Science Popular Mac Developer Slams Apple for 'Sad State of Macintosh Hardware'

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Rogue Amoeba developer Quentin Carnicelli, who works on Mac software like Airfoil, Audio Highjack, Loopback, and Fission, this week penned a critique of Apple's Mac lineup and the company's recent lack of Mac updates, and that missive has been gaining some attention from Mac fans.

Using MacRumors' own Buyer's Guide, Carnicelli points out that it's been more than a year since any Mac, with the exception of the iMac Pro, has been updated.

It's been 375 days, for example, since the iMac, MacBook, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air machines were last updated, and it's been 437 days since the Mac Pro saw the price drop Apple implemented as it works on a Mac Pro replacement.

The Mac Pro has not seen a hardware update since December of 2013, more than 1600 days ago. Apple has promised its professional users that a high-end high-throughput modular Mac Pro system is in the works, but we thus far have no details on when it might see a release.

The Mac mini, Apple's most affordable desktop Mac, has gone 1338 days without an update, with the last refresh introduced in October of 2014. While Apple has made promises about a refreshed Mac Pro, no similar statement has been provided about a future Mac mini, aside from a comment from Apple CEO Tim Cook stating that the Mac mini continues to be important to Apple.

According to Carnicelli, the state of the Mac lineup is "deeply worrisome" to him as a person who works for a Mac-based software company. Customers are, he says, forced to choose between "purchasing new computers that are actually years old" or "holding out in the faint hope that hardware updates are still to come."It's very difficult to recommend much from the current crop of Macs to customers, and that's deeply worrisome to us, as a Mac-based software company. For our own internal needs, we've wound up purchasing used hardware for testing, rather than opting to compromise heavily on a new machine. That isn't good for Apple, nor is it what we want.As Carnicelli points out, Apple could reassure its Mac users with updates and speed bumps to its Mac lineup on a "much more frequent basis," calling the current lack of updates "baffling and frightening to anyone who depends on the platform for their livelihood."

Apple in 2017 refreshed much of its Mac lineup (iMac, MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and MacBook) at its Worldwide Developers Conference, but this year, Apple opted to focus instead on software, with no new Mac hardware announced. With no new hardware in June, based on past release history, we could be looking at an 18-month upgrade cycle this time around, as pointed out by iMore's Rene Ritchie, with new Macs making an appearance in September or October.

Some of the blame for Apple's lack of updates can perhaps be placed on its reliance on Intel, and in the past, some Mac refreshes have been pushed back due to delays with Intel chips. This is likely one of the reasons why Apple is planning to transition from Intel chips to its own custom made Mac chips as early as 2020.

MacBook, MacBook Pro, iMac, and MacBook Air upgrades are not in the dire state that Mac Pro and Mac mini upgrades are in, but increased attention on issues with the MacBook and MacBook Pro keyboards has left Apple customers eager to see those machine updated, especially as Apple has not acknowledged these keyboard issues despite their prevalence in the media.

"Apple needs to publicly show their commitment to the full Macintosh hardware line and they need to do it now," writes Carnicelli.

Carnicelli's comments on the state of the Mac lineup came just before Apple released a new Mac advertising campaign. Called "Behind the Mac," the campaign highlights creatorswho use their Macs to "make something wonderful."

The first ad spots in the series focus on photographer and disability advocate Bruce Hall, who uses his Mac for editing photographs, musician Grimes, who uses the Mac "from start to finish" to write all of her music, edit music videos, and more, and app developer Peter Kariuki who used his Mac to code the SafeMotos app, which is designed to connect passengers with safe motorcycle drivers in Rwanda.

These ads, while inspiring, may be seen as too little too late by those who have grown frustrated with Apple's Mac lineup and have come to see the lack of updates as an indicator of a lack of commitment to the Mac.


https://www.macrumors.com/2018/06/15/developer-slams-lack-of-mac-updates/

Other stories:
https://www.computerworld.com/article/3280944/apple-mac/rip-macintosh-1984-2018.html
https://www.zdnet.com/article/apple-suddenly-remembers-the-mac-or-remembers-you-care-about-it/
http://bgr.com/2018/06/15/behind-the-mac-new-apple-ads/
https://www.cnet.com/news/wwdc-2018-what-we-didnt-get-macbook-air-ipad-pro-iphone-se-airpower/
 
Wow. Has Apple finally got tired of milking these morons for cash? Hard to believe.

Also having your OS be tied to specific hardware is a mistake. Terry Davis and the incredible TempleOS is another example.
 
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They crossed the event horizon of form over function long ago. When you can build a hackitosh that outperforms e v e r y t h i n g apple wants to sell you for $3500 less, put it in an attractive case and attach a 4k display to it, it's time for Apple to either bite the bullet and start giving people mac desktops that are worth a shit again or pack it up and just sell their OS bare to run on whatever PC, and phones.

What's Apple's response? To metaphorically refuse to look consumers in the eye, dig their toe into the floor, and mutter something about maybe in the future building their own CPUs to run their software on.
 
Who the fuck is still buying Apple computers? Seriously, how the fuck is Apple such a fuck-off huge company when anyone who knows anything about technology knows to avoid anything Apple? I guess iPhones aren't that much worse than comparable smartphones?
 
On the opposite end the Apple fanbase is getting more and more desperate, more and more autistic in the morbid sense to justify Apple's decisions. Don't you dare criticize the iPhone 10 or they'll pull the SALES NUMBERS card!

We want to market an all-screen phone, put a giant notch in it.

We want to sell you future-proof hardware at a bargain price, don't actually give you all the features it has at $1,010.99 USD and above in other markets. That'd be $1,250.99+.

Make it so the SMC is a piece of hot fucking garbage that fails within a year. Solder the RAM, hell, WELD the ram and other chips in refurbished models, or even better use a piece of foam so the outer case can help hold the CPU chip down. Solder the power supply because fuck you nigger.

Make it so the hinge on one of our laptops has its weakest point fixed to the body and not the display. Not only is the Macbook Pro's track pad made of glass, but it's impossible to realign properly once you fix it. The iPhone 6 models are still bending and still popping its chips out from normal wear and tear.
 
Apple honestly shouldn't bother with huge updates until they know what theyre doing.
As a complete tool who uses a Macbook, all i can say is that fucking High Sierra update made my Wacom tablet and several apps like Illustrator inoperable until those apps themselves had to release updates. And it somehow triggered my logic board to fail.

(Edit: grammar)
 
Apple honestly shouldn't bother with huge updates until they know what theyre doing.
As a complete tool who uses a Macbook, all i can say is that fucking High Sierra update made my Wacom tablet and several apps like Illustrator inoperable until those apps themselves had to release updates. And it somehow triggered my logic board to fail.

(Edit: grammar)
Having to call a motherboard a logic board is pretty :autism: of them tbh.
 
Having to call a motherboard a logic board is pretty :autism: of them tbh.

It's fitting in how ironic that is, because of how they engineer the thermal throttling and voltage regulator chips is anything but logical.
 
Who the fuck is still buying Apple computers? Seriously, how the fuck is Apple such a fuck-off huge company when anyone who knows anything about technology knows to avoid anything Apple? I guess iPhones aren't that much worse than comparable smartphones?
Rich retards who care more about the brand name than if the laptop itself works. Hell, even the PC clone companies that rip off Apple's aesthetics for their laptops tend to make their laptops far more repairable, durable, and reliable. Many of them let you take apart the whole laptop with a screwdriver and maybe a spudger. High end PC laptops tend to be modular, and the ultra high end desktop market is even worse for Apple, as HP and Dell offer Intel's highest end Xeons, and Apple's insistence on Intel has kept them from using AMD's Threadripper and Ryzen CPUs that are causing previously mostly Intel only companies to build AMD systems too.

There's a reason that even Apple fanboy tech "journalists" are having to admit that people are buying better computers instead.
 
Who the fuck is still buying Apple computers? Seriously, how the fuck is Apple such a fuck-off huge company when anyone who knows anything about technology knows to avoid anything Apple? I guess iPhones aren't that much worse than comparable smartphones?
Rich exceptional individuals who care more about the brand name than if the laptop itself works. Hell, even the PC clone companies that rip off Apple's aesthetics for their laptops tend to make their laptops far more repairable, durable, and reliable. Many of them let you take apart the whole laptop with a screwdriver and maybe a spudger. High end PC laptops tend to be modular, and the ultra high end desktop market is even worse for Apple, as HP and Dell offer Intel's highest end Xeons, and Apple's insistence on Intel has kept them from using AMD's Threadripper and Ryzen CPUs that are causing previously mostly Intel only companies to build AMD systems too.

There's a reason that even Apple fanboy tech "journalists" are having to admit that people are buying better computers instead.

I have a 2015 MacBook Pro that’s wonderful. It’s durable and keeps up with me (a very heavy user). I also greatly prefer Mac OS’s interface over Windows. I know the most recent stuff isn’t as good and the quality has been going downhill, but I feel like Apple hate is really overrated.

I’m not claiming that Apple is perfect, and I definitely have a lot of problems with how they make it impossible for users to modify or fix our own computers, but I do like Apple tech in and of itself. Just saying, it’s obnoxious to refer to Apple users as “fanboys” and “rich retards” when some of us just prefer Macs to PCs.
 
I bought a new PC laptop last week because of this. I was in need of an upgrade, but Apple's weird fetishization of thinness in their Macbook Pros at the expense of ports and performance pushed me away. I had previously gravitated back towards Apple a few years back when Microsoft was getting obnoxious with Windows 10 spyware. If Adobe would just port Photoshop to Linux I could cut them all loose and never look back.
 
Why would you bother to remove ports for a product only a handful of diehard customers are going to buy, when there's a rabbid mob dying to buy your new smartphone, now without headphone ports?
 
How soon until Tim Cook comes out and says "PCs are Dead. Long live iOS."? I know PCs are never, ever gonna die unless we just stop using technology as a whole. The way the article puts things, seems like it might be sooner than you think. Unless apple is really gonna dump billions into R&D to make their own CPUs. Do Motorola still make their own CPUs?
 
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