Mac to the future
Apple is at a turning point with Mac hardware – but just where could it go in the next five or 10 years? Let’s imagine…
WRITTEN BY ALEX COX
Future Macs could come in all kinds of shapes and sizes, including the G4 Cube-like Mac Pro mini.
For our latest subscription offer see page 32!
Apple silicon has changed the game. It is not Apple’s first big platform change – while it seems silly to include the 6502, the Mac has seen 68000, PowerPC and X86 chips before the M1 – but it is the most significant in, if not the Mac’s lifespan, at least a generation. The ARM64-based Apple silicon is a more flexible, versatile system-on-a-chip (SoC) processor, and crucially it is Apple designed…
A ‘MacPad’ could team an iPad-like tablet with a keyboard/battery base for extra oomph when you’re deskbound.
The M1 chip provides superior performance; in-house Apple silicon advances will continue to up the ante.
If there is anything Apple treasures more than anything, it is control over its own platforms. Apple silicon, starting with the M1 chip, gives the company precisely that. An almost entirely closed shop.
Apple has never been afraid of radical innovation
The MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and the Mac mini have gone M1. At the time of writing, a number of iMac models had also been killed off, suggesting the iMac will be next in line. The rumour mill suggests the Mac Pro (already behind M1 laptops in terms of rendering power) will get its refresh in 2022, with a Mac Pro mini also anticipated. After that? Apple has never been afraid of radical innovation, so why shouldn’t now be the jumping off point for a new generation of Mac hardware? There’s a lot to be learned from the changing direction of the PC, and much to be gained from incorporating mobile innovations. Let’s dust off the (admittedly rather scuffed) MacFormat crystal ball, and forsee what we’d like to see in the world of Mac. Real-world rumours swirl about a future MacBook with a completely non-mechanical keyboard, no scissor or butterfly switches, just a flat expanse of touchsensitive nothing. This sounds, frankly, like a horrible idea, so let’s start our journey into this imagined future with something better: the MacBook Touch, a laptop which puts fingers first.