I think the years ahead will be a game changer for the Mac with the advent of ARM Macs
Hardware was never the issue with the Mac platform. I mean, sure, the butterfly keyboards and chasses too thin for the processors were issues on the notebook side of things. Though, the 16" MacBook Pro fixes that as best as we'll see as far as Intel Mac portables are concerned. The desktops didn't get prompt updates, but I don't so much blame that on technological issues as much as I blame Apple for not placing as much importance on those products.
The issue with the platform is the software. It's the fact that macOS releases in the Tim Cook era are on a strict annual schedule and not on the Jobs-era policy of "we're releasing it when it's ready and not sooner". This problem definitely exists with iOS and iPadOS too, but it's much worse on the Mac with macOS. That doesn't show any signs of changing even as macOS hits version 11. It may not be 10.16, but 11 continues the same development trends that have been on-going since 10.9.
Changing the underlying architecture doesn't do anything to remedy these problems. Apple just needs to change their release cadence.
The past 5-10 years have been unkind to all desktop/laptop personal computers as the industry has thrown all of its weight behind mobile and web technologies - it's just that the Windows world is tethered by the huge, corporate sector who have barely been weaned off DOS.
First off, the Windows world has been off of DOS and DOS based applications for the past 19 years. Windows XP was the first Windows OS that removed DOS from the consumer flavor of OSes. You may have had some stragglers that held onto their Windows 98 SE boxes, but you're a bit outdated here.
Second off, the corporate sector uses WIN32 applications and there are still WAY more WIN32 applications out there than there will ever be macOS applications (PowerPC, 32-bit Intel, 64-bit Intel, ARM64/Apple Silicon or otherwise). Web technologies may have dominated thanks to Chromebooks and mobile optimized web-apps, but it's not about to overtake WIN32 outside of the home user space. Even then, Windows marketshare is still WAY high.
Third off, I say that the past 5-10 years have been unkind to the Mac in that the PLATFORM ITSELF has gone downhill. Developers are leaving the platform. The past five years of Mac hardware have been problematic for many reasons. You've had MacBook Pro and Mac Pro customers literally leave the platform due to faulty and non-existent hardware options (respectively). You've had an OS that gets updated too fast for high-end software to properly catch up (yet another cause for the alienation of higher-end users). And worst of it is that the track record of macOS releases since Snow Leopard is abysmal. I can only count three releases since that release that were as good. Considering there have been nine releases since Snow Leopard, that's bad. At least Windows 10 has only had one or two bad releases (looking at you, 1709) and even then, it was passable. I recommended against High Sierra to most of the people I've consulted for on the Mac side of things and I don't even need to do it with Catalina (most people are steering clear on its own).
If Tim Cook had Steve Jobs' level of quality control, we wouldn't be having this discussion on how unkind the past 5-10 years have been on the Mac.
Possibly now people are starting to realise that, while phones and tablets have taken a big bite out of the PC market and are very good for some things, there is still a need for "proper" desktops and laptops (e.g. as soon as you need to type/edit any text longer than a tweet, or need a decent amount of screen estate to display information). This may be reflected in the fact that Apple have gone to the effort of moving the Macs to Apple Silicon, rather than just let the iPad Pro progressively cannibalise the MacBook range. (I mean, seriously, how long does it take people to realise that attaching a keyboard cover to an iPad turns a great tablet into a terrible laptop that loses the extreme portability of an iPad but which you can't actually use, you know, on your lap or otherwise without a desk).
Apple doesn't believe in touch screens for the Mac. As someone who has used it on Windows, I can understand their viewpoint. It's a gimmick when it's in a laptop. My Surface Laptop/Book population aside, I will avoid touch screen models on all PC laptops I buy.
The keyboard cover makes the iPad Pro/Air/standard a good typing device. I'm personally of the mind that smaller than the 12.9" is too cramped for typing, but that's just me. I will say that a 12.9" iPad with a keyboard cover is the best notetaking device I have ever used, including laptops, iPad minis, Phones, and pen and paper. I don't see the appeal of the trackpad, but this is a relatively new area for Apple. So, I wouldn't be surprised to have this user experience improved over time. We did only just recently get the ability to download files from the web and access USB drives...
One consequence of the rush to mobile is that the ability to run iOS Apps on an ASi Mac is, now, probably more valuable than the lost(-ish*) ability to run Windows applications - at least in the consumer market. It's going to ensure that the Mac isn't frozen out of streaming services, banking apps, casual games etc. where "available for iOS & Android" is the new "Works with Windows!". Catalyst, on the other hand, sounds as if it still needs significant work by the developer to ensure compatibility and, while it might be a boon for developers who are already committed to supporting Mac I don't think it is going to unlock a load of iOS Apps.
Honestly, I can't think of a single iPadOS app that I'd have a better experience using unmodified on an Apple Silicon Mac than I would on an actual iPad. I can see iOS iPhone apps being better on an Apple Silicon Mac than on an iPad, but neither as good as the native device it was intended to be used on. Consumers may enjoy having some of their apps on the Mac, but I don't believe that's going to make up for what you can do in Windows. Windows apps on a computer (even one with an Apple logo) make way more sense than tablet apps on a Mac. Have you ever used Android apps on a Chromebook? It's cool because a Chromebook is otherwise stuck with whatever you get out of Chrome and whatever you can sideload with CROSH. But unless that Chromebook has a touchscreen, the experience is awkward and disjointed. Given Apple's strong stance on touchscreens on a Mac, iOS and iPadOS apps on Apple Silicon Macs will be a nice half-way point for nudging developers towards Catalyst app development, but nothing more than that.
However, that might require Apple to swallow their pride and make a touchscreen Mac - or even a 2-in-1 "convertible" - to make iOS Apps more usable because, inconvenient truth: designing a touchscreen App is different from designing a Pointer/Keyboard-driven app. Frankly, it's high time they did: the Surface Pro and 2-in-1s are high-profile competition to the iPad Pro and MacBook. Even if people end up using them as one or the other, it is likely to influence their buying decision - and most competing PC laptops (i.e. higher-end ultrabooks with retina-class screens) have touchscreens anyway. The "gorilla arms" argument isn't wrong, but it is about having touch as the primary UI on a laptop/desktop - this is about having the flexibility to use touch with individual applications that work best that way.
So, anyway, I think the solutions to the iPad/Mac crossover problem will be either (a) buy both - with a lot of effort put into the way the iPad and Mac inter-work or (b) enjoy running iOS apps on your mac, but not vice-versa.
There won't be a cross-over. The experience using iOS and iPadOS apps on Apple Silicon macOS releases will be overrated. It's just a means to nudge developers towards Catalyst. Apple knows this and is hoping the message is sent accordingly.
Meanwhile, I've never quite seen the point of the 12" MacBook given how small and thin a 13" MacBook Air already is (and that was before the 2018 bezel shrink). Also, yes, I don't see the 2-port 13" MBP having a reason to exist alongside an ASi "MacBook Air" that has the potential to pack the same power.
12" MacBooks and 11" MacBook Airs before them did serve useful purposes. They're solid classroom computers for IT training, especially where desk-space is limited. But as a daily driver? Hell no. The 13" Air's current form factor is damn near perfect. It just sucks for x86. ARM64/Apple Silicon will be another story though.
A 13" MBP replacement will need to distinguish itself with more ports, a better class of display (whether it's 14" or 13") or a better class of CPU (not just a higher-binned variant of the basic ASi). If there is going to be an "Apple Silicon Pro" (which will probably be needed to replace the machines that currently have half-decent discrete GPUs) then using that as the distinction between "Pro" and non-"Pro" Macs would make things a lot clearer.
Right. The "13-inch MacBook Pro" concept as has existed in the Intel Mac era was mismarketed. It made way more sense when that machine was the "MacBook". If Apple structures the Apple Silicon portable lineup so that the Air is on the low-end, the "MacBook" at 14" is on the middle-end and the MacBook Pro, solely at 16" is on the high-end, that would make some sense. Similarly, if Apple gave the would-be 14" MacBook Pro most of, if not all of the power in the Apple Silicon 16" MacBook Pro, then at least it would earn "Pro" designation. The fact that the 2020 4-port 10th Gen Intel based 13" MacBook Pro at $1799 costs nearly $800 more than any other similarly (if not better) equipped 10th Gen 13" ultrabooks (because let's be real, even the best 13" MacBook Pro is just an over-glorified ultrabook) is kind of embarrassing.
(* There will probably be options for running Windows - Win10 for ARM maybe, x86 Windows under emulation/translation probably - but with a whole list of "ifs" and "buts" - I suspect that the practical answer will be to subscribe to a cloud-hosted virtual x86 machine via remote desktop...)
That's not practical given that most cloud-hosted virtual desktop providers charge per resources used times the amount of time used for. It's very sensible for businesses; it's horrible if you use Windows for personal use. It will require a second computer.
My predictions:
- iPad Pro: 6GB RAM still, even smaller bezels, no other notable outer changes, micro LED display
- Can’t decide if they will drop the iPad Pro 11” because of new iPad Air. I would say most likely not.
- MacBook Air will be dropped and replaced by simply, MacBook for first ARM device
- 24” iMac will be the other first ARM device. It will be entry level compared to 30” iMac that will come out next year.
- However, I believe the ‘entry level’ will still be better than the base 27” 2020 iMac
- Both new Macs will be unveiled this month, ship in December
1. iPad Pro will get A14X. But yeah, otherwise MicroLED is probably the only change.
2. They won't drop the 11" iPad Pro. It has 6GB of RAM to the Air's 4GB of RAM, also better screen and speaker system and FaceID. The two iPads will continue to exist side by side. You just won't have as many people going for the 11" iPad Pro due to not needing it. Though you'll always have people who don't need the extra umph of the 11" Pro still buying one because it's Apple and they want to blow their money on it.
3. "MacBook Air" isn't going anywhere. They tried to kill it (which is why the 2-port 13" MacBook Pro was a "MacBook Pro" and not "MacBook Air" when it was a continuation of the 2010-2017 MacBook Airs). Same with iPad Air. Then they reversed course. They're not going to flip-flop on this one again anytime soon.
4. The 24" iMac will be better than the 21.5" iMac it replaces. I don't believe it will be better than the 2020 27" iMac, but it will get close enough to turn heads.
5. We don't have an event day yet for iPhones or Apple Silicon Macs yet. Considering Apple would need at least a week lead time, we're looking at mid-month at the absolute earliest for announcement. Furthermore, no Apple Silicon Mac will get released before Big Sur is launched and we still have a little ways to go on that front too.