The M1 is really great. It is probably the greatest Apple's achievement under Tim Cook. It shows Tim Cook's mastery of efficiency in the production line. Apple was able to use the economics of scale of iPhone chip production to make a processor for the Mac which exceeds anything Intel could offer.
But, for all this mastery of the production line, there seems to be an indifference or perhaps even apprehension of excessively changing the product themselves.
I mean, when the M1 MacBook Air and Pro came out, my jaw just dropped. It looked exactly the same as previous models, but much faster and with much better battery life. Wow, just think of the possibilities! It was November 2020. It was just a matter of time before Apple could make a very impressive line-up of Macs.
In April 2021, more than five months later, Apple released new M1 products again, now the iMac and the iPad Pro.
The very same M1 was there inside the iMac, exactly as it was five months before. OK, it was still a great processor, although I was disappointed that Apple did not make it faster for a desktop-class computer. The performance gap between desktop Intel and Apple's M1 was not so great. Still, the new 24-inch iMac is very thin and impressive. Apple was off to a good, or at least decent, start.
The iPad Pro puzzled me. For some reason, Apple decided to put an M1 inside. Perhaps to justify the price tag. Great processor, lacking software. Apple will not make software to match the power of the M1 iPad Pro, it will just, as always, leave it to the world of unfulfilled possibilities of independent small developers. Instead of spending some hundreds of millions making software, Apple decided to put 6 billion to produce streaming content (which I cannot see how it can succeed).
It was still OK, though.
In October 2021, Apple released the long-awaited MacBook Pro. It came in two versions, 14 and 16-inch. Bigger screen, miniLED, ProMotion, additional ports, no TouchBar, better sound. More importantly, the M1 Pro and the M1 Max, beefed-up versions of the M1 processor. What else could one possibly want?
Now it is February 2022, and Apple is yet to release the M2. Which may take a little bit of time, provided how recent the M1 Pro and the M1 Max are. More importantly, the release of the M1 Pro and the M1 Max showed some things which somehow shattered my expectations:
The M1 was so fast compared to contemporary Intel processors so Apple could have a headstart. This headstart was so important because the timelines may differ. In November 2020, the M1 absolutely trounced the wide available 10th gen Intel processors. Now the 12th gen Intel processors may still not be quite there, but are much more on par with the M1.
Although the M1 was revolutionary, Apple did not care to change the composition of its MacBook Pro line-up. There is still a small model and a larger one. Apple is not willing to make a third MacBook Pro size, for instance.
When Apple started making its own chips, I thought cellular connectivity in Macs would be a given. I was wrong. I cannot understand why Apple would not provide 5G on the MacBook Pros, but the fact is that it is not available not even as an upgrade.
There are rumours about Apple keeping the MacBook Air and the low-end MacBook Pro as separate lines of products. This makes zero sense for me, and it a testament of Apple's reluctance to change its line-up.
If I were Apple's CEO and had the M1, I would be truly excited about the possibilities and how it could really revolutionize the line-up. Tim Cook did nothing of that. He gave customers what they wanted and was as conservative as possible in respect to the line-up. Perhaps this is the reason why he is the CEO and I am not. But I just think what Steve Jobs would have done if he had the M1.
But, for all this mastery of the production line, there seems to be an indifference or perhaps even apprehension of excessively changing the product themselves.
I mean, when the M1 MacBook Air and Pro came out, my jaw just dropped. It looked exactly the same as previous models, but much faster and with much better battery life. Wow, just think of the possibilities! It was November 2020. It was just a matter of time before Apple could make a very impressive line-up of Macs.
In April 2021, more than five months later, Apple released new M1 products again, now the iMac and the iPad Pro.
The very same M1 was there inside the iMac, exactly as it was five months before. OK, it was still a great processor, although I was disappointed that Apple did not make it faster for a desktop-class computer. The performance gap between desktop Intel and Apple's M1 was not so great. Still, the new 24-inch iMac is very thin and impressive. Apple was off to a good, or at least decent, start.
The iPad Pro puzzled me. For some reason, Apple decided to put an M1 inside. Perhaps to justify the price tag. Great processor, lacking software. Apple will not make software to match the power of the M1 iPad Pro, it will just, as always, leave it to the world of unfulfilled possibilities of independent small developers. Instead of spending some hundreds of millions making software, Apple decided to put 6 billion to produce streaming content (which I cannot see how it can succeed).
It was still OK, though.
In October 2021, Apple released the long-awaited MacBook Pro. It came in two versions, 14 and 16-inch. Bigger screen, miniLED, ProMotion, additional ports, no TouchBar, better sound. More importantly, the M1 Pro and the M1 Max, beefed-up versions of the M1 processor. What else could one possibly want?
Now it is February 2022, and Apple is yet to release the M2. Which may take a little bit of time, provided how recent the M1 Pro and the M1 Max are. More importantly, the release of the M1 Pro and the M1 Max showed some things which somehow shattered my expectations:
The M1 was so fast compared to contemporary Intel processors so Apple could have a headstart. This headstart was so important because the timelines may differ. In November 2020, the M1 absolutely trounced the wide available 10th gen Intel processors. Now the 12th gen Intel processors may still not be quite there, but are much more on par with the M1.
Although the M1 was revolutionary, Apple did not care to change the composition of its MacBook Pro line-up. There is still a small model and a larger one. Apple is not willing to make a third MacBook Pro size, for instance.
When Apple started making its own chips, I thought cellular connectivity in Macs would be a given. I was wrong. I cannot understand why Apple would not provide 5G on the MacBook Pros, but the fact is that it is not available not even as an upgrade.
There are rumours about Apple keeping the MacBook Air and the low-end MacBook Pro as separate lines of products. This makes zero sense for me, and it a testament of Apple's reluctance to change its line-up.
If I were Apple's CEO and had the M1, I would be truly excited about the possibilities and how it could really revolutionize the line-up. Tim Cook did nothing of that. He gave customers what they wanted and was as conservative as possible in respect to the line-up. Perhaps this is the reason why he is the CEO and I am not. But I just think what Steve Jobs would have done if he had the M1.