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The MacRumors Show: MacBook Neo First Impressions

On this week's episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss first impressions of the MacBook Neo, Studio Display XDR, and iPhone 17e.


Following its announcement last week, the ‌MacBook Neo‌ arrived this week. Unlike every other Apple silicon Mac, the ‌MacBook Neo‌ is powered by the A18 Pro chip originally developed for the iPhone 16 Pro, making it the first Mac to use an iPhone-class processor instead of an M-series chip.

To reach its substantially lower price point, the ‌MacBook Neo‌ makes some compromises. Unlike the MacBook Air, it does not feature keyboard backlighting, a haptic trackpad, P3 wide color, True Tone, ambient light sensing, a camera indicator LED, MagSafe charging, Thunderbolt connectivity, or a 12-megapixel camera with Center Stage, nor does it come with Touch ID as standard. It is also thicker with a slightly reduced battery life, and has larger borders around the slightly smaller display.

That being said, it is $500 cheaper than a ‌MacBook Air‌ and is designed to compete with lower-cost Windows laptops and Chromebooks, while expanding the Mac lineup with a substantially more affordable option. We talk through the real-world impact of some of these compromises, including performance with the A18 Pro chip and 8GB of memory.

The ‌iPhone 17e‌ retains the same design and price as the iPhone 16e but adds the A19 chip, ‌MagSafe‌ support, Apple's second-generation C1X modem, and 256GB of base storage. Apple also introduced a new ‌Studio Display‌ XDR model, replacing the Pro Display XDR. The new model offers a 27-inch 5K mini-LED panel with up to a 120Hz refresh rate, HDR brightness up to 2,000 nits, and Thunderbolt 5 connectivity. We compare both of these new products to their predecessors, as well as the ‌iPhone 17e‌ and the ‌iPhone 16‌ as the two lowest-cost iPhones on sale today.

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Related Roundup: MacBook Neo
Buyer's Guide: MacBook Neo (Buy Now)
Related Forum: MacBook Neo

Top Rated Comments

Chet-NYC Avatar
3 weeks ago
So I'm sitting here in a high school where I'm substitute teacher. (I worked here as a regular teacher for 32 years before retiring in 2017.)

The Neo became available on Wednesday. I've already seen two students and two teachers with one. Another teacher said they planned to get one this weekend.

It's just anecdotal, but the Neo is going to be a huge seller. I got to play with one in an Apple Store yesterday, and I was quite impressed. No, you aren't going to be running virtual machines all over the place on it, but that's not what the Neo is designed for.
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ProMotionPotato Avatar
3 weeks ago

Spoiler alert: It's a cheaper, less premium MacBook using commodity parts.
That’s a category error. The Neo isn’t built from commodity parts in the usual PC sense. A commodity laptop means Intel/AMD CPU, third party motherboard design, Windows license, ODM chassis, etc. The Neo is the opposite of that model with custom silicon, vertically integrated OS, and Apple designed hardware. Calling that “commodity” misunderstands the architecture completely.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
3 weeks ago

To reach its substantially lower price point, the MacBook Neo makes some compromises
There were no compromises. The machine is what is. A compromise is buying blush because yellow was not available.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
tripleburst Avatar
3 weeks ago

There were no compromises. The machine is what is. A compromise is buying blush because yellow was not available.
Yup. The specs were set to the limits allowed by the A18Pro.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
3 weeks ago
I tried the Neo yesterday in my local shop and it took me back a long time ago when I use to own a MacBook … It’s not for me but was impressed … Long live the Neo line …
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
AppleWes Avatar
3 weeks ago

There were no compromises. The machine is what is. A compromise is buying blush because yellow was not available.
Thank you!

I'm so tired of hearing the word "compromise" thrown around about Neo. It's like everyone ignores the fact Apple still sells Air and Pro (similar to regular vs pro iPad / iPhone.)

I guess they expect MacBook Pro level for the same $599
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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