this post was submitted on 30 Jun 2025
18 points (95.0% liked)
Apple
913 readers
47 users here now
There are a couple of community rules in addition to the main instance rules.
All posts must be about Apple
Anything goes as long as it’s about Apple. News about other companies and devices is allowed if it directly relates to Apple.
No NSFW content
While lemmy.zip allows NSFW content this community is intended to be a place for all to feel welcome. Any NSFW content will be removed and the user banned.
If you have any comments or suggestions please message one of the moderators.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
LOL what?
That has nothing to do with processing power.
It could be? We don't know. I mean it probably won't be cheap but it'll also probably be a lot cheaper than a MacBook Air.
Dunno, have you used Win11? I have. It led me to uninstall windows
I mean yea, they’re a joke among the gaming community, because they’re Macs. They’ve been getting better at gaming than they were before but they’re decidedly not gaming machines. Most games don’t even run at all. For productivity work (and definitely day-to-day tasks like browsing the web) they’re definitely not underpowered. Even the worst, 5 y/o AppleSilicon (i.e. ARM powered) Macbook is a very decent daily driver and machine, even capable of light video editing, animation, coding, etc. (I would know, I have two and work in media)
And iPhones are far from being underpowered (for phones) either. Quite the opposite, being at or among the top of the phone-chip leaderboard for years now. The current A18 chip benchmarks similarly to a M1 chip in CPU and much higher in GPU workloads.
A cheaper MacBook with a lower powered chip would absolutely make sense. Of course, given they hit a competitive and affordable price point. This has the possibility to get much more people to buy a MacBook, not less. A brand new 600-700€ MacBook that has the same power as an M1 would absolutely sell like hot cakes. Heck, even used M1 MacBooks still sell very well on second hand markets.
And btw, proof that lower powered AppleSilicon Macs would totally work already exists. The dev kit that released before the M1 processor was powered by an A12Z iPad chip. It’s much slower than any current AppleSilicon Chip (and any M series chip) and even it performed perfectly well as a platform to develop and test apps on until M1 arrived.
But yes, it won’t be a gaming machine beyond the casual market. But for a student or as a family laptop, or anyone who just doesn’t need a whole lot of power…
Ok, but hear me out - what if it could play all of the ipad/iphone games AND steam games with full desktop controls like mice? That'd be interesting :D
I mean, in theory, you can already do that on AppleSilicon Macs. In practice, Apple’s Windows translation layer („Game Porting Toolkit“) isn’t particularly good yet