• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Apple to Turn Up Heat with $799 MacBook Air

Joined
Jul 1, 2005
Messages
5,197 (0.75/day)
Location
Kansas City, KS
System Name Dell XPS 15 9560
Processor I7-7700HQ
Memory 32GB DDR4
Video Card(s) GTX 1050/1080 Ti
Storage 1TB SSD
Display(s) 2x Dell P2715Q/4k Internal
Case Razer Core
Audio Device(s) Creative E5/Objective 2 Amp/Senn HD650
Mouse Logitech Proteus Core
Keyboard Logitech G910
It will be Intel Atom powered Macbook :laugh:

Apple will never use an Atom until it can beat a basic Core2duo. As much as people would like to believe, they do care about baseline performance, unlike most vendors. They would use ARM running IOS first; apps are not currently being compiled in any universal form (arm7 in xcode currently).
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
Not really. Apple and AMD have been buddies on a lot of things recently. Intel has not supplied the performance on the GPU front to Apple's liking either. Plus there has been some friction as Intel behaves like...Intel.

Last year it was posted that Apple was indeed looking into APUs but wasn't satisfied with Llano. Trinity would be a likely choice. Apple sure isn't going to do a $700 laptop with Intel without really delivering poor performance. Competitors would have a big edge since they already have i7s in the same price bracket.

I wouldn't be surprised to see Trinity make a big debut in Apple machines with a lot of deals between Apple and AMD. If Apple wants it enough, they'll push for it and I don't see AMD saying "no" to Apple right now. A deal like that would also help AMD gain a lot of attention. Both sides would come out winner with a Trinitybook. Heck I'd buy one.



This doesn’t change the fact that Apple went with Intel solutions for CPU / GPU with their current generation of Mac Book Air products and therefore Apple’s needs and standards were met. Intel Ivy Bridge and its included Intel HD 4000 graphics is a very likely future hardware configuration for next gen Mac Book Air (or some subset / derivative). This allows for a progression (improvement) of the graphics even if it is incremental.

The focus of the Mac Book Air isn’t excellent graphics. I don’t think people who are buying such products want or need the graphics people are suggesting here. Sometimes its easy to get cough up in the product one wants rather then the product niche that is on offer.

BTW, with Intel Thunderbolt, its theoretically possible to provide desktop like GPU performance with an external card,...but again I dont think AIR focuses on users who want this type of graphics.

Also, its $799 or ~$800 not $700.

Still anything could happen I guess. Apple did drop nVidia like a bad habit so they are apt to do an about-face whenever it suits them.
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2005
Messages
5,197 (0.75/day)
Location
Kansas City, KS
System Name Dell XPS 15 9560
Processor I7-7700HQ
Memory 32GB DDR4
Video Card(s) GTX 1050/1080 Ti
Storage 1TB SSD
Display(s) 2x Dell P2715Q/4k Internal
Case Razer Core
Audio Device(s) Creative E5/Objective 2 Amp/Senn HD650
Mouse Logitech Proteus Core
Keyboard Logitech G910
The focus of the Mac Book Air isn’t excellent graphics. I don’t think people who are buying such products want or need the graphics people are suggesting here. Sometimes its easy to get cough up in the product one wants rather then the product niche that is on offer.

Still anything could happen I guess. Apple did drop nVidia like a bad habit so they are apt to do an about-face whenever it suits them.

There are strong rumors stating Apple had considered AMD options up until last minute, including working prototypes.

However, for the current CPU power, AMD is failing miserably in the Power consumption and actual computing power. The -only- current reason is GPU power. Of which holds little value, for a MBA design. Apple isn't trying to pretend it can play games, its just flat out not intended to. It's intended to be ultra portable, providing as much as they can within their portability baseline.

Granted, the intel HD video barely squeaks past Apple's approval, because it really is awful, AMD just cannot compete currently.
 
Joined
Mar 9, 2012
Messages
213 (0.05/day)
System Name "Da Krawnik Six Hunnit"
Processor Intel i5 2500K @ 4.6GHz
Motherboard ASUS P8P67 EVO (B3)
Cooling H100i w/2x Bitfenix Spectre Pros + Bitfenix Spectre Pro Blue LED 1x 200mm + 1x 120mm
Memory Patriot Intel Extreme Masters Limited Edition 8GB (2x4GB) 1600MHz
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 @ 1491MHz (Actual Boost) / 7.6GHz
Storage Samsung 840 EVO 250GB + 2x WD Green 2TB + 1x WD Green 1TB
Display(s) BenQ XL2430T 144Hz
Case Corsair 600T w/full custom 1/2" acrylic side panel
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Pro
Power Supply Coolermaster Silent Pro 850w
Mouse Roccat Kone XTD (laser)
Keyboard Corsair K65 RGB
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores Couldn't care less about benchmark scores.
Jobs is turning in his grave right now.
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
522 (0.12/day)
There are strong rumors stating Apple had considered AMD options up until last minute, including working prototypes.

However, for the current CPU power, AMD is failing miserably in the Power consumption and actual computing power. The -only- current reason is GPU power. Of which holds little value, for a MBA design. Apple isn't trying to pretend it can play games, its just flat out not intended to. It's intended to be ultra portable, providing as much as they can within their portability baseline.

Granted, the intel HD video barely squeaks past Apple's approval, because it really is awful, AMD just cannot compete currently.

with trinity amd went a long way in terms of efficiency, and note that graphics with gpgpu capability is a totaly win for apple, since apple has its inhouse mac os and can optimize and its software much easier, in other words apple can take advantage of open cl much faster than the rest of the industry mostly because the rest of the industry is led by many other players/factors while apple pretty much runs the show for mac os
also with adobe CS6 supporting opencl i wont be surprised at all ;) if anyone buys apple its the graphic designers! and with open cl support/acceleration on cs6 graphic designers will be very pleased with an amd APU
 
Joined
Jun 13, 2011
Messages
137 (0.03/day)
Location
Cheonan, South Korea
System Name Youtube Machine | Jellyfin Server | Not so retro PC
Processor Ryzen 5 5600X | Athlon 200GE | Athlon X2 270
Motherboard B550M DS3H | A320 Pro-VD/S | N68S-UCC
Cooling Hyper 212 Turbo | Stock Ryzen 5 cooler | Stock
Memory 32GB Klevv 3600mhz | 16GB Team 2666mhz | 2GB DDR2 800
Video Card(s) RX 6600 Eagle | Vega whatever igp | HD 7770
Storage 2x SX8200Pro 512gb | 8TB of scavenged HDDs | 1tb laptop hdd
Display(s) rmmnt30hfcw + S24F350
Case CM Q300L | Old Pentium 4 PC Case | old case
Power Supply PA-5B1B | S12III | 1stplayer "80+" time bomb
Mouse Loigtech G502
Keyboard Corsair Strafe | $8 wireless MK combo
Software Win11 | OMV | WinXP
Benchmark Scores I don't like Gigabyte
Come on guys, don't take it too serious about atom stuff, I'm just kidding :laugh:
Btw if they realy make $800 macbook with i5, it will be nice, but I think it still unworthy if they just go with i3 and integrated graphics.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
with trinity amd went a long way in terms of efficiency, and note that graphics with gpgpu capability is a totaly win for apple, since apple has its inhouse mac os and can optimize and its software much easier, in other words apple can take advantage of open cl much faster than the rest of the industry mostly because the rest of the industry is led by many other players/factors while apple pretty much runs the show for mac os
also with adobe CS6 supporting opencl i wont be surprised at all ;) if anyone buys apple its the graphic designers! and with open cl support/acceleration on cs6 graphic designers will be very pleased with an amd APU


I’m sure Intel has AMD hardware somewhere in the bowels of their labs, I’m sure Microsoft has Linux distributions and Mac hardware in their labs. Apple likely has Windows running in some of their labs as well. All of it can be justified as well but that doesn’t necessarily mean that we will see products come to market because of it (although we likely do in many cases such as iTunes for Windows for example).

Generally speaking it isn’t surprising IMO for Apple to evaluate AMD hardware and to develop early prototypes for in-house evaluation.

I may have said before, its been rumored that Apple will be releasing iOS on an ARM device in a Mac Book Air form factor but it has also been rumored that Apple will migrate OS X to ARM hardware. I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple has this running in labs now but again that doesn’t mean we will ever see product released. But then again it was also rumored that Apple was moving OS X to an x86 platform and that did come to pass,…
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2005
Messages
5,197 (0.75/day)
Location
Kansas City, KS
System Name Dell XPS 15 9560
Processor I7-7700HQ
Memory 32GB DDR4
Video Card(s) GTX 1050/1080 Ti
Storage 1TB SSD
Display(s) 2x Dell P2715Q/4k Internal
Case Razer Core
Audio Device(s) Creative E5/Objective 2 Amp/Senn HD650
Mouse Logitech Proteus Core
Keyboard Logitech G910
I may have said before, its been rumored that Apple will be releasing iOS on an ARM device in a Mac Book Air form factor but it has also been rumored that Apple will migrate OS X to ARM hardware. I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple has this running in labs now but again that doesn’t mean we will ever see product released. But then again it was also rumored that Apple was moving OS X to an x86 platform and that did come to pass,…

TBH its not really much of a rumor. ARM is just pitifully weak, compared to x86. Once it hits critical mass, it will happen. Theres already many parallel tracks from Apple and Microsoft to migrate.

Just a matter of hardware catching up now.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
TBH its not really much of a rumor. ARM is just pitifully weak, compared to x86. Once it hits critical mass, it will happen. Theres already many parallel tracks from Apple and Microsoft to migrate.

Just a matter of hardware catching up now.

I don’t like to talk in terms of absolutes if I can help it,……most of the time that is. I much prefer probabilities and likelihoods.

I don’t have a crystal ball with the ability to look into the future so I wont say, for example, that Ivy Bridge will definitely be the bases of the next gen Mac Book Air. I’ll just say, given the history of Apple’s recent products, it is very likely that Ivy Bridge will be the platform of choice for the Mac Book Air as well as the Mac Book Pro, iMac and Mac Mini. Clearly not the iPad though,….for obvious reasons.

In terms of ARM and its future I suspect it looks very bright. ARM will probably spread like a virus. However, Intel is clearly looking to derail the ARM initiative by hook or by crook. Intel clearly isn’t all powerful but they have quite a bit of money and a vested interest motivating them so I wouldn’t be keen on counting those chickens before they have hatched. Intel is definitely looking to provide alternatives to the ARM platform and stem the tide. I personally wouldn’t want a company with Intel’s resources breathing down my neck.

Even if they are tardy to the party, Intel knows their prosperity could be in serious gyp-parody,…I mean “jeopardy”.

I’m not a betting man so I wouldn’t care to wager either way because what seems like a sure thing may not be.
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
522 (0.12/day)
I’m sure Intel has AMD hardware somewhere in the bowels of their labs, I’m sure Microsoft has Linux distributions and Mac hardware in their labs. Apple likely has Windows running in some of their labs as well. All of it can be justified as well but that doesn’t necessarily mean that we will see products come to market because of it (although we likely do in many cases such as iTunes for Windows for example).

Generally speaking it isn’t surprising IMO for Apple to evaluate AMD hardware and to develop early prototypes for in-house evaluation.

I may have said before, its been rumored that Apple will be releasing iOS on an ARM device in a Mac Book Air form factor but it has also been rumored that Apple will migrate OS X to ARM hardware. I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple has this running in labs now but again that doesn’t mean we will ever see product released. But then again it was also rumored that Apple was moving OS X to an x86 platform and that did come to pass,…

well with intel going all out in marketing ultrabooks its just suspicious, especialy in the statements were they said "apple has to decide whether the macbook air is an ultrabook or not" and its like whaa? intel pretty much described the mac book air, and marketed it as ultrabook as their own. and such a move seems like a threat to apple which makes you wonder why, probably because intel felt that apple is getting too close to amd so they got quickly countered
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
well with intel going all out in marketing ultrabooks its just suspicious, especialy in the statements were they said "apple has to decide whether the macbook air is an ultrabook or not" and its like whaa? intel pretty much described the mac book air, and marketed it as ultrabook as their own. and such a move seems like a threat to apple which makes you wonder why, probably because intel felt that apple is getting too close to amd so they got quickly countered

The Mac Book Air is based on Intel hardware. If anything Apple is marketing Intel hardware as its own not the other way around. Switching to AMD would be no different in this respect. ARM as well, jumping from one skillet (frying pan or in this case manufacturer) to the next doesn’t change the fact that Apple is basing their products on another companies technology.

You have a point though, there were similar rumblings in the industry before Microsoft announced their Windows on ARM initiative. Companies don’t always get along though even if they are in bed together.
 
Joined
Mar 7, 2007
Messages
3,842 (0.61/day)
Location
Maryland
System Name HAL
Processor Core i9 13900k @5.8-6.1
Motherboard Z790 Arous master
Cooling EKWB Quantum Velocity V2 & (2) 360 Corsair XR7 Rads push/pull
Memory 2x 32GB (64GB) Gskill trident 6000 CL30 @28 1T
Video Card(s) RTX 4090 Gigagbyte gaming OC @ +200/1300
Storage (M2's) 2x Samsung 980 pro 2TB, 1xWD Black 2TB, 1x SK Hynix Platinum P41 2TB
Display(s) 65" LG OLED 120HZ
Case Lian Li dyanmic Evo11 with distro plate
Power Supply Thermaltake 1350
Software Microsoft Windows 11 x64
i understand the business strategy of entering into your competitors market to lower their sales, but are people really looking forward to windows 8? i mean seriously...

I know I'm not.. Use to be a day, when I looked forward to a new OS. Now it's like looking forward to a new line of CPU's... Minimal improvements, big price increases.. Not worth it..
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2005
Messages
5,197 (0.75/day)
Location
Kansas City, KS
System Name Dell XPS 15 9560
Processor I7-7700HQ
Memory 32GB DDR4
Video Card(s) GTX 1050/1080 Ti
Storage 1TB SSD
Display(s) 2x Dell P2715Q/4k Internal
Case Razer Core
Audio Device(s) Creative E5/Objective 2 Amp/Senn HD650
Mouse Logitech Proteus Core
Keyboard Logitech G910
The Mac Book Air is based on Intel hardware. If anything Apple is marketing Intel hardware as its own not the other way around. Switching to AMD would be no different in this respect. ARM as well, jumping from one skillet (frying pan or in this case manufacturer) to the next doesn’t change the fact that Apple is basing their products on another companies technology.

This is what apple wants, and needs.

Unlike HP/Dell/Etc, Apple is in it to sell the product experience, not just the hardware which is why so many people have a lot of issues with apple products.

More competition in the Ultrabook space forces innovation in hardware. Apple saw a unique way to utilize Intel's CPU's, took advantage of it, and intel was like "Hey! thats a fantastic idea!" and is now trying to improve it. Since the PC market will never actually innovate themselves, intel is trying to force their hand.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
This is what apple wants, and needs.

Unlike HP/Dell/Etc, Apple is in it to sell the product experience, not just the hardware which is why so many people have a lot of issues with apple products.

More competition in the Ultrabook space forces innovation in hardware. Apple saw a unique way to utilize Intel's CPU's, took advantage of it, and intel was like "Hey! thats a fantastic idea!" and is now trying to improve it. Since the PC market will never actually innovate themselves, intel is trying to force their hand.

I think Intel is keenly aware of what their own hardware and designs are capable of. I don’t think Apple did anything Intel wasn’t already well informed of in terms of the possibilities. Intel’s Ultrabook initiative isn’t very different from its Netbook initiative in that Intel never really had to get as involved as they did, they only needed to provide the platform (Processors, chipsets, recommended designs and so on).

You cannot build something like the Mac Book Air around a cinder block brick, Intel knows this and Apple knows it.
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
522 (0.12/day)
I think Intel is keenly aware of what their own hardware and designs are capable of. I don’t think Apple did anything Intel wasn’t already well informed of in terms of the possibilities. Intel’s Ultrabook initiative isn’t very different from its Netbook initiative in that Intel never really had to get as involved as they did, they only needed to provide the platform (Processors, chipsets, recommended designs and so on).

You cannot build something like the Mac Book Air around a cinder block brick, Intel knows this and Apple knows it.

well i know for a fact that apple was pissed off when intel blocked nvidia from making chipsets, because by doing so they were sorta cornered to use whatever intel wants or offers.
as much as we would like to deny things, intel IS almost running a monopoly, or keeps trying to do so, and is normal with capitalism as the main goal in competition is to knock the rival out and dominate the market, intel never succeeded in a complete monopoly but they sure had a monopoly with netbooks and ultrabooks untill amd came to the show and made brazos and now trinity for ULV

either way i would like to see OEM's rebelling a bit against intel to force it to change its ways a bit, we need better prices and more co-operation with the rest of the tech industry to bring out better platforms and technology
amd seem to be going in that approach with their decision to sell/buy IP with the rest of the industry and i think that is a move in the right direction as it benefits everyone
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
1,889 (0.32/day)
Processor RyZen R9 3950X
Motherboard ASRock X570 Taichi
Cooling Coolermaster Master Liquid ML240L RGB
Memory 64GB DDR4 3200 (4x16GB)
Video Card(s) RTX 3050
Storage Samsung 2TB SSD
Display(s) Asus VE276Q, VE278Q and VK278Q triple 27” 1920x1080
Case Zulman MS800
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Seasonic 650W
VR HMD Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest V1, Oculus Quest 2
Software Windows 11 64bit
well i know for a fact that apple was pissed off when intel blocked nvidia from making chipsets, because by doing so they were sorta cornered to use whatever intel wants or offers.
as much as we would like to deny things, intel IS almost running a monopoly, or keeps trying to do so, and is normal with capitalism as the main goal in competition is to knock the rival out and dominate the market, intel never succeeded in a complete monopoly but they sure had a monopoly with netbooks and ultrabooks untill amd came to the show and made brazos and now trinity for ULV

either way i would like to see OEM's rebelling a bit against intel to force it to change its ways a bit, we need better prices and more co-operation with the rest of the tech industry to bring out better platforms and technology
amd seem to be going in that approach with their decision to sell/buy IP with the rest of the industry and i think that is a move in the right direction as it benefits everyone


Well I would like to see more competition in this space too as it seems Intel is running virtually uncontested in such a high profile segment of the industry, which filters down to other corners of the industry as well (even if only in mindshare).

Competition on Intel's own platforms don't mean much to me though. While nVidia had some really interesting Intel chipsets there were some fairly poor ones from other manufactures. Third party chipsets have the potential to reflect poorly on Intel and it's this principle that helps justify (at least in my mind) the direction that Intel has taken. However, third party chipsets would at least diversify the gen pool so that chipset recalls (like the P67) wouldn't necessarily holdback the platform.

I don't know about companies like AMD, they aren't on the track I would like to see them on, at least not entirely.
 
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
522 (0.12/day)
Well I would like to see more competition in this space too as it seems Intel is running virtually uncontested in such a high profile segment of the industry, which filters down to other corners of the industry as well (even if only in mindshare).

Competition on intel's own platforms don't mean much to me though. While nVidia had some really interesting Intel chipsets there were some fairly poor ones from other manufactures. Third party chipsets have the potential to reflect poorly on Intel and it's this principle that helps justify (at least in my mind) the direction that Intel has taken. However, third party chipsets would at least diversify the gen pool so that chipset recalls (like the P67) wouldn't necessarily holdback the platform.

I don't know about companies like AMD, they aren't on the track I would like to see them on, at least not entirely.

well right now AMD's approach is to cooperate with the rest of the industry with solutions/technologies and move forward in harmony, and everyone benefits, thats what i understood with their opening their ip for third party move
intel on the other hand just wants to freaking dominate everything and use its platform to force even their poor products
so there was an ssd and memory movement? intel started making ssd's and are not forcing ssd's in order to be able to label an "ultrabook" which opens up a market they may benefit from, nvidia made motherboards? they cut that off and kept it inhouse only, which forced the industry to use their HORRIBLE graphics solution, and nvidia lost so much market share in the low end discrete graphics and that pretty much brought the whole graphics standard of the industry down as OEMs now have to supply intel chipsets in order to use intel cpu's and it would cost more to get nvidia or amd discrete graphics, when before they can just use an nvidia chipset that pretty much cost the same or even less than an intel chipset AND had much better graphics
and just a few weeks ago i saw an article about intel demanding high res screens in 2013-2014 when haswell and broadwell come out. why not now?? oh wait, because intel graphics arent capable! had it been up to nvidia or amd we would be running much higher resolutions already
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 17, 2009
Messages
2,558 (0.48/day)
Location
United States
System Name Aluminum Mallard
Processor Ryzen 1900x
Motherboard AsRock Phantom 6
Cooling AIO
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) EVGA 3080Ti FTW
Storage SSD
Display(s) Benq Zowie
Case Cosmos 1000
Audio Device(s) On Board
Power Supply Corsair CX750
VR HMD HTV Vive, Valve Index
Software Arch Linux
Benchmark Scores 31 FPS in Dalaran
I bet it'll be Trinity powered. Didn't AMD just come to Apple's defense against Samsung in a patent dispute?
 
Top