The Citizen (KZN)

Macs could be on top of AI wave, or be left behind

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– Forty years after igniting a PC revolution, Apple’s Mac is stronger than ever and could reach new glory due to AI computing – or be left behind.

Apple launched the Macintosh in 1984 with a history-making television ad pitching the machine as an anti-Establishm­ent blow against a dystopian future.

The computer, referred to simply as a Mac, won fans with user-friendly features such as a graphical interface, clickable icons, and a mouse.

“The influence of the Mac is massive,” Futurum Group research director Olivier Blanchard told AFP. “Every laptop and every PC (personal computer) has tried to emulate the Mac and its success.”

Macs became the preferred choice for Apple fans along with artists, filmmakers and other creative profession­als.

Windows-powered computers, however, dominated business workplaces with lower cost machines that synced with ubiquitous productivi­ty tools like data-bases or spreadshee­ts made by Microsoft and others.

More recently, Apple has been making inroads in business, getting help from iPhone lovers using their smartphone­s for work and Macs becoming more compatible with programmes used on the job.

The Mac’s market has expanded to “basically everyone,” Dag Spicer, senior curator at the Silicon Valley Computer History Museum, told AFP at an exhibit to mark its anniversar­y.

“Apple is doing more to get into businesses,” said Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi.

“It is clear that with Vision Pro they want to get into the enterprise space and they linked the Vision Pro to the Mac.”

The Mac’s 40th birthday comes when the global PC market has sagged with the rise of smartphone lifestyles. But it is being reinvigora­ted by remote work trends as well as keen interest in upgrading to machines tuned to handle AI computing, according to analysts.

“AI is a once-in-a-generation change in the PC market,” Blanchard said.

He likened the change to suddenly having a team of experts on your computer to help with whatever is being worked on.

Data used for AI will remain on PCs, keeping it protected and saving cloud computing costs, he added.

PCs with the muscle to handle

AI workloads on device will tap into a hot trend people are keen to exploit and Apple has already taken to designing its own custom chips, the analyst noted.

“Just because Apple doesn’t talk about generative AI, don’t think it is not going to be playing in that space,” Milanesi said.

Apple is expected to put its spin on AI computing the same way it put its world-changing spin on the smartphone.

It already uses AI in its camera, Siri digital assistant and more.

It is likely quietly designing its own computer chip for “AI Macs”, according to analysts.

When an AI Mac arrives, expect it to be tied to Apple’s “ecosystem” where Apple can control experience­s and make money from offerings, according to analysts. –

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