Fall seems more likely for the rest of the Mac line. I for one, wasn't expecting the M2 or new MBA as rumors were too conflicting.So much for all the pandits who said we would see new Mini and Mini Pro at WWDC. I wonder if we have to wait until fall to find out about M2 variants for Mini, Mini Pro, 24" iMac, Studio, and Mac Pro.
I think they refreshed those specifically for back-to-school season.I think the only reason they released the new MacBook Air M2 and MacBook 13 inch M2 at the WWDC was to give something exciting to the day.
Debatable as Apple usually states actual release date and pre-order dates with new product releases. Right now we got neither, just a rough release date. Apple usually does this when inventory is low and manufacturing isn't where it's supposed to be.If we believe the reports, Apple has been trying to launch the M2 MacBook Air for some six months now, so I presume they finally have enough supply to get it out the door to customers and Apple has launched new Macs at a number of WWDCs (including consumer models).
M2 mac mini is expected at the latest event of this year, along side with Mac pro and M2 ipads proSo much for all the pandits who said we would see new Mini and Mini Pro at WWDC. I wonder if we have to wait until fall to find out about M2 variants for Mini, Mini Pro, 24" iMac, Studio, and Mac Pro.
If today's event is anything to go by, the M2 mini won't replace the M1 mini. It will most likely be added to the lineup at $899 for 8/256 M2.Higher margins probably come from $1,199 MBA and $1,299 MBP. The same M2 chip placed in the Mac mini sells for $699. Give it until Oct/Nov.
If today's event is anything to go by, the M2 mini won't replace the M1 mini. It will most likely be added to the lineup at $899 for 8/256 M2.
the Mac Mini is a cheap entry into the MacOS ecosystem just like the Air. here the cheapest Air (m1) is £999. cheapest Mac Mini is £699.I get the feeling Apple kept the M1 MBA because of the number of first time buyers to the ecosystem. At $999, it continues to attract new users.
I suspect the mini is largely targeted at those who are already familiar with Mac. They’ll still buy without a cheap entry level model.
It's possible - but it's also possible that the M1 Air is just there for the US "Back To School" season, because, otherwise, it would be disastrous if the M2 Air didn't ship in time.If today's event is anything to go by, the M2 mini won't replace the M1 mini. It will most likely be added to the lineup at $899 for 8/256 M2.
Maybe. But it might be that they have a large supply of them since it is the best selling laptop in the industry right now. Once that supply dwindles the MacBook Air M1 might disappear.I get the feeling Apple kept the M1 MBA because of the number of first time buyers to the ecosystem. At $999, it continues to attract new users.
I suspect the mini is largely targeted at those who are already familiar with Mac. They’ll still buy without a cheap entry level model.
It'll be a while then cause inflation is too dang high. Also, the supply chain crunch isn't helping.Even when Apple launched the Intel Retina MacBook Air at $1099, they still sold more of the non-Retina model because it was a couple hundred dollars cheaper. I would not at all be surprised if the M1 Air sticks around for at least another year to anchor the bottom end until component pricing for the new Air allows a $200 price drop to reach $999 (perhaps when the Air moves to the M3).