Archive for April 14, 2026

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

An Ultralight MacBook and Other Apple Silicon Roads Not Taken

John Gruber:

If I had my druthers, Apple would make a new svelte ultralight MacBook. Not instead of the Neo, but in addition to the Neo. Apple’s inconsistent use of the name “Air” makes this complicated, but the MacBook Neo is obviously akin to the iPhone 17e; the MacBook Air is akin to the iPhone 17 (the default model for most people); the MacBook Pros are akin to the iPhone 17 Pros. I wish Apple would make a MacBook that’s akin to the iPhone Air — crazy thin and surprisingly performant.

The biggest shortcoming of the decade-ago MacBook “One”, aside from the baffling decision to include just one USB-C port that was also its only means of charging, was the shitty performance of Intel’s Core M chips. Those chips were small enough and low-power enough to fit in the MacBook’s thin and fan-less enclosure, but they were slow as balls. It was a huge compromise for a laptop that carried a somewhat premium price. Today, performance, performance-per-watt, and physical chip size are all solved problems with Apple Silicon. I’d consider paying double the price of the Neo for a MacBook with similar specs (but more RAM and better I/O) that weighed 2.0 pounds or less. I’d buy such a MacBook not to replace my 14-inch MacBook Pro, but to replace my 2018 11-inch iPad Pro as my “carry around the house” secondary computer.

Mike Sax:

I want a MacBook Mini (12”). I’d be thrilled and impressed.

David Sparks:

If you’ve been waiting for Apple to make a truly ultralight Mac, something more premium, smaller, and yes, more expensive, the Neo isn’t that machine. The Neo is about accessibility and volume. It’s the MacBook for everyone.

I want the other thing.

[…]

The technology is ready. Apple silicon was basically designed for this. The question is whether Apple sees the market opportunity, or whether they think the Air (or whatever it becomes post-Neo) already fills that slot.

I don’t think it does.

Thomas Clement:

Actually looking for ultraportable ~1Kg (or less), whatever size makes this possible (13" I guess, even maybe 12").

Stephen Hackett:

Among the many sins Apple committed with the 12-inch MacBook is that it was priced like a mid-range laptop, confusing the product line. If Apple were to return to this market, slotting in an ultra-portable machine in a more premium price point would avoid that confusion and let Apple go wild with what it could do with such a machine.

Jason Snell:

As someone who has known and loved the 12-inch PowerBook, 11-inch MacBook Air, and even the 12-inch MacBook, I am sadly not convinced that this is a big enough segment for Apple to target when the MacBook Air exists.

And here’s the biggest reason I think a smaller laptop may never happen: Over the last decade, everything in macOS has gotten a bit bigger—not just OS elements, but even fundamentals of app design. When I was still using an 11-inch Air, I would often discover apps that couldn’t be resized to fit on my screen. The same happened with the retina MacBook. I’m afraid that the 13-inch display in the MacBook is probably as small as modern macOS and today’s Apple will reasonably go.

Dan Moren:

She, did, however knock the MacBook Neo on one hardware feature—or lack thereof. And no, it wasn’t the two USB-C ports or that one is slower than the other. It’s the lack of a touchscreen. That’s a feature that even budget PC laptops have had for a long time, and Apple—arguably the king of touchscreens!—has refused to bring to its computer platform.

Dan Moren:

Still lacking in any of Apple’s laptops, however, are cellular options, all the more apparent as the company touts its C1X modem in recently released iPhones and iPads. Might that finally find its way into a future MacBook?

Mr. Macintosh:

I know this is goofy thinking territory… but imagine if Apple actually wanted to make a run at the low‑price PC market

Neo could be the budget nameplate across the entire Mac lineup

Mac mini Neo: Apple TV case, A18 $299

iMac Neo: A18 Chip $899

William Gallagher and Mike Wuerthele:

Apple has all of the elements to make a “Mac Neo” Mac mini adjunct. There is proof of market demand, and proof in the company’s own historical trends.

[…]

Save incredible rendering power for the Max and Ultra chips. A19 Pro would be just fine for most uses, and faster than the M2 mini.

[…]

There is an argument that Apple could build a Mac Neo into the chassis of the Apple TV 4K. We’d very much like this.

Mr. Macintosh:

How could Apple not turn the Studio Display into the next generation 27" iMac?

Adam C. Engst:

[W]hat’s stopping Apple from turning this into a 27-inch iMac Neo besides a little storage? It probably couldn’t support all the ports in Mac mode, but that would make the $1600 a lot more palatable if you got a Mac with it.

Scott Hanselman:

The MacBook Neo uses an A18 Chip that is in my iPhone Pro Max, and it runs full macOS competently in eight gigs of RAM

I want to plug my iPhone into my thunderbolt dock and run macOS X.

It doesn’t seem like it’s a technical problem anymore, now it’s organizational willpower

benwiggy:

The cheapest iPhone (17e) is the same price as the MacBook Neo! (In the UK: both £599.) If Apple can make a laptop for that price, then surely a basic phone should be a fraction of that?

gabe:

Had a dream that Apple released a 32-inch MacBook, called the MacBook Pro Ultrawide, and it looked like this. I bought one and unlocked extreme productivity but then it wouldn’t fit into my backpack, so I had to leave it behind.

Saagar Jha:

So I needed a new trash can

Previously:

Modern FatBits Mode

Marcin Wichary:

Go to Settings > Accessibility > Zoom, and then turn on “Use scroll gesture with modifier keys to zoom.”

[…]

I’d also recommend turning off “Smooth images” under “Advanced…” so you see individual pixels better[…]

Over the years, I found this feature very useful to inspect various misalignments, to check visual details, and occasionally simply to read text that’s too small.

[…]

Peek gestures are fast, but the main benefit is that they’re safe. In some apps, pressing ⌘+ a few times and then ⌘– the matching amount of times doesn’t guarantee you will end up back in the same situation. The window size might change, the scroll position might move, the cursor might end up in a different place. In contrast, the Ctrl gesture is 100% deterministic and reversible; it will always work the same and never mess anything up.

John Gruber (Mastodon, previously):

This is one of the very best MacOS tips. No third-party software. Built into MacOS for several (many?) years now. Incredibly useful.

But I had no idea it existed until last June at WWDC.

A great feature that I rarely hear anyone talk about. It’s the perfect topic for the “Unsung” blog. I’m not sure how old this feature is, but I think I recall using it back when I had a Mighty Mouse. I think I could activate it one-handed using the side buttons?

These days, with a Magic Mouse, I use the Control-Option-Command modifier keys to avoid conflicts. It actually feels a bit more natural with a trackpad because you can use the same three-finger double-tap gesture to toggle the zoom level (it remembers where you left it) and to adjust the zoom. You can also quick-toggle the zoom when using the mouse, and it does let you use the same separate set of modifier keys as for zooming, but the problem with using modifier keys to toggle the zoom is that it conflicts. Any combination of modifier keys is also used by some keyboard shortcut that I use. When I press the bare modifiers as part of typing that keyboard shortcut, macOS doesn’t know that a letter key will be forthcoming, and it triggers an unwanted zoom.

Wichary has another great tip of using the Command-Shift-4 mode to measure distances on screen. Somehow I’ve never thought to do that—when were the numbers added? I do often use that mode to draw a temporary straight line to see whether two items are aligned. And, yes, this works in combination with the accessibility zoom.

Previously:

Only Time Will Tell

Marcin Wichary:

Why is there a short wait if you press a button on your headphone remote or your AirPods to pause the music? Because the interface has to let a bit of time pass to figure out if you’re going to press the button again, making it a double press (advance to next track) instead of a single press.

This kind of disambiguation delay is everywhere for simple gestures.

[…]

Why is there a short wait if you press a button to go to the next track on your car’s steering wheel? It’s a delay of a different kind, but the same principle: the function cannot kick in on press down, because press down and hold mean “fast forward.”