Macworld

What will the ARM Mac line-up look like?

Chip transition­s give Apple an opportunit­y to make major changes, like a redesigned imac. Jason Snell reports

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For a company with a reputation for sudden bursts of industry-shaking creativity, Apple’s pretty conservati­ve most of the time. The company has a years-long product pipeline, and while we’re beginning to anticipate the 2020 iphone, its hardware engineers are finishing work on the 2021 model while its

component designers are pondering the chips and sensors that will power the device into the mid-2020s.

For so many of Apple’s product choices, a decision now is likely to be a decision that sticks for years to come. Think of how many years it took for the company to backtrack on the butterfly keyboard in the Macbook line, even after it was obvious that it had made a mistake. More to the point, consider the continued existence of the low-end, two-port version of the 13in Macbook Pro, which is largely the consequenc­e of a failed attempt to replace the Macbook Air with the 12in Macbook and the entry-level Macbook Pro.

Some strong news reports suggest that in 2021, Apple’s going to being a major reset of the Mac product line, thanks to its transition from Intel processors to its own ARM chips. After a decade and a half in which Mac product designs were often constraine­d by the Intel processor types that were available, Apple’s got a chance to build a Mac product line exactly as it envisions it – right down to the right chips for the right computers. It’s not an exaggerati­on to suggest that this will affect the shape of the Mac for the next five years, if not more.

What is Apple likely to do? I’ve got some ideas, informed by my observatio­ns of the last two transition­s, a sense of where the Mac is today, and maybe a little bit of wishcastin­g.

The comfort of the imac

I don’t expect Apple to sweep away all familiar Mac models in 2021 just because it’s changing

the processors that power them. Done right, the transition to Apple-designed processors should be barely a blip on the radar screen of the general public.

When Apple transition­ed to Intel from Powerpc, the first product to make the transition was the imac. The new Intel imac looked more or less identical to the G5 imac that it replaced. If you weren’t aware that there was a chip transition underway, you might have missed it entirely. It took three years for Apple to truly redesign the imac case, taking it from white plastic to silver aluminium.

What’s different this time is that the imac hasn’t had a major design change in a long time, which suggests to me that this might be the perfect moment for Apple to change both the inside and outside of its iconic desktop Mac. It’s possible that there will be an ARM imac in the same case as today’s models, but I don’t think I would bet on it.

What does seem sure, though, is the continued existence of the imac. It’s been a core part of the

Mac for more than two decades. The imac changes with the times, but it stays with us.

Stability of the profession­al Mac

It would stand to reason that the high end of the Mac product line will be the hardest spot for Apple’s new chips to reach. Convention­al wisdom is that Apple will start the transition with consumer tech and only spread to pro models later on. I’m inclined to agree with that assessment, at least for the first wave of new Macs. Keeping Intel compatibil­ity and stability available to Apple’s most demanding pro customers seems like a good idea.

The imac Pro is getting a bit long in the tooth and could use a speed boost, but not a rethink. The

Mac Pro just came out and seems to be built for the long haul. It’s hard to see these models jumping to ARM soon. I’ll throw the Mac mini in this category, too. While I’d love to see a reimagined Mac mini that’s tiny and powerful and cheap, I suspect that the 2018 revision of the Mac mini will have to hold us for a few years to come.

Mystery of the Macbooks

That brings us to the big question: once it’s free from the constraint­s of Intel’s various mobile processor lines, will Apple rejigger its laptops?

I have to think that Apple will take the opportunit­y to do just that. It hardly needs three different 13in laptops. (Four, if you count the 12.9in ipad Pro when connected to a Magic Keyboard.)

So let’s draw a four-square grid (see opposite), Steve Jobs style, with smaller and larger laptops for consumers and profession­als. (Both groups could use some variety in terms of size, don’t you think?)

On the consumer end, let’s consider two new forms of Macbook or Macbook Air. A smaller 12in model takes the form of the old Macbook, but this time it’s much more capable of running well without any fan. A larger model, perhaps a version of the 13in Air currently on sale, offers more robust cooling and a larger screen.

The A13 Bionic chip that powers Apple’s current line of iphones has six processor cores – two optimized for power and four optimized for energy efficiency. A chip with a similar configurat­ion would instantly become the first six-core consumer Mac

laptop ever. (Let’s also not forget Apple’s built-in GPUS, which will probably put Intel’s built-in graphics to shame.) In low-energy operation, these chips would sip power and maintain battery life, but when called upon, they could crank up those two ‘performanc­e cores’. It’s hard to imagine that these laptops wouldn’t be faster than the current Macbook Air, and with dramatical­ly better battery life.

Then there’s the Macbook Pro. As with Apple’s pro desktops, I suspect that Apple’s pro laptops

will not make the move as quickly as the consumer models. But the path forward is pretty clear: a

14in laptop that’s redesigned in the same way that the 16in model replaced the 15in last autumn. And then, ultimately, a new 16in model that’s powered by a next-generation A-series chip that is truly capable of handing profession­al workloads. If the iphone can have a six-core processor, what’s to stop the Macbook Pro from having four or even six performanc­e cores to go with four or six efficiency cores?

I’ve got no rumours or media reports to back up this particular suppositio­n. I’m just looking at the imbalance in Apple’s laptop line – one consumer laptop and three pro models. But while

I’m dealing in pure speculatio­n, I’ll throw out one final bit before I go.

Every time Apple has made a Mac processor transition, it’s taken the opportunit­y to rename a portion of its product line. The Powerpc transition ushered in the Power Macintosh, replacing the Quadra. The Intel transition converted all Power Macs into Mac Pros and Powerbooks and ibooks into Macbooks.

So I’d like to suggest that 2021 might be the perfect time to retire the Macbook Air and Macbook Pro brand names and replace them with something simpler. How about Macbook and Powerbook? (We can reserve ibook for the ipados-based laptop.)

Perhaps that’s a bridge too far. But chip transition­s are funny things. They’re an opportunit­y for Apple to take stock… and change course. I can’t guarantee that anything I’ve written here will come to pass in 2021, but I can guarantee that change is coming, and some of it will take us all by surprise.

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 ??  ?? imac Pro (left) and imac
imac Pro (left) and imac
 ??  ?? Mac Pro
Mac Pro
 ??  ?? Steve Jobs I’m not, but imagine a simpler Mac laptop line-up
Steve Jobs I’m not, but imagine a simpler Mac laptop line-up
 ??  ?? 2021 might be the perfect time to retire the Macbook Air (pictured) and Macbook Pro brand names
2021 might be the perfect time to retire the Macbook Air (pictured) and Macbook Pro brand names

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