What I am saying here is how can Apple justify the $500 difference between 24" vs 27" at the same 218 ppi? One was released 2021 vs the other in 2014?
I think this makes an assumption that Apple has to justify it at all and I’m arguing they don’t and they wouldn’t. And yes, I do think 2021 vs 2014 would be just as good of a reason as anything.
Look, until 13 months ago, Apple sold brand-new $1600 laptops with 8GB of RAM of non-upgradable RAM, the same way they had been selling $1600 laptops with 8GB of RAM of non-upgradable RAM since 2012. And people on this website
still defended them and I even saw people argue that really, with inflation, we were all getting our base amounts of RAM and storage for just amazing prices.
At what price point though? Will Apple support it at today's 6K standard of support? Does today's macOS on M4 model Macs support 8K displays better than today's Win11 on the latest 5nm x86 chips & 5nm Nvidia GPUs?
I’m not Nostradamus but I imagine in 5 years, 8K will be the equivalent of what 4K was 6- 7 years ago (so attainable, on the cusp of being a standard). That’s how progress works. This will all be driven by content (as it always is) so if there aren’t a lot of 8K video, and 8K TVs and 8K upscaled games, we won’t see the displays. It will come to TVs first (after tablets and phones as another poster said), and TV makers love 8K because it’s a way to convince people they really need an 80” screen in their house you can see skin cells on or something.
4K TVs got very cheap, very quickly and then that proliferated down to monitors — so that’s what I’m watching here. How long before 8K TVs become attainable and then it will shift into other displays.
But like
@tenthousandthings, I also expect almost all our displays to be OLED or even whatever comes after OLED. And if anything a move to OLED will just in increase how quickly we go from TVs to monitors, because they’ll be able to use some of the same materials, as opposed to still segmenting into IPS.
I definitely don’t think current macOS supports 8K — assuming you could get access to a reference monitor or a TV — as well as Windows/Nvidia do, but in theory the M4 supports
The Acer PE0 ("ProCreator") series 5K and 6K press release was May 2025. But the 31.5" 4K 240Hz was announced at
CES 2025. You're probably thinking of the ASUS ProArt, where the 5K was available a year ahead of the 6K and 8K.
I really thought I was thinking of some display that was directly targeted at Mac users, and I could’ve sworn it was Acer, but it may have actually been one of their creator laptops. No idea!
Interesting. I had a 2017 27" iMac, and recall when the gap between MacMini updates was so long a number of people speculated Apple had written it off, so I suspect the iMac was the leader seller amongst Macs by a large margin, and most of those were 27" if you are correct (and I've no reason to doubt that).
So, if even the lead seller amongst Macs didn't sell 'enough,' I have to wonder what that means for how Apple chooses to manage the Mac line.
Yeah, Apple always led me to believe the 27” was the one iMac they sold in real volume. Lots to schools, to offices, to families. But as
@tenthousandthings eloquently said, I don’t think that Apple quite anticipated some of its use cases (a lot of creatives who or prosumers who used it as a great monitor and a very good, if not Mac Pro level, computer) and when it did do an iMac Pro, I think it gave us the worst of everything. Perhaps it is unfair and irrational, but I blame the failure of the iMac Pro (which was really just a very late reaction to the failure of the 2013 Mac Pro) on why Apple just exited the segment, and just did a redesign of the kitchen computer. Or maybe the plan was to try to make the ASD the new 27” iMac but they couldn’t get the thermals or whatever to work. Who knows.
But the Mac mini as you note, is the interesting anomaly across the desktop history. As you said, they’d go through eras of just never updating it ever — and then eras of it being a great value. Heck, before the 27” iMac came out I remember people pairing Mac minis with various Apple Cinema Displays. The late-2009 iMac was my college graduation gift to myself, so I could never afford that matchup earlier, but I recall people doing that.
I wonder if the secret was the datacenter. Even pre-Apple Silicon, the company I work for quite literally has custom server racks for all the minis we use to serve some of our custom compute products in our data centers — thousands of them — and I’m sure we’re not even close to the cloud company that has the most minis. And that only accelerated post Apple silicon, where the mini was an even stronger compute performer (and Apple cracked down even more on licensing usage). The current Mac mini is so small and so powerful relative to its price, honestly, I absolutely believe it would be more popular than an updated iMac — but that definitely didn’t seem that way in 2021 when the iMac redesign happened.
But maybe it was that simple: “we can sell tens of thousands of minis to data centers and we won’t ever sell the displays in that volume.” And for all my complaints about the death of the iMac for me, at least Apple
did give us a very good prosumer/professional desktop in the Mac Studio. I was always a Mac Pro admirer, but Apple kept doubling the price as soon as it became something I could reasonably budget for, and when faced with spending my annual computing budget on one Mac Pro, or on a iMac and a phone and a tablet, or a laptop and a phone and a tablet, I chose what I chose.
Although I keep buying laptops, the Mac Studio is sort of my perfect desktop. And now that I have two 6K displays, I might more seriously consider getting one for personal stuff, alongside a MacBook Air, instead of my current cycle of just spending way too much on a 14” laptop that I often use as a desktop anyway.
Apple sort of lucked into the value, as it were, of using Mac minis and Studios for AI inference, and so I expect they are probably selling for more desktops today than in the 2010s.
Also, I totally agree with you on the surprise we haven’t seen a more aesthetic Mac mini mounts for the ASD or really any monitor.
I had two Retina iMacs, a 2015 and a 2017. I replaced a perfectly good machine to get an improved panel in 2017. I think, also in 2017, Apple admitted the 27" iMac was being used in ways that they hadn't anticipated. They didn't understand. The iMac Pro really illustrated that, I think. Like you, I spent ~$4,000 (including the cost of high-quality, third-party RAM) each time, so the base iMac Pro at $5,000 wasn't wildly out of reach, but I didn't see the point.
Yeah! I was in a similar scenario — I did buy the 2017 iMac in June or July of 2017 — and I probably would’ve done a base model iMac Pro had it been available at the same time, but as it was, I really didn’t need the power of that iMac Pro. And 3 years later, as I was debating my final Intel Mac, I was looking at the Mac Pro (2019) and a fully specced out iMac and honestly, what I did was to buy the iMac AND then I built a high-end gaming PC that I could also use for Docker and the then-burgeoning AI stuff, and that made more sense. Use the iMac as an iMac (and a great one), use the PC for games and some coding and streaming stuff. Plus it was 2020, and building computers was one of the only things keeping me sane.
Back to the display convo — with the disclosure that I just got two $2000 monitors for free (that I haven’t been able to setup because I injured my neck and I need to wait for a part from Ergotron for my desk) — my plan pre-contest was to order a Kuycon or LG and see how it goes. That said, for value, I think it looks like the Acer in 5K and 6K, might not be the “nicest” monitors in terms of fit snd finish, but the price is extremely, extremely compelling.