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Apple has been developing a more affordable version of the MacBook, and it's rumored to be launching in under two weeks. This is going to be one of Apple's most unique Macs, because there hasn't really been anything quite like it before.

Low-Cost-A18-Pro-MacBook-Feature-Pink.jpg

We've rounded up everything we know about the low-cost MacBook ahead of its March debut.

Design

Rumors about the MacBook's design make it sound a lot like the MacBook Air. It will have an aluminum chassis in various colors, and a 12.9-inch or 13-inch display, depending on the rumor.

Multicolored-Low-Cost-A18-Pro-MacBook-Feature.jpg

It's possible the low-cost MacBook will have a thin and light design because it's going to use a lower power A-series chip that doesn't require a lot of heat dissipation, but that's not yet confirmed. Apple used to have a 12-inch MacBook with a thin design and a low-power Core M chip, and it's been suggested that this new MacBook could be something of a revival of that machine.

Thinner and lighter typically means more expensive with Apple products, so a super slim design might not be what Apple is optimizing for. Making the low-cost MacBook thinner than the MacBook Air could just confuse the MacBook lineup.

With the low-cost iPad, Apple keeps the price down by using older display technology that's not as thin, so we could see that same strategy with the low-cost MacBook. A thicker chassis and a super efficient chip could mean a long battery life, which would be ideal for an educational environment.

Colors

The MacBook is going to come in a selection of fun colors, and Apple has tested light yellow, light green, blue, pink, silver, and dark gray, according to Bloomberg. Not all of those colors are likely to ship, but it sounds like we'll get at least four of them.

Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo thinks the MacBook will come in yellow, silver, blue, and pink, which would be the same colors that Apple offers for the iPad.

A-Series Chip

The most consistent rumor we've heard about the MacBook is its planned chip. Rather than an M-series Mac chip, Apple is planning to use an A-series chip. The low-cost MacBook is expected to use the A18 Pro chip, which Apple first debuted in the iPhone 16 Pro.

A18-Pro-Chip.jpg

The A18 Pro uses a second-generation 3-nanometer process. It has a 6-core CPU with four performance cores and two efficiency cores, along with a 6-core GPU and a 16-core Neural Engine for AI-based tasks. In Geekbench benchmarks, the A18 Pro has an average single-core score of 3451, and a multi-core score of 8572. For comparison, the M4 iPad Pro earns a single-core score of 3694 and a multi-core score of 13732 (Apple's next MacBook Air is going to use the M4 chip).

The A18 Pro outperforms the M1, which is the chip that Apple kept around in a lower-cost version of the MacBook Air for several years. An A18 MacBook wouldn't be too far off from the M4 Mac/iPad chips in terms of single-core performance, but there would be a difference in multi-core performance.

A MacBook with the A18 chip would be more than powerful enough for day-to-day use like web browsing, document creation, watching videos, and even light photo and video editing. It won't be ideal for system-intensive games or tasks like 4K video editing and 3D rendering, but it will do almost everything an iPhone or iPad can do.

Apple is developing the low-cost MacBook with students in mind, and it sounds like it will be the Apple equivalent of the affordable Chromebook PCs that are often used by students.

RAM

Macs start with 16GB RAM, but the iPhone 16 Pro has 8GB RAM, the minimum for Apple Intelligence. We can expect an A18 Pro MacBook to have at least 8GB RAM so it can support Apple Intelligence, but it's possible Apple will give it the 16GB that all Macs have.

Storage

The MacBook Air starts with 256GB of storage, but Apple could possibly launch the low-cost MacBook with 128GB.

Ports

The A18 Pro chip in the iPhone 16 Pro models doesn't support Thunderbolt, so the MacBook will be limited to USB-C (10GB/s) and won't offer Thunderbolt speeds. That will limit display connectivity, so it's likely the A18 Pro MacBook will only support a single external display.

Naming

It's not really clear what Apple will name the low-cost Mac notebook. We have the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro, so it's entirely possible it will be called "MacBook." Apple has used the MacBook name multiple times in the past, and it's not in use at the moment.

Price

Pricing on the MacBook Air starts at $999, and the low-cost MacBook is expected to be priced much lower.

Apple probably won't want to undercut its iPad pricing by too much. The low-cost iPad with A16 chip starts at $349, and the iPad Air with M2 chip starts at $599. A price between $599 and $799 could make the most sense because it wouldn't be as expensive as the MacBook Air or iPad Pro, but would come in at or just over the iPad Air's cost.

$599 would be on par with some of the highly rated Chromebook options that people often purchase for school use, while a $699 or $799 price would be in the same general pricing area, but a little more of a premium price tag. $599 is also the cost of the iPhone 16e, Apple's most affordable iPhone that uses a slightly less powerful A18 chip.

Launch Date

Rumors suggest that the low-cost MacBook will be introduced at or just before Apple's March 4 Special Experience that's taking place in New York, London, and Shanghai. Apple could announce the MacBook in a press release ahead of the experience.

Select members of the media have been invited to the mini event, and it's likely to provide them with a chance to try the new MacBook and other new devices.

Article Link: Apple's Low-Cost Colorful MacBook: All the Rumors
 
I think it is likely to have 12GB RAM, the biggest currently available in an A-series chip. It doesn't make sense for a Mac to have less RAM than an iPhone.

I also think the device will be quite slim through having a smaller battery. Smaller means cheaper, and not having the cheapest MacBook outlasting the more expensive models because the lower chip won't use as much power.
 
I think it is likely to have 12GB RAM, the biggest currently available in an A-series chip. It doesn't make sense for a Mac to have less RAM than an iPhone.

I also think the device will be quite slim through having a smaller battery. Smaller means cheaper, and not having the cheapest MacBook outlasting the more expensive models because the lower chip won't use as much power.

Macs have been lagging behind iPhones in a wide range of hardware areas for a long time now.
 
I'm already excited for the various podcasters who are going to claim, for a few weeks, how this can be their "only" and they could "never go back" to something larger and heavier.
And there’s very likely a lot of truth in that.
The A18 can do basic 4K video editing no problem, pretty much anyone currently using an M1, M1Pro or M2 *could* get all of their work done just fine on this new MB, just like how pretty much anyone who has an iPad Pro would get by just fine with an iPad 11 or anyone with an iPhone 17 Pro Max can get by just fine with a 16e…

(they'll all be done with that within a couple weeks)
And who cares? Let them use whatever makes them happy, no need to kill someone’s buzz.
 
I also think the device will be quite slim through having a smaller battery. Smaller means cheaper, and not having the cheapest MacBook outlasting the more expensive models because the lower chip won't use as much power.
Yes, but to be fair, the idle wattage of the A18 is about 1/3 that of an M1.
So even with a smaller battery, it will likely still get somewhere between 15 and 18 hours of usage.
 
And there’s very likely a lot of truth in that.
The A18 can do basic 4K video editing no problem, pretty much anyone currently using an M1, M1Pro or M2 *could* get all of their work done just fine on this new MB, just like how pretty much anyone who has an iPad Pro would get by just fine with an iPad 11 or anyone with an iPhone 17 Pro Max can get by just fine with a 16e…


And who cares? Let them use whatever makes them happy, no need to kill someone’s buzz.

"I switched to the new Macbook!!!*"

*loaner review unit
 
"I switched to the new Macbook!!!*"

*loaner review unit
This will be some, this won’t be others.
Tailosive Tech has said he has never received a review unit from Apple, and when he reviewed the M1 several years ago it outperformed his iMac Pro.
But he still kept and continued to use the iMac Pro because he preferred it.
Again, no need to kill someone’s buzz, if they want to use a speced out MacBook Pro to do tasks then even they admit would be just fine on an A18 MacBook, it’s their money.
 
This is going to be one of Apple's most unique Macs, because there hasn't really been anything quite like it before.
Rumors about the MacBook's design make it sound a lot like the MacBook Air.
Apple used to have a 12-inch MacBook with a thin design and a low-power Core M chip, and it's been suggested that this new MacBook could be something of a revival of that machine.

Got it. Just like their previous MacBooks only completely different.
 
I agree with this assessment. It's probably not a lighter design, if you were to go by the iPad line-up.

I think they are going for that, if this iPad line-up is working well enough.
 
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Choose your favourite

1) MacBook
2) MacBook Go
3) MacBook e
4) MacBook Mini (it will be a 12", trust me)
I actually really like the name “MacBook SE”.
It stands out, it gives the computer its own identity (which “MacBook” on its own does not), and it can be seen as a little throwback to the “Macintosh SE” from the 80s.
Unfortunately, given the color palette is the same as the standard iPad, the chip is going to be the same as the standard iPad, the product it’s going to be positioned similarly to the standard iPad, the name they will probably go with is just “MacBook”.
Which is fine in its own nostalgic way but a bit bland.
 
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