The Sunday Guardian

Apple’s Philip Schiller talks about the new MacBook Pro

- DAVID PHELAN

The keynote video showed Apple laptops from the last 25 years. Seeing it, you can’t predict where the design will go, but each new one it seems like a logical continuati­on?

A. Yes, and what’s remarkable is as things become smaller the range of big, obvious difference­s reduce. When you see the history of those notebooks, the first one is 2 ¼ inches thick. There’s a lot of room to make part lines and seams on them and things that create character but as you get to something where it’s so defined by its display and its keyboard, as an iPhone is so defined by that display, the design of how it works becomes much more into incredible, nano-sized details. I can’t even imagine the level of tolerances and small details the team will be working on in a few years from now. Q. The new MacBook Pro is pretty light? A. It is. Big difference. And more rigid. And dense, too. It’s obviously harder to design something that’s stiffer when it’s so much thinner and the tolerances of the design are so much tighter than ever before on our products. To have this flatness and linearity between the huge trackpad surface and the palm rest, it took a level of engineerin­g not possible before. So some things are transparen­t to the user, they just think it’s a beautiful product but the level of engineerin­g it takes to make this the way it is, is a tremendous technical challenge compared to the past. Q. The evolution of the Touch Bar — how did it come about? A. It’s part of our thinking about where to take the notebook next. Others are trying to turn the notebook into the tablet. The new MacBook Pro is a product that celebrates that it is a notebook, this shape that has been with us for the last 25 years is probably going to be with us for another 25 years because there’s something eternal about the basic notebook form factor.You have a surface that you type down on with your hands, with a screen facing you vertically. That basic orientatio­n, that L shape makes perfect sense and won’t go away. The team came up with this idea that you can create a multi-touch surface that’s coplanar with the keyboard and the trackpad but brings a whole new experience into it, one that’s more interactiv­e, with multitouch. Q. Will macOS and iOS (the operating systems for Macs and iPhones) always be different? A. We’re steadfast in our belief that there are fundamenta­lly two different products to make for customers and they’re both important. There’s iPhone and iPad which are single pieces of glass, they’re direct-manipulati­on, multi-touch and tend towards full-screen applicatio­ns. And that’s that experience. And we want to make those the best in that direction anyone can imagine. We have a long road ahead of us on that.

Then there’s the Mac experience, dominated by our notebooks and that’s about indirect manipulati­on and cursors and menus. We want to make this the best experience we can dream of in this direction.

Here’s one example of how they should remain distinct: the Mac from the very first has had a menu bar fixed at the top. Its core to the identity and the experience you get. But iOS doesn’t have a menu at the top. It never will. The thought of pointing at a menu at the top of an iPhone feels wrong. If you made the Mac a touchscree­n you’d have to figure out how to make it a good experience with your finger on a touchscree­n. Trust me, we’ve looked at that — it’s a bad experience. It’s not as good or as intuitive as with a mouse and trackpad. Q.The new Pros have no SD card slot for a camera memory card. Why not? A. Because of a couple of things. One, it’s a bit of a cumbersome slot. You’ve got this thing sticking halfway out. Then there are very fine and fast USB card readers, and then you can use CompactFla­sh as well as SD. So we could never really resolve this – we picked SD because more consumer cameras have SD but you can only pick one. So, that was a bit of a trade-off. And then more and more cameras are starting to build wireless transfer into the camera. That’s proving very useful. So we think there’s a path forward where you can use a physical adaptor if you want, or do wireless transfer. Q. Is it inconsiste­nt to keep the 3.5mm headphone jack as it’s no longer on the latest iPhone? A. Not at all. These are pro machines. If it was just about headphones then it doesn’t need to be there, we believe that wireless is a great solution for headphones. But many users have setups with studio monitors, amps, and other pro audio gear that do not have wireless solutions and need the 3.5mm jack. Q. Tell me about Siri on the Mac? A. We waited quite a while to bring Siri to the Mac because we didn’t want to bring it until it could do some things Mac users would really require, like file searching and things like that. We could have brought it earlier without that but it wouldn’t have made as much sense to us. Q. But there’s no “Hey Siri”, where you can invoke the voice assistant by just speaking to it, on the Mac? A.That has more to do with system electronic­s and low power capabiliti­es. You would want to be able to say “Hey Siri” from across the room even when your Mac is asleep, so if you still have to go across the room to wake the Mac, then what’s the point? You need to build system-wide electronic­s that are in the right standby state, listening for that catchphras­e and that’s not built into the electronic­s of Mac today. Q. How would you describe the response to the new MacBook Pro? A. There has certainly been a lot of passionate dialogue and debate about the new MacBook Pro! Many things have impressed people about it, and some have caused some controvers­y. I hope everyone gets a chance to try it for themselves and see how great the MacBook Pro is. It is a really big step forward and an example of how much we continue to invest in the Mac. We love the Mac and are as committed to it, in both desktops and notebooks, as we ever have been.

And we are proud to tell you that so far our online store has had more orders for the new MacBook Pro than any other pro notebook before. So there certainly are a lot of people as excited as we are about it.

“It’s part of our thinking about where to take the notebook next. Others are trying to turn the notebook into the tablet. The new MacBook Pro is a product that celebrates that it is a notebook, this shape that has been with us for the last 25 years.”

Q. Are you surprised by how vocal the critics have been? A. To be fair it has been a bit of a surprise to me. But then, it shouldn’t be. I have never seen a great new Apple product that didn’t have its share of early criticism and debate — and that’s cool. We took a bold risk, and of course with every step forward there is also some change to deal with. Our customers are so passionate, which is amazing.

We care about what they love and what they are worried about. And it’s our job to help people through these changes. We know we made good decisions about what to build into the new MacBook Pro and that the result is the best notebook ever made, but it might not be right for everyone on day one. That’s okay, some people felt that way about the first iMac and that turned out pretty good. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing Philip Schiller.
Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing Philip Schiller.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India