No Mac Minis either
- MBP with a "just so so" touch bar, lower battery life, "maybe worse" keyboard.
- No iMacs.
- Earpod, delay(again).
- Minor upgraded iPhone.
- Too many Emoji upgrades on iOS
- MBP with a "just so so" touch bar, lower battery life, "maybe worse" keyboard.
- No iMacs.
- Earpod, delay(again).
- Minor upgraded iPhone.
- Too many Emoji upgrades on iOS
Was 2015 much better? Or even 2014 , with jobs gone, profit has become the number one priority, and if you look at the financials , apple is doing great actually
I'm guessing you wanted to say disappointing year
Anyway - that's a matter of opinion (but I do agree about no iMac upgrades and AirPod delays). But the MBP is great for the majority of users, iPhone 7 only seems minor on the outside (people only seem to notice the looks), but it turns out it's a fantastic upgrade, and I don't understand how the number of Emoji upgrades can disappoint anyone. Who cares about how many Emojis they added? Some people will find them useful, and it's not like this took major Apple resources to do.
For me:
- iOS 10 is a solid upgrade to a great mobile OS
- Watches get faster CPUs across the board, even the S1 models
- New MBPs, while pricey, are great
- iPhone 7/7+ is a great upgrade, and Apple's lead in CPU tech has grown even more
- iPad Pro 9.7 is a solid addition to the amazing Pro line
- Siri comes to the Mac and macOS Sierra is good
I'd say a solid year, all in all.
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Jobs' number one priority was profit.
His number two priority was profit.
tbMBP - fail
iPhone 7 - 3rd year, same old design. Software wise same as in 2007
iPad - lol
OSX/macOS - killing off features and making it even more iOS-like
disappointing year for most people in general.
Mac Pro, Thunderbolt Display, etc. - RIP
Indeed. A great year for Apple fans. Unless you are a pro and you use your machine to get the actual work done
iOS 10 is the same as iOS in 2007? Yeah, right.
Literally the best stylus on the market for artists, already used by major illustrators across the world, one of the best products Apple made. Yeah, "lol" indeed.
Troll much?
I can't imagine a better machine to do work on than the new MBP. Best in-class performance, great battery, unparalleled extensibility and all that with excellent portability.
tbMBP - fail
iPhone 7 - 3rd year, same old design. Software wise same as in 2007
Killing off hardware - bye bye old apple, hello fashion apple
iPad - lol
OSX/macOS - killing off features and making it even more iOS-like
Mac Pro, Thunderbolt Display, etc. - RIP
Indeed. A great year for Apple fans. Unless you are a pro and you use your machine to get the actual work done
Jobs' number one priority was profit.
His number two priority was profit.
On the bolded part I agree with you. On battery part I dont, since new tb MBP 15 has worse battery then older rMBP. Best in class performance? Compared to what? Unparalleled extensibility? You can't even connect it to iPhone/iPad without buying extra cables or dongles.
Future-Proofing.
Just in order of your questions: best-in-class overall performance compared to all portable work laptops (at any price range). Things like Dell XPS, MS Surface etc. This thing even rivals workstation laptops that are twice as heavy. The battery life is better than the last model, all benchmarks show that clearly. That some people experience less then stellar battery performance is obviously a software problem, either a bug in OS X or an issue with their software configuration. Extensibility: you get 16 external PCI-E 3.0 lanes. You can literally connect this thing to a dozen of high-performance RAID enclosures at full speed. No other laptop — and barely any ready-made desktop even — has that adaptability.
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Sorry friend, the tech has moved on. We are living in an era where hardware integration has gone even further. We are now using soldered-on RAM, because its more efficient and reliable than socketed RAM (and not to mention that these model come with hardware max preinstalled, so questions of upgradeability are moot). I am not a big fan of soldered-on SSD, that is true, but using that allows Apple to offer essentially fastest storage currently on the market, as fast or faster than professional PCI-E SSDs.
As to the lack of Mac Mini updates, well, the CPU tech hasn't moved that much on yet, so releasing new Mac Minis wouldn't serve much purpose. We already saw that going from Haswell to Skylake on the laptops brough very little in terms of CPU performance. I know you are disappointed by the lack of upgrades, but imagine the reaction if Apple releases new Mac Mini that offers the same performance as the old one. I assume that Apple is waiting on the Kaby Lake to make it at least a little bit more worthwhile.
Dell XPS 15 - if you go with the huge battery and the FULL HD screen you get around 12 to 14 hours of battery. SSD and Ram are upgradeable (Ram up to 32 GB of Ram) also it has a capable integrated Nvidia GPU.
Socketed Ram is thicker, that is all. There is no benefit in energy consumption, power or heat distribution when using soldered on Ram. The only two reasons to use soldered on Ram is to obsolete a product early and make a device thinner.
Upcoming (january) Samsung Evo M2 NVME MLC SSDs perform on the level of the new MBPs maybe even faster. It has nothing to do with it being soldered in and will be available for all M2 slots.
Also on the mac mini you don't get my point. They actually made the mac mini LESS powerful on purpose (no more quadcore, no more i7, only i5 dualcores), less upgradeable (with no reason since the chassis hasn't changed) and double as expensive (because why the f not). This has nothing to do with the jump from Haswell to Skylake or Kabylake.
There were engineering reasons for the Mac mini to get the quad core in a couple of generations. The quad was on the same socket as the dual core for two Intel generations of the mobile chips, Intel changed that and it was no longer an easy thing for Apple to put in the mini that simple really.
Not having researched this myself I'll take your word for it. Still... raise the price while bottom-line-offering slightly above 50% performance of older models? Seems odd.
It's been a pretty good year for me:
- MBP with a "just so so" touch bar, lower battery life, "maybe worse" keyboard.
- No iMacs.
- Earpod, delay(again).
- Minor upgraded iPhone.
- Too many Emoji upgrades on iOS
Hey I was just explaining the change. Apples pricing is a law unto itself and always has been that's the price you pay for using their devices it's hardly a secret after all.
Dell XPS 15 - if you go with the huge battery and the FULL HD screen you get around 12 to 14 hours of battery. SSD and Ram are upgradeable (Ram up to 32 GB of Ram) also it has a capable integrated Nvidia GPU.
Socketed Ram is thicker, that is all. There is no benefit in energy consumption, power or heat distribution when using soldered on Ram. The only two reasons to use soldered on Ram is to obsolete a product early and make a device thinner.
Upcoming (january) Samsung Evo M2 NVME MLC SSDs perform on the level of the new MBPs maybe even faster. It has nothing to do with it being soldered in and will be available for all M2 slots.
Also on the mac mini you don't get my point. They actually made the mac mini LESS powerful on purpose (no more quadcore, no more i7, only i5 dualcores), less upgradeable (with no reason since the chassis hasn't changed) and double as expensive (because why the f not). This has nothing to do with the jump from Haswell to Skylake or Kabylake.
You really put in EarPods as being a bad year? Worst product design that should be discontinued before it even launches. Hanging tampon out of your ears make it a good year for you?
- MBP with a "just so so" touch bar, lower battery life, "maybe worse" keyboard.
- No iMacs.
- Earpod, delay(again).
- Minor upgraded iPhone.
- Too many Emoji upgrades on iOS