Might as well start this one. 2020 is surely the year of the redesign.
The main problem I have with waiting at this point is that the very fact that they engineered a fourth generation butterfly keyboard with new materials tells me that they’re not getting rid of that keyboard garbage anytime soon.
To be fair, it‘s not out of question that we do get that supposed 16“ MacBook Pro this year.
The main problem I have with waiting at this point is that the very fact that they engineered a fourth generation butterfly keyboard with new materials tells me that they’re not getting rid of that keyboard garbage anytime soon.
The way I see it, these keyboard issues won’t be resolved until they move past the current butterfly mechanism, which is probably something that happens with a re-design (e.g., new chassis)
TBH I'm not sure, but I also don't think that it's out of question it has the same CPU/GPU specs as the current 15" model. A lot of people are fine with the specs on offer, they just want changes in other areas (a new design, a 4K screen or at least a screen with a full 2:1 conversion ratio for the resolution, 120Hz, a new keyboard, thinner bezels, Face ID, more T3 ports, the next successor of the T2 chip that takes up even more functions, the new USB-C MagSafe connector patent that we saw floating around a while ago, ...).What kind of hardware would you expect from in this MacBook Pro? Surely you don't think that they would release a new chassis with otherwise identical internal specs? The reason why I am asking is because for the foreseeable future, there won't be any new hardware that the MBP could be updated with (maybe AMD Navi in early autumn, who knows).
You guys will be waiting for this for a while. Apple's commitment to butterfly is obvious. A next-gen MBP will most likely use some sort of variation on the butterfly switch. So if you deeply dislike the feel of this type of keyboard, might as well jump the ship now. If you are instead worried about reliability, it's just an engineering issue that will be solved earlier or later. Might have even been solved with today's update.
It does seem like a major change in the key mechanism is required (including the possibility of reverting the previous design). We’ll have to wait and see with these 2019 MBPs.
To be fair, it‘s not out of question that we do get that supposed 16“ MacBook Pro this year
But thats the thing, there is just no reliable info to go with. Aside anecdotal reports we still don't know how often the keyboard actually fails. Apple sells millions and millions of these laptops per year, there will be keyboard failures no matter what. There is simply no way to know whether it's "fixed".
I would think a new 16” MBP is indeed out of question for 2019 because there are no new CPU models suitable for a 16” laptop this year except for the ones already used on the new 2019 MBP. With a 15” model having the i9-9980HK I don’t see Apple releasing a re-designed higher end laptop that carries the same CPU as the 15” MBP with the older design.
As I've argued in a comment slightly above yours, I don't think it's impossible that the rumored 16" could release with the same internal specs as the current 15", because these are not what a redesign is about. There will always be people who want the best specs and highest performance they can get, and the current 2019 refresh is for them – it's for bringing the newest CPUs in the hands of buyers as soon as possible. But an overwhelming (and steadily increasing) part of the user base just doesn't care that much about raw speeds and performance anymore, as we live in a time where even the lower end CPUs are sufficiently fast for an overwhelming amount of use-cases and applications, and where throwing more performance at it doesn't make a noticeable difference in their user experience for them. If a CPU is fast enough for you, it's fast enough for you, it's as simple as that.I would think a new 16” MBP is indeed out of question for 2019 because there are no new CPU models suitable for a 16” laptop this year except for the ones already used on the new 2019 MBP. With a 15” model having the i9-9980HK I don’t see Apple releasing a re-designed higher end laptop that carries the same CPU as the 15” MBP with the older design.
I still wouldn't be completely surprised if we see the 16" redesign later this year as an ultra high end machine (though does now look somewhat less likely) maybe alongside the Mac Pro. Apple aren't adverse to adding new product categories at higher starting price points (iPhone X; iPad pros). It's a way of helping recoup the R&D costs before rolling the design out fully across the lineup. Navi GPUs would be a good excuse to debut it, particularly as they've left the 555X in the base Pro (I was somewhat expecting the lower stock model to get the 560X and the upper sock model to get the Vega 16).