Ah, the advantages of CGI renderings over boring reality. No inconvenient gusts of wind to make that top-heavy contraption fall flat on its face, and presumably the CD disappears into the 4th dimension when you put it in the slot. (Pro tip: if you put a fake CD slot on your 'minimalist design' you're doing minimalist design wrong). At least it has a headphone jack!
(OK, I know that rendering was a joke, but it's not far from the
20th Anniversary Macintosh which was real)
Sorry folks, the 1984 Mac's design followed partly from the size and shape of 1984 components (like the smallest practical CRT display at the time, and the relatively chunky full-height floppy drive). If you re-design the classic Mac to take advantage of 2020s technology it's always gonna look pretty much like the current Mac range in "broad strokes" - arguments and feelings over details like notches, bezel colours etc. notwithstanding.
Actually, although the 1984 Mac gets all the love, the most influential Apple design in terms of "form factor" was probably the PowerBook 100/140/170 range. They weren't the first laptops with a hinge-up screen over the keyboard, but the particular combination of full-depth "clamshell/notebook", set-back keyboard and front wrist-rest with centralised pointing device pretty much defined the modern "notebook" computer.