of these became garage sale fodder pretty quickly.

    • tfehring 2 hours ago ago

      I thought I was so clever for buying one of those things for like $190 and putting Lubuntu on it to make it usable. It worked - but the joke was still on me when it died a year later.

    • DauntingPear7 36 minutes ago ago

      This is pretty much a repackaged M1 air from 2020, so it’s a competent machine

      • madeofpalk 11 minutes ago ago

        It's a repackaged iPhone 16. Also a competent machine.

  • pragmatic 7 hours ago ago

    But you’re stuck with MacOS.

    I can’t stand it and every update makes it worse.

    Been running popos abs everything I can and it’s petty nice.

    Installed it on a new LG Gram and everything works including fingerprint reader. Is my favorite laptop and my old Mac sits gathering dust,

    • hadlock 2 hours ago ago

      I generally run chrome/firefox and vscode full screen, and then alt-tab between those and my email (outlook at current company) and messaging (slack). Plus terminal window/s. That workflow is mostly reproducible across win/mac/linux. What features are you using that MacOS is getting in the way?

      • mmcnl an hour ago ago

        Decent package manager, brew is awful compared to apt. Window snapping can only be done on Apple keyboards not on external keyboards. No Alt+Tab, Cmd+Tab is not the same. No window previews when hovering over dock, ridiculous animation speed when switching workspaces that can't be changed (and somehow Ctrl+1/2/3 is 2x faster than Ctrl+Left/Right? What is that all about). Needing third-party apps for basic things like: setting a custom resolution (BetterDisplay), setting scroll direction for mouse wheel independent of touchpad scroll direction. And the Settings app is super slow.

        • Xfx7028 18 minutes ago ago

          What is bad about brew? I have used it in the past and I found it fine. With apt I have less experience since I only used it when playing with a raspberry pi.

        • Howietje an hour ago ago

          Nix darwin + package manager with aerospace and sketchybar make it almost the same as my desktop pc. Could that be an alternative?

    • Carstairs 6 hours ago ago

      Yeah I got one from work. I was quite excited to get one as macos is supposed to be a paragon of design but after using it I'm so glad I didn't spend my own money on it as it's been a total disappointment. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't want to launch it off the roof.

      • FeloniousHam 4 hours ago ago

        I use it everyday, I love it. Native unix, great apps and ecosystem.

        • drcongo 2 hours ago ago

          It's amazing how often people who post on here about hating macOS have only just got a Mac for the first time and simply can't be bothered to learn, or hate that the keyboard shortcuts are different, or desperately want their OS level adverts back or something. It's lazy.

          • thepryz 43 minutes ago ago

            As a lifetime Mac user, I will say that the last few updates to MacOS have made me start looking towards linux. Ignoring the many sins of liquid glass, Disk utility is almost nonfunctional, as are many of the built-in utilities. Sure I can use the command line tools but to me it's a concerning trend that highlights poor attention to detail that the Mac was always known for.

          • throw-the-towel 2 hours ago ago

            Conversely, it's amusing how often do Apple people assume everyone else is Holding It Wtong (tm).

          • p_ing an hour ago ago

            Been using macOS for years, even main it for both personal and work. It has a LOT of UX issues and requires many 3rd party tools to "fix" it.

            macOS has plenty of it's own OS adverts.

      • alistairSH 2 hours ago ago

        MacOS was the paragon of design 5-10 years ago. Sadly, Apple is subject to enshittification just like MS and others.

    • Kostic 2 hours ago ago

      For now. These will be pretty cool Linux machines if Asahi starts supporting them at some point.

      • hu3 2 hours ago ago

        It's going to take 3 years+ and it will be a 8GB RAM linux machine.

        • cmxch an hour ago ago

          Still would be a good ssh terminal or presentation laptop.

    • voidmain0001 2 hours ago ago

      From work, I have a Thinkpad X1 gen 13 and it's awesome. Super lightweight, and great power. But, when I tried Linux a few months ago its hardware was still too bleeding edge. Things may be better with kernel v7 on the way. I like the Gram as a personal device so may I know what model Gram you have?

  • ExoticPearTree 13 hours ago ago

    Maybe other manufacturers will actually stop making crappy hardware that feels like its taped together?

    • MengerSponge 2 hours ago ago

      Hardware is hard, and Apple's scale lets them make things that are nice while still maintaining their margins.

      A decade ago, but still relevant: https://beneinstein.com/no-you-cant-manufacture-that-like-ap...

    • VerifiedReports 13 hours ago ago

      More importantly, they need to find an alternative to Windows. A $10,000 computer wouldn't fix that dogshit.

      • ExoticPearTree 12 hours ago ago

        There's really nothing in between. If ChromeOS would have been an alternative, maybe more Chromebooks would have been sold.

        It comes down to Microsoft not doubling down on "let's make Windows as annoying as possible" (with ads, with telemetry that can't be turned off).

        • fragmede 10 hours ago ago

          Depends what you want to do. ChromeOS is pretty great at certain things.

  • Reason077 an hour ago ago

    > “Once or twice a day I need to manually bump the display brightness up or down.”

    This is a daily, albeit minor, annoyance on my MacBook Air too.

  • cromka 12 hours ago ago

    Just imagine what Apple would do to the market if they also offered a full Linux support, but not Windows... They'd probably own some 70% of Linux market outright and also double its overall size overnight.

    • eloisant 3 hours ago ago

      They already cannibalized a lot of Linux users, developers mainly when they released MacOS X around year 2000.

      Suddenly you could have a Unix, with pretty much the same CLI as Linux but without all the supported hardware/driver issues. Laptop sleep in particular was pretty finicky.

      If MacOS didn't pick a Unix/BSD base, I'm pretty sure all the tech companies running Mac would be on Linux.

    • layer8 2 hours ago ago

      Apple wants to make money with services, however, and buying more devices in their ecosystem. Full Linux support would counteract the lock-in.

    • beAbU 11 hours ago ago

      If apple came out with their own linux distro, with open drivers and a mainline kernel... A girl can dream!

      • starkparker 2 hours ago ago

        The memory that XNU and Darwin are technically open-source projects is a curse that brings one only suffering.

        • p_ing 42 minutes ago ago

          I would call them open access. Apple doesn't accept contributions.

      • kylec 2 hours ago ago

        I feel like Apple wouldn't want to make full Linux work on their hardware, but they could enable their Darwin kernel to emulate Linux syscalls and provide a way to boot into a mode that basically loads the kernel and whatever Linux shell you want

      • pjmlp 10 hours ago ago

        This path is already taken and it didn't sell Apple hardware in masses.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MkLinux

        • beAbU 9 hours ago ago

          MkLinux was first released in 1996, and discontinued in 2002.

          I would argue that things have changed significantly since then.

          • yfw 9 hours ago ago

            Yeah liquid glass suckss

    • pjmlp 10 hours ago ago

      Don't need to imagine, it did not take off, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MkLinux

      > Reception was mixed, focusing on the difficult installation process and the significant performance costs of the Mach kernel. Reviewers noted its potential as a "Unix killer", but that it required users to abandon the user-friendly Macintosh experience for a pure Linux environment.

      • kingstnap 10 hours ago ago

        1996 is not now. This comparision makes little to no sense.

        I'm sure if Apple provided support for installing your own OS on their M series laptops it would be incredibly popular. And I don't need to guess at this using weird 1996 research on microkernels because Asahi Linux exists and clearly there is interest in it.

        • pjmlp 9 hours ago ago

          Indeed, Apple from 1996 would not released Tahoe, most likely.

          We don't need research because QNX, L4 and many others on embedded space do exist as well.

          • mhurron an hour ago ago

            Do you forget what Apple in '96 was? Or are you saying that Tahoe is too polished for the Apple of '96?

            Apple was not a bastion of quality in the 90's. They couldn't modernize the Mac OS, and that continued with little more than window dressing over what was released in the 80's. The Mac line up was a horrible mess of barely different models that needed a Ph.D to figure out what was different. The company was bleeding money and seriously close to bankruptcy.

            The Apple of the mid 90's wishes it could release something like Tahoe.

            • pjmlp 19 minutes ago ago

              Yes the 1996 Apple was on the edge of bankruptcy, yet Mac OS 8 was definitely much more polished than Tahoe.

          • officeplant 25 minutes ago ago

            Rip Blackberry Phone + QNX, you were so promising for such a short time.

          • ribosometronome an hour ago ago

            Apple circa 1996 would be charging for its updates and licensing out the software to Power Computing and UMAX. They were making a lot of "interesting" decisions.

            • pjmlp 17 minutes ago ago

              They still are doing lots of interesting decisions, the difference is that now the piggy bank is full to care of them going badly.

      • fsflover 10 hours ago ago

        > difficult installation process and the significant performance costs

        So it was a failure in implementation.

        • pjmlp 9 hours ago ago

          And the Apple that delivered Tahoe will do better?

          • cromka 8 hours ago ago

            All they would need is to provide complete DTBs and some drivers, no need to write a new OS from scratch.

  • smackeyacky 13 hours ago ago

    My daughter just ordered one of these. She’s a student (not stem) and her ancient 8Gb MacBook Air with an intel processor was still serving well but the battery has become unuseable and her keyboard is becoming flaky.

    The Neo is such a perfect replacement and easier than fixing the Air.

    • ThePowerOfFuet 12 hours ago ago

      The keyboard issue was probably caused by the battery, which can be replaced, and the keyboard would have likely returned to normal after the battery replacement.

      In fact, depending on the model, the battery replacement may well have also entailed replacing the whole top cover (including the keyboard).

      • smackeyacky 9 hours ago ago

        Interesting I will look at replacing the battery if that’s a possibility. Thanks!

  • BugsJustFindMe 40 minutes ago ago

    > The biggest shortcoming of the decade-ago MacBook “One”, aside from the baffling decision to include just one USB-C port that was also its only means of charging, was the shitty performance of Intel’s Core M chips.

    MMMMMMM.....I don't know. I think the biggest shortcomings of that laptop were super common keyboard (dustgate), SSD, USB-C port, display, battery, and CPU (popcorning) failure.

  • nicoburns 2 hours ago ago

    > The Neo charges faster if you plug it into a more powerful power adapter, in either USB-C port.

    The fact that the "usb 2" port works for (fast) charging is a big win. That means you can charge and use the fast usb port at the same time.

    • blacksmith_tb 2 hours ago ago

      I think that makes it a non-standard implementation though (I agree it's certainly more practical for the user), sounds like it's usb-c pd but with nerfed data, an odd choice that feels like it would actually have cost more to develop than just adding two identical usb-c 3.x ports...

      • nicoburns 2 hours ago ago

        I suspect the limitation is that the SOC doesn't have the IO bandwidth to support two ports at usb 3 speeds (remembering that the SOC was designed for iphones which physically only have one port).

    • Someone 2 hours ago ago

      > That means you can charge and use the fast usb port at the same time.

      For some use cases, you can do that with a single USB port, too. For example, a single USB cable connected to a monitor can both send video and charge the laptop.

      • nicoburns 2 hours ago ago

        Sure, but it's certainly convenient to have two ports

    • hadlock 2 hours ago ago

      USB-C PD (power delivery) has been a standard for over a decade now. I first used it on a Nexus 4 or 5, and later on a Chromebook Pixel in 2016. It would be surprising for apple to not use that standard, particularly when both ports are probably run from the same controller.

  • xp84 an hour ago ago

    > You cannot buy an x86 PC laptop in the $600–700 price range that competes with the MacBook Neo on any metric — performance, display quality, audio quality, or build quality.

    Interesting metrics, though I'd add that if you count storage and memory as metrics, it'd be hard to find a worse PC laptop. And I don't see why we should artificially exclude ARM PC laptops from the comparison.

    https://www.bestbuy.com/product/asus-vivobook-14-wuxga-lapto...

    2x the RAM and 2x the storage isn't meaningless to a lot of people.

    The PC has a single-core geekbench around 2100 single / 10,000 multicore. The Neo is apparently in the range of 3600 / 9,000 multicore.

    No arguments on the Mac's screen being way nicer though. However, the low-end computer market - unlike most of us on HN - has never cared about pixel density, color accuracy, or really any screen specs other than size (Looks like the Asus has the Mac by an inch on that spec).

    Bottom line, for a high-end Chromebook replacement (literally everything is done in the cloud, so storage doesn't matter, and only running a browser, so RAM isn't a big deal), as long as it's for someone who will take care of such a delicate device, the Neo is pretty great. For everyone else, it's debatable.

    > And certainly not software quality.

    This is most definitely only a little true in that Windows has jumped the shark lately with ads and various enshittification, and thus ties with Mac OS. Tahoe is without a doubt the worst Mac OS ever released. It's both poor quality and poorly designed.

    • zarzavat an hour ago ago

      The manufacturers don't care about display quality, because displays are hard and expensive. Apple has enough volume that they can get a custom panel.

      Users on the other hand, they definitely care about display quality more than they care about RAM. The display is the part you look at!

      If you're in store and there's a Neo with a crisp 200 PPI screen and a Windows laptop with a cheap screen but more RAM, the vast majority of consumers will choose the laptop with the better display. People make purchasing decisions based on feels and the Neo has great feels.

      • fsh 28 minutes ago ago

        On the contrary, displays are commodity components. So much so that motivated enthusiasts have managed to swap better panels into their ThinkPads for a long time. Manufacturers don't prioritize display quality in cheap devices because it doesn't show up on the spec sheet and most customers don't care that much.

    • officeplant 15 minutes ago ago

      >And I don't see why we should artificially exclude ARM PC laptops from the comparison.

      As an ARM enthusiast who has tried a lot of WinARM, I think at this point I really struggle to believe MS has a single care in the world for improving quality of life for WinARM users. They sure do market it, and the laptops do work most of the time. I've just never had any other computers shit the bed when it comes to graphics drivers like a Qualcomm powered PC. Website with too many video/gifs playing? Screen whites out/all the video boxes go pink and explorer resets. Open up the gif search in Discord? Basically a coin flip chance its going to kill the graphics driver and reset explorer again. I had a Dell Inspiron with the Qualcomm 8CX Gen2 that could reliably be crashed just by quickly scrolling twitter on a video posting heavy day.

      I would rather take a Mediatek powered Chromebook any other day until the Neo showed up and started to approach the sub $500 ARM chromebook price point.

    • DauntingPear7 32 minutes ago ago

      I also am not a huge fan of the 256GB storage, but if someone doesn’t already know what ram is, they really won’t care and won’t notice much. I’m a tech guy. I bought an M1 air with 256GB storage and 8GB RAM. I was able to do development and mobile development fine. I never encountered RAM related slowdowns. I have an iCloud subscription because I don’t want to manage my own NAS. This is a heavier use case than what, say, a normal college student will do with it, and it worked just fine for me. This is by far the best laptop I have seen in this bracket. If I was just heading to college today, and I didn’t have the money for a Pro or Air, I would 100% get this far before a windows laptop.

  • needSomeCoffee 30 minutes ago ago

    I do not really understand why the Walmart $599 M1 MBA comparison is so lost in the MSM. The Neo is the same price (without edu discount). The Neo CPU benchmarks slightly better until the 4W performance limit factors in more real-world cases (then the M1 wins handily). So much is given up with the Neo: Worse screen, Worse keyboard, No TouchId, Worse Trackpad, etc. Yet Apple is praised for the Neo. No longer matters of course as it appears that the Walmart M1 is history, and we now have the Neo -- worse in almost every way vs. M1 MBA. The only real beneficiary is undoubtedly Apple's margin. I guess the MSM and Apple fanbois hatred of Walmart and the "losers who shop there" influences this, but even so. Neo only benefits Apple vs. Walmarts M1 MBA deal.

    Edit / Link: https://www.macworld.com/article/2986234/walmart-m1-macbook-...

    • kvuj 20 minutes ago ago

      For me the longer software support would play a role in my decisions. The M1 MBA will probably lose support in 4-5 years whereas the Neo has a longer road ahead.

      Combine that with the enormously improved single core performance (which matters more in the real world than sustained load for an entry level notebook), fun colors and 499 price tag for students and I can see the interest.

      The screen is good compared to the MBA (only loses P3 colors) but the bummer seems to be ports and the "normal" trackpad.

    • nouveaux 18 minutes ago ago

      Why compare the M1 MBA discounted at Walmart but not give the same edu discount to the Neo? The target audience for Neo is likely people who would be able to use the edu discount.

      I know many people who would not care about the differences you have outlined and gladly pay $499 for the Neo.

    • haunter 17 minutes ago ago

      Even cheaper if you buy from Walmart's refurb outlet, they are $380.

  • jackhalford 16 hours ago ago

    > Given Apple's historically very premium pricing, launching such an affordable product is certainly a shock to the entire market

    No? Apple has been delivering way cheaper laptops ever since M1, this one is just even cheaper. I thought PC execs were asleep at the wheel but not this bad.

    • alwillis 5 hours ago ago

      > Apple has been delivering way cheaper laptops ever since M1

      I wouldn’t "way cheaper".

      A baseline Neo with 256GB SSD is $599 vs the first M1 MacBook Air with 256GB SSD was $999 ($1,251.09 in 2026 dollars)

      A Neo with 512GB SSD is $699 vs the M1 MacBook Air with 512GB SSD was $1249--that's $1,568.38 in 2026 dollars.

      So this is a big deal; the Neo is the first Apple Silicon MacBook where the starting price is less than $999.

      • ndiddy 35 minutes ago ago

        Apple sold the the base model M1 Macbook Air through Walmart for $600 between when they stopped selling it directly up to early this year. It looks like this computer is about as performant as that one, so I guess they started to have trouble sourcing components and came up with the Neo as their replacement.

  • bdbdbdb 12 hours ago ago

    600 is a bargain for a MacBook, but I can't see the public windows users switching en masse. Most people who buy cheap windows laptops do so because 1) they need to replace a broken laptop and want to pay the lowest amount possible 2) they don't want to learn some new thing

    600 might seem budget, but it's out of budget for most people. And my guess is PC manufacturers will retaliate against this by cutting prices just a little to drop under that 600 price point for mid range ryzens, with more ram and space.

    Any family members I've helped shop for computers only care about how much space it has, how cheap it is, and will it struggle to run things like the last one. As it sits the MacBook is more money for less gigabytes

    • kstrauser 3 minutes ago ago

      The last time certain family members asked me for a computer recommendation, I gave them a detailed breakdown of which MacBook they could get to meet their lightweight needs for the next decade. They thanked me, agreed, went to Best Buy, and came back with the laptop that the salesperson convinced them was better "because he knows computers". It was an utter piece of crap and they've had nothing but problems with it.[0]

      Had this existed when they were shopping, I would've just asked what color they wanted it in, ordered it for them, and been done with it.

      [0] OTOH, that got me out of all future tech support duties. "Hey, why can't I connect our new printer to it?" "I'm not sure. Does that Best Buy expert still work there? He might have some suggestions." (Phrased more politely IRL because I'm not a monster, but the intent was there.)

    • basch 3 hours ago ago

      The thing about "switching" is you just need to capture the next generation. Kids who have an iPhone 17e. Then go off to college.

      • intrasight 26 minutes ago ago

        Also, there are plenty of users such as myself that won't be "switching" but will instead be augmenting my AMD desktop with a laptop. I've not purchased a new Mac since year 2000-ish but I do play to purchase a Neo.

    • lm28469 12 hours ago ago

      > 600 might seem budget, but it's out of budget for most people.

      Out of budget for my parents but I'll pay the difference myself. It's just painful to see them use their pile of shit $300 laptop that can barely open a text editor, sounds like a jet engine and has about 45 minutes of battery life.

      The only haptic feedback they get if the entire fucking thing creaking as soon as you lightly touch it.

      They've been through at least 5 of them since I bought my 2015 mbp, which is still working fine in every aspects

      • kreco 2 hours ago ago

        The funny thing is that it would do the same for double the price.

        You need to spend a ridiculous amount of time on research because the producer itself is selling very different product (very different quality) from a year to another.

        I wish a "brand" would be consistant but it's not 99% of the time.

      • tim333 10 hours ago ago

        That's an important point - the been through 5 of them. The cost or running a $600 mac is probably similar to running $300 pc laptops that pack up.

    • asimovDev 37 minutes ago ago

      you might be underestimating how much lifting the apple logo on the lid will do for this laptop. If it advertises the whole apple ecosystem thing well, then those people who already have iPhones, AirPods etc they would be very very compelled to go with this versus an Acer or a Lenovo

    • unethical_ban 2 hours ago ago

      My dad the other month, in need of a computer with webcam and ideally portable, bought some $400-500 HP 17" laptop. He was so proud of it, proud of buying a piece of hardware without asking me, and rather than tell him the truth, I nodded and said "yeah this is neat".

      The monitor is awful. Like, the horrible way it changes color and brightness depending on exact viewing angle is sickening; I am shocked California hasn't declared it illegal. It feels cheap, keyboard is cheap, who knows what the battery life is.

      If the Apple Neo were available then, and he had asked what to buy, I would have instantly told him to get one.

      • ezst an hour ago ago

        I broke that circle by having a sibling ultimately follow my recommendation of getting a ThinkPad T at a discount (prev-gen during a sale) and then letting them advertise it to the rest of the family.

        If you ask me, for a comparable price range, the ThinkPad still is a much better pick than the MacBook Neo: that thing has no IO and not even enough RAM for nowadays light web browsing.

  • yegle 32 minutes ago ago

    > The A9, in 2015, benchmarked comparably to a two-year-old MacBook Air from 2013. More impressively, it outperformed the then-new no-adjective 12-inch MacBook in single-core performance (by a factor of roughly 1.1×) and was only 3 percent slower in multi-core.

    Too bad that performance is (still) locked in the walled garden and cannot be used as a small Linux server.

  • dagmx 15 hours ago ago

    I was watching this video and it’s pretty impressive what can be done on this spec machine.

    https://youtu.be/d-VOt9559Gk?si=tYlDstnaxtQWoJ88

    He opens 50+ apps at once while working in Final Cut and Lightroom. Obviously anyone doing those full time would benefit from more resources but I think this is going to be enough for a big chunk of the population, and will be more appealing than the windows alternatives.

    • p_ing 28 minutes ago ago

      And here I am on my M2 w/ 24GB RAM and a couple of RAW 48MP photos will bog the system down.

      And if Time Machine kicks in, there goes any form of performance since Apple can't seem to figure out what a 'background task' is.

    • justsomehnguy 13 hours ago ago

      I still remember how Apple fans run around singing praises what their 8GB M1 absolutely kicked ass of Intel Macs with 16GB (and even more). Only to quietly replace them with a model with more RAM next year or some even way earlier than that.

      I can open even 500 apps on any laptop. This is what swap for. But with only 8GB you are getting into the swap territory very fast because you need almost half of it for the OS and video memory.

      Eg: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47272996

      • thejazzman 12 hours ago ago

        It did/does absolutely kick ass and 16GB is better. They’re not at odds with each other :D

      • dagmx 4 hours ago ago

        More RAM is better. But doesn’t negate that it’s still very usable. Did you even bother to watch the video for responsiveness before commenting? Also it was a couple years after the transition to arm that Apple bumped the minimum RAM they shipped their laptops with.

        • justsomehnguy an hour ago ago

          > But doesn’t negate that it’s still very usable.

          As a glorified terminal? Sure.

          > Did you even bother to watch the video for responsiveness before commenting?

          I did, now what?

          > Also it was a couple years after the transition to arm t

          Hello, we are talking about Neo with the same 8GB.

          • dagmx 32 minutes ago ago

            It’s hard to take you seriously or at face value if you did watch the video and called it a glorified terminal.

            What in the video is remotely glorified terminal like? What terminal are you using that gives you local 4K editing capabilities and the ability to run locally run Lightroom for 50MP files?

  • fxtentacle 9 hours ago ago

    The legacy PC makers are lucky that Ubuntu doesn’t work on this, or else they’d face even more competition. By now, everyone hates Windows. And I’d wager some people hate it enough to be willing to switch to whatever works and is halfway ad-free.

    • joe_mamba 13 minutes ago ago

      >The legacy PC makers are lucky that Ubuntu doesn’t work on this

      If Linux would be able to be installed and fully working on this out of the box, then the laptop wouldn't cost 600 dollars. Apple profits from monetizing people tied to its iOS+MacOS ecosystem. If you're not gonna be a MacOS/iOS user, you're worthless to them and they're not gonna sell you a laptop for 600 dollars.

  • pjmlp 14 hours ago ago

    All these PC can't compete reviews are based on US prices, outside it is ridiculous expensive for a 8 GB laptop.

    • jsheard 3 hours ago ago

      I can't be the only one who remembers the celebration 18 months ago when Apple finally stopped selling Macs with 8GB of memory... only for 8GB to suddenly be excused again when the Neo arrived. Perhaps it's not the same people but the general vibe is giving me whiplash.

      • kreco 2 hours ago ago

        8GB is aweful. If you don't do a single task.

        But nice for Apple. Millions of replacement on the Neo 16GB release next year I guess.

        • jsheard 2 hours ago ago

          My money is on 12GB in the second gen since that's what the A19 Pro has, and it would still conveniently differentiate from the other MacBooks with at least 16GB.

          • pjmlp 12 minutes ago ago

            That one I would find more acceptable.

    • keyle 13 hours ago ago

      Note that 8GB of ram on a Mac plays out a lot more different than 8GB on a PC.

      I work professionally on a Macbook Air 16GB now and I have quite a few docker images and services running bare metal, + browser, vscode etc. on top. Not a problem until I start loading up some LLMs.

      The paging works wonderfully well; an advantage of everything being fused.

      If anything, I'm much more bound by the CPU limitations and the eco-cores than the memory.

      On a PC, I wouldn't think about less than 32GB for a dev pc.

      If I had a fulltime gig programming C, I'd even say I could work on this A14 8GB device. Why not? It's as powerful as a 10 year old powerful machine; probably. Or in that ballpark.

      • Rohansi 2 hours ago ago

        > The paging works wonderfully well; an advantage of everything being fused.

        I think it's more of a combination of 1) lower baseline usage by macOS and 2) your swap is guaranteed to be on a fast SSD (1.5+ GB/s read/write).

        Also when you buy a budget PC they cut back on everything, while you get roughly the same SoC across the board for Mac (give or take a few cores). There are absolutely horrid CPUs, GPUs, and SSDs still being released today! If you cut your budget too much you can get a slow E-core only CPU with a no name SSD that's barely faster than a HDD.

        Hopefully the MacBook Neo puts pressure on manufacturers to do better.

      • pjmlp 12 hours ago ago

        PC work just fine with 16 GB, that is coping with Apple limitations.

        https://discussions.apple.com/thread/255765423?sortBy=rank

        Why on Earth do I need a 32 GB PC?!?

        Turbo C also worked just fine with 640 KB in MS-DOS, but then again MS-DOS wasn't full of Electron crap.

        • foldr 6 hours ago ago

          There are lots of reviews on YouTube of people demoing the performance of the Neo in typical non-power-user usage scenarios (multiple apps, lots of browser tabs, etc.) It works perfectly fine for typical consumer usage.

    • tim333 10 hours ago ago

      I've had an 8GB M1 since they came out and had almost no problems with memory shortage. The only thing is Firefox sometimes gets in a loop and takes up 20GB+ doing nothing much and you have to close it but that's not really the laptop's fault. You can have programs use >8GB because it swaps to the SSD very well.

      • pjmlp 9 hours ago ago

        Almost no problem seems that there is indeed a problem.

        • ZiiS 2 hours ago ago

          I love Firefox but my 32GB MBP and 64GB desktop have both had it run out of memory.

          • pjmlp 11 minutes ago ago

            Learn to use bookmarks instead of leaving tabs open.

    • TiredOfLife 6 hours ago ago

      Eastern europe here. At mobile operator that offers laptops for 2 year no interest loans. The only laptops that are cheaper than Neo are essentially atom garbage with crappy screens. And those that cost about the same are also 8gb ones.

  • nottorp 2 hours ago ago

    So the force touch stuff has also been available on Apple laptop trackpads?

    Damned if i ever noticed, and all my laptops since like 2013 have been Apple.

    I knew I had it on one of my previous iPhones but there it was an annoyance because I never knew what was going to happen on a touch.

    • nerdjon an hour ago ago

      It is also a critical part of watchOS.

      I am still sad that they stopped putting it into iPhone, I think the tech is great and the watch really proves what can be done with it when it is a fundamental part of the hardware and the OS can be built around it. But we never had a situation that every compatible iPhone had force touch so everything that could be done with it had to work in other ways.

      I think the iPad made that even more complicated since I doubt we would have ever gotten it on a screen that large, if it would have even worked.

      As far as it being on the trackpad, it is honestly pretty wild when you realize it. It does an incredible job of faking feeling like it is actually moving. Was similar with the fake home button that some iPhone’s had for a little while.

      • losvedir 22 minutes ago ago

        I remember being totally flummoxed when I was trying to figure out why my trackpad wasn't clicking when the machine was off. I had no idea it wasn't a mechanical lever anymore!

  • pupppet 14 hours ago ago

    Microsoft will respond to this by furiously adding more garbage to Windows.

    • theshrike79 13 hours ago ago

      "We need to put Copilot into more places!" - Satya Nadella most likely

    • bdbdbdb 12 hours ago ago

      I've yet to meet anyone who wants AI added to anything. If they released a version of windows+office tomorrow that was "guaranteed free of AI" it would be their top seller

      • ryandrake 5 hours ago ago

        But, then all Microsoft's top managers, who apparently have bonuses based on how much AI is shoved down our throats, wouldn't get those bonuses. Nobody's cares whether or not something is a top seller because their incentives are obviously aligned toward cramming AI.

    • commandersaki 9 hours ago ago

      Needs more javascript for native functions in the OS.

  • ryandrake 5 hours ago ago

    Not Asus, but I have a crappy Lenovo plastic laptop that was around that price range when new, and it's horrible. The hinges have so much resistance that the garbage display panel flexes when you try to open the lid. The junk trackpad is the size of a credit card, and requires some amount of force to actually pick up the fact that your finger is moving on it. The SDCard reader has failed twice (I'm on my third). It's just a piece of garbage and is even then it's about middle of the road when it comes to PC laptop quality. And outside of specific defects, (and this is what's endemic throughout the PC laptop ecosystem) the build quality just subjectively feels like it's barely held together with tape and glue. Like what you'd expect from a toy from an old cracker jack box. These OEMs have been shipping absolute trash for years, and it's about time the industry got a shock.

  • intrasight 38 minutes ago ago

    >we’re lucky it comes with a charger at all

    Yup

  • bob1029 14 hours ago ago

    Looks like the PC laptop market is going to have to stop being bad on purpose. I hope this causes significant pain for vendors like Dell, Microsoft and Asus.

    I don't see any way they can get out of this situation without seriously improving the UX of their products. Windows itself is likely implicated here too.

  • timpera 3 hours ago ago

    Does anyone know if it runs Windows 11 well? It seems like the Parallels app has not been tested by reviewers so far. This could make a great Windows machine.

    • giobox 2 hours ago ago

      Given you only have 8gb of RAM to share between MacOS and the Windows VM, running a Windows 11 VM in Parallels is not a great usecase for this machine.

  • philip1209 an hour ago ago

    Imagine if future versions had a sim card slot for data-only connections. That would be killer - a main reason I've considered an iPad is for "ambient internet" wherever you go. Why has that phone feature not made its way to laptops?

  • insane_dreamer 22 minutes ago ago

    My kids (ages 10, 14) have never used a Windows computer. They were introduced to computing with iPhone and iPad, and they use Chromebooks at school. At home I have Win, Linux and MacOS computers, but they've only used the MacOS ones (not interested in the others). I am trying to get them to use Linux, but unless they want to do hacking-type stuff (that's not them), then it's hard to sell them on it.

    When we buy them personal laptops (not there yet), it'll be a MacBook Neo (or its successor). I expect that unless they're forced to at work, they'll never touch a Windows computer in their life.

  • etothet 8 hours ago ago

    “I’ll just say it: I think I’m done with iPads. Why bother when Apple is now making a crackerjack Mac laptop that starts at just $600?”

    I’m curious to see this machine in person, but I’d bet the an iPad is still the best large device in Apple’s ecosystem for anything that benefits from viewing in portrait mode.

    • bell-cot 8 hours ago ago

      Portrait or landscape - if your use is dominated by looking at the screen and/or situations where it can't set it down (to use the KB), then the iPad is better.

      Assuming the software you need supports iPad, etc.

      • WillAdams 2 hours ago ago

        Am I the only person who manually rotates a laptop screen to portrait, then holds it like a book to use thus?

  • asadm an hour ago ago

    Soo has there been work to run hackintosh on an iPhone??

  • system7rocks 2 hours ago ago

    I notice they are sold out at MicroCenter - I was hoping to go look at one in person today.

  • JSR_FDED 12 hours ago ago

    What's shocking is that this is a shock to the PC Industry.

  • rurban 15 hours ago ago

    I've used an MacAir with 8GB ram starting at 700€ for years, writing and testing compilers. This was until the macOS and butterfly keyboard desasters, which made me go back to 450€ ThinkPad Ryzen laptops with Fedora, upgraded to 64GB RAM.

    My wife is using a fancy new air for 2500€, which is way better. But I still think of the good old MacAir times, they'll try to bring up again.

  • Marazan 2 hours ago ago

    It's good but it's no Asus eee901

  • dmitrygr 3 hours ago ago

    > Because the Neo’s only camera-in-use indicator is in the menu bar, that seems obviously possible to circumvent via software.

    Not as obvious as the author implies. Apple has some docs out, IIRC, explaining how it is implemented. Worth a read...

  • ozlikethewizard 11 hours ago ago

    When did $600 become budget?

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

      When it lasts 5 to 10 years. I’m still using my 2020 MacBook Pro, and figure I’ll get another half decade out of it. That’s <$200/year. The Neo could be a <$100/year laptop, which puts it in the same class as $200 shitbooks that crap out after two or three years.

    • Schmerika 5 hours ago ago

      Would you be surprised if I told you that $600 is slightly under 11 days of the average rent [0]?

      0 - https://www.rentcafe.com/average-rent-market-trends/us/

      • ozlikethewizard 3 hours ago ago

        Is that more rents are insane though, british perspective but 600 ~ £450, £450 is still around a third of an average rent, but I'd consider a budget laptop those in the £2-350 range. For the average user £400+ (so $500+) is decidely midrange purely on the virtue that its the middle of the range for general use laptops (being £150-1000 really, anything more than that and you're entering decent gaming/workstation specs).

        • amenhotep an hour ago ago

          Not to mention that it they are, naturally, going to convert $600 to £600.

    • mixmastamyk 2 hours ago ago

      Recently after another round of 30-40% inflation.

    • thunderbong 5 hours ago ago

      For existing Mac owners.

  • heraldgeezer 32 minutes ago ago

    Impressive hardware for cheap. Too bad it is MacOS.

  • dangus 33 minutes ago ago

    While the impact of the MacBook Neo is huge, this type of review is really screaming of an inexperienced reviewer who can't actually make good purchase recommendations to average people.

    It's really cool that this device is cheap but 8GB of RAM is the elephant in the room. Even non-technical web browsing users will notice the sluggishness coming from that spec.

    The moment they upgrade it to the next iPhone processor, it'll get 12GB of RAM, and it will need it.

    And the other elephant in the room that John doesn't bring up is the fact that you can definitely find in-warranty MacBook Air options for ~$700 and they'll be much better buys.

    You'll get more RAM, keep your Touch ID, better trackpad, better screen, better battery life, better speakers, better mics, I think even a better webcam? Maybe.

    That reminds me: the small battery in the Neo means that high screen brightness or more than light usage will more quickly deplete it compared to other Mac systems.

  • etchalon 3 hours ago ago

    I look forward to the insane amount of bloatware HP will add to hit a 599 price point.

  • ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago ago

    Some more discussion on source: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47332009

  • VerifiedReports 13 hours ago ago

    Windows is such an offensive, defect-ridden pile of shit now that every PC maker should be blaming Microsoft for their inability to compete with the Neo.

    I bought my parents Asus laptops years ago, and can't wait to replace them with a Neo.

    Microsoft has spurned and scorned users. Now it's time for computer makers to push back and reject its shit. I'd love to see a consortium of computer makers come together to refine a Linux distro that's consumer-friendly enough to oust Windows and compete with Mac OS.

    • schaefer an hour ago ago

      >I'd love to see a consortium of computer makers come together to refine a Linux distro that's consumer-friendly enough to oust Windows and compete with Mac OS.

      System 76 already has Pop!_OS. Lenovo.com/linux will redirect you to a list of linux compatible lenovo laptops that's a mile long.

    • nubinetwork 12 hours ago ago

      Dell has been pushing Linux for like 20 years? I don't remember which distro, probably fedora or ubuntu...

      • greatgib 11 hours ago ago

        They have a very limited set of choices. I would have bought more if you were not too limited in term of choice in their inventory.

        At some point the XPS 13 dev edition was the almost perfect laptop. Then they ruined it with the following generations of it.

      • franktankbank 4 hours ago ago

        I got an xps long time back that had the option to pay extra for ubuntu. I'm not going to pay to plug in a usb and I also get the joy of erasing a windows install from the face of this earth.

      • BoredPositron 12 hours ago ago

        It's an option for maybe 2 SKUs... hardly pushing anything.

        • ZiiS 2 hours ago ago

          That you couldn't actual order; at least as a UK SME.

  • locallost 12 hours ago ago

    Was my first thought also when I saw it. I honestly planned to ditch Macbooks before they released M1, but this hardware is just so much better than anything Intel or AMD can offer at least for laptops. For people that are not too demanding I've recommended Airs for a while, but this basically has the potential to destroy the entire midrange PC market. Some people will be reluctant to switch, but I don't think the OS is as important today as it was before. So much happens on the web anyway.

    edit: also on a tangent, Apple's pricing has become weird. It actually feels like it's a really good bang got the buck. Regular iPads are under 400 now, and they're just better than the competition. MacBook Pro is about the same price as it ever was, but it's just so much better than it was etc.

  • calf 30 minutes ago ago

    I woke up to see my other comment downvoted by some rando, but I honestly think this is the best line in the entire article and Gruber's wish is telling (I quote the line only here, but it is best read in context of the original passage):

    "I wish Apple would make a MacBook that’s akin to the iPhone Air — crazy thin and surprisingly performant."

    What this reflects is all those comments and users, myself included, over the years saying "I would get an iPad if only it could run MacOS", and the ensuing discussion to the effect of why Apple won't do it, the chips are just as powerful, etc. A tablet Mac is a lot of people's (both casual and tech) holy grail in portable computing, justified/sensible or not in terms of technology and UI form factor. Gruber's wish is precisely the expression of this not unpopular sentiment. And also the Tahoe iPad OS features is a clue that Apple knows this.

  • scuff3d 16 hours ago ago

    "Of course, it's not that it cannot do all the work, but considering user experience and those hardware limitations, the experience, I think, differs significantly from mainstream products..."

    I worked in retail for a decade, a lot of that was selling computers. The vast majority of what people buy computers for could be done a toaster. You don't exactly need top end specs to browse the internet, reply to emails, and write the occasional document.

    • red-iron-pine 6 hours ago ago

      the average user could probably do most of their computing on a $150 cell phone and a raspberry pi 4.

      gaming is a different beast, but there are xboxes, ps5s, steam boxen, etc.

      • scuff3d 4 hours ago ago

        Exactly. That's why the comment was seemed arranged to me.

        For the most part, there's gamers/editors and a few other groups who need a lot of horsepower. They're generally gonna have decent hardware. Then there's everyone else, who wouldn't notice a difference regardless of hardware (to a point). There just isn't a whole lot of middle ground.

    • vrighter 16 hours ago ago

      electron...

  • frankacter 14 hours ago ago

    I’m a bit confused about who this article is really for. The MacBook Neo starts at $600 so when I read:

    “MacBook Neo is built on an iPhone chip—the A18 Pro. It’s far less capable of running intensive tasks than any of Apple’s M‑series chips or any moderately powered Intel or AMD processor.”

    and that:

    “It’s merely the right kind of performance for anybody who wants to browse the internet or stream video.”

    ...at this price point there are plenty of alternatives for laptops with better performance and specs.

    For example, you can get a 15.6" Ryzen 7 5700U laptop with 32GB RAM and a 1TB SSD for less than the “unbeatable” price of the Neo:

    https://www.amazon.com/NIAKUN-Computer-Processor-Graphics-Ke...

    Or a 15.6" Intel Core i7‑1255U/12650H laptop with 16GB RAM and a 1TB SSD in a similar price range:

    https://www.amazon.com/HP-Laptop-High-Performance-i7-1255U-4...

    Both of these offer:

    * A more traditional laptop CPU

    * 2–4× the memory

    * 2-4× the storage (1TB vs 256GB base on the Neo)

    Standard HDMI/USB‑C video out for external displays

    So I can definitely see the appeal of the Neo for people who just want an inexpensive way into macOS, but the claim that “no other budget laptop can compete.” doesn't track.

    Maybe it should have been "The least expensive Macbook yet, but that comes with significant downsides."

    • theshrike79 13 hours ago ago

      MKBHD said it best: If you're looking at the reviews of the product on tech youtube channels or tech news sites - it's not the laptop for you.

      As for your comparisons: My aunt doesn't need a terabyte of storage or a Ryzen 7 5700U, she needs 15+ hours of battery life because the laptop is going to live next to her spot on the couch and she most likely can't remember to plug it in every night.

      Also the first laptop is from a reputable brand called NIAKUN. They must have amazing customer service and unbeatable warranties, right? =) And they certainly will exist in 12 months when you go look for the brand on Amazon and won't be replaced by another random set of letters in all caps selling the exact same product?

      The HP is on sale, it's MSRP is $699 and for some weird fucking reason has the numpad on it, making the whole keyboard wonky. Who wants that on a laptop?

      And the final thing, as with all price-forward comparisons: build quality. We need an objective standard measurement for chassis and keyboard flex, the ability to open the lid with one finger, the amount of creaking and squeaking said laptop will do in normal use and how hot and loud it gets in your lap when doing light browsing.

      • bdbdbdb 13 hours ago ago

        Anyone doing accounts and data entry wants a numpad. My dad recently damaged his laptop keyboard. I gave him a spare usb keyboard, and he still went out and bought a new keyboard just for the numpad. There's a reason pc makers keep stuffing those lopsided monstrosities in there

        • theshrike79 12 hours ago ago

          Anyone doing data entry with a numpad will also want a proper one, not a squishy laptop one.

          But they're clearly not the majority of the people - the rest of us have to live with a lopsided keyboard because a few people for some reason do data entry on a laptop keyboard.

    • commandersaki 9 hours ago ago

      Ah the classic NIAKUN, what we expect from brand name quality: awesome keyboard layout (love a number pad that smashes into the arrow keys), great resolution (1920x1080 so good for 2026!). I'm sure the speakers are state of the art for the form factor, gets amazing battery life (love me max 4-5 hrs on moderate usage), and of course can't forget the plastic body.

      I'm sure a similar story can be said about the HP.

      If you didn't detect the sarcasm, a laptop is much more than cpu, memory, and storage; it'd be short-sighted to only fixate on this trio. PC laptops compromise on pretty much everything and usually do everything poorly, including CPU (since apple silicon Macs are much better performance per watt).

      Then there's the whole aspect of Apple support for both hardware AND software, something no PC vendor can provide.

      • drcongo 2 hours ago ago

        I wouldn't even let someone connect that thing to my home network, let alone pay money for one.

      • glimshe 7 hours ago ago

        I was about to say the same thing. How can people compare Apple to a NIAKUN throwaway laptop? I'm no Mac fanboy - I use Windows, Linux and Mac at home. I find MacOS somewhat annoying, but as a Internet browsing laptop, I'd much rather pay for the Mac Neo than "NIAKUN".

        PS: I wrote this on my Macbook Air.

    • JSR_FDED 12 hours ago ago

      > It’s far less capable of running intensive tasks

      The latest reviews are showing that's not really the case

    • TiredOfLife 6 hours ago ago

      Single thread performance on the Neo (important to web browsing) is literally 2-3 times faster than those laptops

    • sockaddr 14 hours ago ago

      Your amazon links are broken. But I think you're missing the point of this thing. This isn't for people that really even care about performance. It's for people that want a laptop that works with their iPhone, does all the things their school needs them to do in a browser, and doesn't come with a complete dogsh*t OS, and isn't of dubious quality like an HP or a "NIAKUN", whatever that is.

      Now the color options, that's a tragedy.

      • frankacter 14 hours ago ago

        >Your amazon links are broken.

        Thanks. Fixed.

        >This isn't for people that really even care about performance. It's for people that want a laptop that works with their iPhone

        That was my conclusion to my comment in my original. The title of "no other budget laptop can compete" is not just sensationalized, it is factually wrong. It should have been "the least expensive macbook yet comes with a catch"

      • musicale 14 hours ago ago

        > Now the color options, that's a tragedy.

        Maybe they need to bring back psychedelic iMacs.

        https://www.slashgear.com/1706745/rare-apple-imac-designs-fl...

      • saghm 14 hours ago ago

        "No other budget laptop can compete on offering MacOS" is certainly a correct statement, but it's not a particularly interesting one. If they're missing the point, it's because it was exaggerated to the point of not being recognizable.

      • x0x0 3 hours ago ago

        And for their kids sick and tired of trying to help them fix Window's incompetence. You're into Dell for at least $800 for anything approaching an actually usable laptop. This is definitely my mom's next laptop.

    • apimade 14 hours ago ago

      Total cost of ownership.

      I’d give my entire family these ahead of Windows laptops any day.

      • hulitu 13 hours ago ago

        > Total cost of ownership.

        Mister Gates, is that you ?

    • atoav 14 hours ago ago

      I would ask the opposite. For years now for most of my family even a Raspberry Pi 3B+ 3ould be enough. 95% of people use their machine to run a web browser, that easily ran on hardware that was old 20 years ago.

      • frankacter 13 hours ago ago

        Agreed, which is why a $600 price point on a "budget laptop" targeting users running a web browser seems quite over priced.

        • tim333 10 hours ago ago

          The thing with laptops in my experience is a) they last ~6 years (macs at any rate) so that's ~$100/year or 27c a day and b) people spend a lot of time on them, hours a day often. Is it really worth cutting back much on that when it's like 1/10th the cost of getting a cup of coffee?

        • atoav 12 hours ago ago

          Well but that's the thing. It is priced like a phone for exactly the kind of person who would spend 600 bucks on a phone. I don't think this is a coincidence.

          In terms of performance the raw compute people have in their pockets nowadays surpasses what they typically need by magnitudes for a while now. Granted: programmers and tech companies find new ways of wasting that compute on features that people ultimately do not need, so they may need that the compute so things feel snappy, but if I think about what my parents do on their devices you could easily enable them to do theirs tasks with far less. They are essentially doing the same as ca. 2006 with pictures and videos being higher fidelity & resolution and websites running hundred thousand lines of javascript being the main difference.

    • kasabali 10 hours ago ago

      > 15.6"

      eww

    • foldr 6 hours ago ago

      > It’s far less capable of running intensive tasks than any of Apple’s M‑series chips or any moderately powered Intel or AMD processor.”

      This is false. The A18 Pro has much better single core performance than the M1 and slightly better multi core performance. Most people would see no noticeable benefit to a faster CPU. Especially with a fanless design, the additional cores of a comparable M-series chip would give you better burst performance for some workloads, but possibly not much improvement in sustained performance.

      • starkparker 2 hours ago ago

        > The A18 Pro has much better single core performance than the M1 and slightly better multi core performance.

        For the first few minutes of sustained use. Then it drops like a rock: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/03/apple-macbook-neo-re...

        > In extended single-core benchmarks, performance drops to the 3.7-to-3.5 GHz range within a minute or so, and they drop to the 2.9-to-3.2 GHz range after about five minutes. Both the M1 Air and the new M5 Air (4.46 GHz) are able to sustain their peak clock speeds indefinitely in single-core mode.

        • foldr 17 minutes ago ago

          That's a fair point above sustained multicore, but this is probably the right tradeoff for this class of device. Few people are regularly maxing out all of their cores for more than a few minutes at a time, and the people who are doing that probably weren't going to buy Apple's budget $600 MacBook anyway. The increase in single core performance over the M1 is much more valuable to most users.

        • adolph an hour ago ago

          I wonder if the new displays with A19 processors have better heat dissipation. (and if they can be modified to run full iOS instead of the displayOS variant)

          https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/new-apple-studio-displa...

    • Mawr 11 hours ago ago

      > ...at this price point there are plenty of alternatives for laptops with better performance and specs.

      Laughable. Seriously, how long has it been since the M1 Air dropped? And we're still this clueless?

      > For example, you can get a 15.6" Ryzen 7 5700U laptop with 32GB RAM and a 1TB SSD for less than the “unbeatable” price of the Neo:

      Awesome spec dump. Now, what's the real life usage battery life of that laptop like? Oh? Yeah, thought so.

      Nobody buys a list of specs, they buy a set of capabilities. And the Neo is capable of supporting normal usage for 12h+ on battery. Go ahead and link me some alternative laptops that can do that, with comparable performance of course — which is on par or better than the original M1 Air mind you.

      Killer move by Apple, and I'm shocked there's still so much ignorance around.

      • tim333 10 hours ago ago

        The Windows ones sound good for running games. Wouldn't suit me as I don't game on them and want battery life for reading.

      • lostmsu 8 hours ago ago

        https://www.staples.com/hp-omnibook-5-16-2k-laptop-copilot-p...

        I own one. It lives long enough not to get bothered by charging.

        • commandersaki 7 hours ago ago

          Looked up more info on this laptop, my cursory thoughts:

          plastic chassis: gross. keyboard with a numberpad: yuck no inverted-T for arrow keys: yuck limited size trackpad, not to mention a PC trackpad: yuck display looks good and is matte: nice fans: gross usb-c (charging) port is not the first port in the array: yuck supplied charger brick: yuck, why not something a bit more modern

          But at least it seems to have comparable battery life to the neo.

          • lostmsu 5 hours ago ago

            > plastic chassis: gross.

            I don't care, it holds, it is not slippery (a huge problem with my current phone with metal body). What exactly is better with metal?

            > keyboard with a numberpad: yuck

            I would prefer one without, but that's just a matter of preference here. The layout is good. In fact, it's the keyboard that mostly makes me feel good whenever I use this laptop.

            > inverted-T for arrow keys: yuck

            In theory I agree, but for some reason that did not feel problematic on this particular keyboard.

            > limited size trackpad

            ?

            > not to mention a PC trackpad

            To each their own

            > fans: gross

            Never heard them, not even sure they are there.

            > usb-c (charging) port is not the first port in the array

            Sounds like a minor issue

            > supplied charger brick: yuck, why not something a bit more modern

            I prefer "bricks" on the wire to "bricks" on the plug like Apple does because it does not take 10 slots on a power strip.

  • rf15 14 hours ago ago

    Except for the bit that immediately killed it for us in the office: only one external display. Even if you close the lid.

    I dream of the day I can kick windows into the next bin, but this is the one thing that the Neo fails hard on, all other compromises would've made this a great remote dev machine.

    • red-iron-pine 6 hours ago ago

      does the ~$400 consumer PC market -- which is what theyre aiming at -- need multiple external displays?

      my mom might need a 2nd monitor, but probably not. that's who they're chasing.

      my crappy business dell work computer can only do one too, but it comes with a docking station to do real multi-monitor

  • shrubble 14 hours ago ago

    It’s really an iPad running MacOS instead of iOS; the question is whether people want that.

    I’m not the target market since I require Linux compatibility but I realize that is not a necessity in the market.

    • recursive an hour ago ago

      Really an iPad running MacOS instead of iOS, with a built-in keyboard and touchpad, without a touch screen, multiple ports.

      In other words, indistinguishable from a laptop by virtually everyone. I don't even know what difference you might be referring to.

    • exidy 12 hours ago ago

      I don't think it's a useful distinction. I wouldn't describe my car as "really a vacuum cleaner", despite them both having an electric motor.

      The form factor is the defining characteristic, because that informs how people use it. The CPU does not.

    • musicale 14 hours ago ago

      The iPad has a touchscreen, supports Apple Pencil, etc. but the observation that the iPad has been Apple's "budget" computing platform for a while is spot on. It is interesting that they have reformulated it into a Mac laptop (and also that A-series iPhone chips offer M1-class performance.)

      Fortunately/unfortunately for Apple, the M1 MacBook Air from 2020 is still a great laptop.

  • pipeline_peak 14 hours ago ago

    This feels like the first time Apple’s walled garden approach has paid off in the desktop arena.

    With a cheaper Windows alternative to the MacBook Neo, your options are inferior battery life with AMD 64, or Windows Arm’s inferior compatibility.

    I doubt Microsoft is holding developers hands when transitioning to Arm the way that Apple does. Not to mention they’ve been using their own chips.

    • perfmode 2 hours ago ago

      I think what you're describing is vertical integration rather than the walled garden specifically. The walled garden is the App Store restrictions, iMessage lock-in, that kind of thing. What made the Neo possible is that Apple controls the silicon, the OS, the firmware, and the industrial design as a single unit. They could put a phone chip in a laptop form factor and have it feel coherent because there's no seam between the hardware and software teams.

      The distinction matters because it changes what the lesson is for the rest of the industry. You don't need a walled garden to compete here. You need to own enough of the stack that you can make aggressive tradeoffs (like shipping 8GB and an A18 Pro) without everything falling apart at the integration boundaries. Microsoft can't do that because they don't make the hardware. Dell and Lenovo can't do that because they don't make the OS. Qualcomm can't do that because they don't control the software ecosystem.

      The one company that could theoretically pull this off is Google with ChromeOS on their own Tensor chips, and the fact that they haven't is probably the more interesting question than why Asus is shocked.

      • pipeline_peak an hour ago ago

        >The one company that could theoretically pull this off is Google with ChromeOS on their own Tensor chips, and the fact that they haven't is probably the more interesting question than why Asus is shocked.

        Successful Chromebook’s have always been the throwaway $200 models. Higher end ones like the Pixelbook served more as flagship devices to prove they could do more but were never really marketed.

        I don’t think Google’s gonna make a souped up Chromebook because they know their place. They’re entirely internet dependent devices with little brand recognition and no serious software. The Neo serves somewhere in between that. They have the brand recognition and MacOS.

    • happymellon 14 hours ago ago

      > I doubt Microsoft is holding developers hands when transitioning to Arm the way that Apple does.

      While this is key it has nothing to do with the walled garden approach, and everything to do with Microsoft's contempt for users of its platforms.

      • operatingthetan 14 hours ago ago

        People may not be very happy with recent UI changes in Tahoe but it's still another universe compared to some the clunky Windows 2000-ish stuff still in Windows 11.

  • calf 8 hours ago ago

    "I wish Apple would make a MacBook that’s akin to the iPhone Air — crazy thin and surprisingly performant."

    I think a lot of us wish that! I'm struggling to pick either the Neo or the new iPad Air 13", the former for having MacOS, or the latter for light weight and light usage purposes. And come this fall pair whichever choice with an M5 mini at home.

  • gamblor956 13 hours ago ago

    He wasn't referring to the build quality which is about average, or the ipad level performance.

    He was referring to the supply chain. The shock is that Apple was able to build something like this with current component costs.

    • BoredPositron 12 hours ago ago

      Planning beyond the next quarter? That’s a rare level of foresight for most.

    • financetechbro 7 hours ago ago

      “Average” build quality? All the reviews I’ve seen rage about the build quality of the Neo

  • svilen_dobrev 13 hours ago ago

    maybe Apple is "subsidizing" this ?

    nudge/"help" people to join the party?

    trying to ride something around the windows-bullshitization , recent memory-prices etc..

  • bdbdbdb an hour ago ago

    There's no point taking any Mac opinion from John Gruber, he's basically just Apple PR. He can't be objective