The M1 Macs: Interview and Review
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From Relay FM, this is Upgrade, episode 326.
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Today's show is brought to you by DoorDash, Pingdom, SaneBox and Remote Works.
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My name is Myke Hurley and I am joined by Jason Snell. Hello, Jason Snell.
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Hello, Myke Hurley. Ah, what a week.
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We have a monumental, historical, groundbreaking episode of Upgrade today.
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Product reviews, interviews, so much more.
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We have a ton to get to. It is going to be a fantastic episode ahead.
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But we must start, as we will every episode of Upgrade,
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of a Snell Talk question sent in by an Upgrading.
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And this time we'll choose Marlies, who asks, "Jason, what's your favorite mini?
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iPad mini? iPhone mini? Mac mini? HomePod mini?
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What's your favorite mini?"
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Well, what I want to say to be super cool is to say the iPod mini. Remember that?
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Ah, yes, yes. I think that would be mine.
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But it's the Mac mini. It's the Mac mini is mine.
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Because I've had a Mac mini in my house as a server since the first Mac mini.
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I'm on my fourth now, third or fourth.
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I mean, and it's been like 15 plus years since, it's been more than that actually.
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So it's been like almost 20 years since the Mac mini first came out.
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So it's, yeah, that's got to be my answer.
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Because I have had a Mac mini chugging away, doing stuff in my house since the very beginning.
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And so I think it has to be my favorite because it's been the longest, longest serving.
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Mine is iPod mini because my pink iPod mini that I had was my entry into the Apple ecosystem.
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That was my first Apple product.
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I love those colors. I love the iPod mini. It was great. We had one. Loved it.
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So thank you so much to Marleis for that question. That was a good one.
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You can send in a question to help us open an episode of Upgrade.
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All you have to do is send out a tweet with the hashtag #AskUpgrade
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or just use the command ?AskUpgrade in the Relay FM members Discord.
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So we do have a lot to cover this week.
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One thing we're not going to be covering is macOS Big Sur.
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Love you macOS, but we don't have the time for you today.
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Plus, the other thing is, Jason, I've not used it.
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But I have my MacBook Pro coming this week, my M1 MacBook Pro, which has Big Sur on it.
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So that's going to be my first usage of Big Sur.
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I mean, I put Big Sur on a 16 inch MacBook Pro review unit I had.
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But this was like beta one and I got to use it for about two weeks before I had to send it back again.
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And, you know, the quiz I spoke about in a bunch of places,
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Big Sur has been shaky for some types of applications.
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Audio applications is one of them.
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So I wasn't going to put it on any of my recording machines.
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But my M1 Mac ships with it.
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So we'll talk about Big Sur in a little more detail on next week's episode.
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Now, one thing we do definitely must have to cover today is our iPhone,
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the remaining iPhone reviews that we need to get to.
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So you've had the iPhone mini and the iPhone Max for...
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Nearly two weeks.
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But of course, there's been so much going on.
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I don't think you've actually...
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When we spoke about it, you haven't written a review.
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I don't know if you're going to write a review.
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When did I get the...
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I don't actually...
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It would have been last...
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Last Monday?
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Something like that.
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The day before the Apple event.
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So, yeah, so a little over a week.
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I got them right here.
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Now, obviously, I've had my Pro Max since last Friday,
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and I have a lot of thoughts on it.
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And so I think really to cover these,
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I think we should probably both take one of them
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because the mini is more of the phone for you.
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The Max is more of the phone for me.
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The Pro Max is not a phone for you, right?
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Like, especially this one.
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So I want to get your thoughts on the iPhone 12 mini.
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Really, the question to ask is, what do you think of the size?
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Is this the right size for you,
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or has the ship sailed for you at this point?
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Well, I love the size of it.
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I'm really loving the iPhone 12.
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It's hard to say.
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I think I'm right on the edge,
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where I see the benefit of both of them,
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and I'm not sure which way I would lean at this point.
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But, you know, I don't use my iPhone
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as much as a lot of people do because I never leave the house,
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although a lot of people don't do that now,
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but I never did, and I still don't.
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The iPhone 12 mini has appeal to me
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because, first off, I like the 12.
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I don't feel like the 12 Pro would be for me anyway.
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It has additional features, but I prefer the feel of the 12,
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and the 12 is cheaper. It's a better buy.
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The mini is cheaper still, and it's delightful, right?
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Like, it feels like an iPhone 5, kind of,
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even though it's slightly larger than that.
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It actually is so small that I can put my finger up on the top
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where the on/off button used to be,
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that they had to move to the side because it was too far up.
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You can actually reach that part now.
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So I guess what I'm saying is anybody who's had pause
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about the size of the iPhone and has fought that
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and has avoided buying iPhones
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and always tried to find the smaller iPhone
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and choose that one, this is the phone for you.
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Like, if you've ever questioned the size of the iPhone,
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this is the phone for you because it's good.
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It's fast. It feels great to hold in your hand,
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and it is much smaller than any iPhone
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Apple is ever going to make.
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Like, this is it. If you want it, this is it.
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Yeah, so I would seriously consider buying one,
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you know, for my own use,
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but I would also seriously consider the regular 12
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just because it is, you know, I'm kind of used to that size now.
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It doesn't feel oppressively big.
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I'm not putting it in a case,
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which makes it feel a little bit smaller,
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but, you know, it's totally usable,
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and actually for people who are concerned
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because the way the 12 screen works,
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the 12 mini screen is a shrunken-down version
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of the 12 screen.
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It's actually scaled down,
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so everything's a little bit smaller,
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and if you're somebody who has, like, issues with your vision,
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reading small things, that's not great,
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although I will say there's a scaling mode in the mini
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that makes everything bigger,
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and it's still quite usable in that form.
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The only limitation I would mention is I think some apps
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are not prepared for that size of screen.
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Some of them work better than others
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at that smaller screen size,
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because then it's using, like, the real smaller screen resolution
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as opposed to just using the iPhone X resolution,
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but in general, like, it's just an iPhone 12 except smaller.
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It's really nice, so for now, that's sort of my review of it,
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is it's the iPhone 12 for people who look at the 12 or the 10
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or even the 6, 7, 8 and think, "It's bigger than I'd like."
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Like, literally, if you've ever given, you know, some pause
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or changed your buying patterns
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because you're concerned about the size,
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I think this is the phone for you.
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-I feel like maybe if this was always a product,
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it would have been likely
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where you would have gravitated to naturally.
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-I think probably so.
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I mean, I wasn't thrilled at the size increase in the 6.
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I wasn't thrilled with the size increase in the 10,
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although it was subtle, so I got used to it,
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but I'm not one of those people like you, for example,
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who says, "Bigger screen," and so many people are like,
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"Bigger screen. Give me more. I want more,"
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and with my phone, I think I want less.
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I want to have a phone, and I want to be able to look at it
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and see what's going on in the world,
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but I also don't feel the need on my phone
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to have an expansive -- I just don't use my phone that way.
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I'm going to use an iPad or a Mac or a TV for that.
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I'm not going to be completely kind of engaged
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in the content on my phone.
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My phone is more utilitarian than that.
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That's just sort of how I treat it.
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-It's kind of intriguing to me
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that Apple decided to make this phone now.
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It's like, why now?
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-I don't know. Maybe they always wanted to,
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and it was just a matter of sort of their timing.
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They were experimenting with lots of things.
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They had to do the OLED transition with the iPhone X,
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and then they wanted to do that other class of phone
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with the XR the next year.
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Maybe it just really was that it was always on their list,
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and now is the time when they finally were able to do it.
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-Yeah, it's just intriguing.
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I'm going to be -- I have my eye on this.
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There's been outlier phones, right?
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So many outlier phones.
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You look at something like the 5C into 10R.
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These phones that are one and done,
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so they're kind of peculiar things.
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Even the SE to some degree,
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whilst they've done another one of them,
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they've both been very different.
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The original SE to this SE is a very different product.
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-They're recycled old products is what it is, right?
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They're recycled old products,
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and the 10R became the 11, essentially.
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So that was a product transition,
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but that product has kind of disappeared now,
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and we're left with -- because we don't have an 11 Max
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or something that's a little bit bigger.
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-No. -But the Mini really does --
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Honestly, it feels like the return of the iPhone SE 1
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or really the return of the iPhone 5, essentially.
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It's an iPhone 5.
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I know it's not quite the same size.
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I have an iPhone 5. I pulled it out.
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It is smaller than this, but not much.
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And they look the same because they've got the flat sides.
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It's just -- I think it's remarkable
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because there were a lot of us who figured Apple
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was never gonna go back there, right?
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Like, it's over. Just get used to it.
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And I wonder to what extent the iPhone Mini exists
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because Apple did keep hearing from people
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that there was this category,
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this subcategory of iPhone users who just didn't want a big phone.
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And at some point, they decided, well, we need --
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I think the source of this is that as iPhone sales stalled,
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Apple realized the way that you continue to grow the iPhone
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is by offering more models with more variations
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so that you can focus on some new sort of sweet spots
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and spread out the different slots that you're using.
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And obviously, that's four new phones, right?
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-You can try and find the edges and cater to the edges
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a little bit more, maybe. -Yeah.
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-Also, the SE has done so well for them.
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I mean, the thing about the SE --
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You know, 'cause Tim, in the earnings schools,
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they always talk very highly about the SE,
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about, you know, like, I think maybe the original one,
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at least I remember them saying,
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like, it vastly outperformed their expectation.
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But the question on that, which I think it's hard to answer,
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I don't think we can answer it,
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is, like, what is the appetite for the SE?
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Is it I want a small iPhone or I want a cheap iPhone?
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Because the Mini is not a cheap iPhone, right?
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Like, the Mini is the start of the line.
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But it's the cheapest of the modern iPhones.
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So it is still a little bit both,
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but it's also not, like, dirt cheap or anything like that.
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-Yeah, cheapest is something cheap.
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-It'll be interesting to see.
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I think Apple has underestimated the SE,
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and I think maybe Apple learned the lesson
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of the success of big Android phones a little too well.
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Like, they learned it and they integrated it,
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and they had great success with larger phones.
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And maybe they just kept driving on the larger phone for a while
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because it's like, as long as this is working for us,
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let's keep doing it.
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And maybe now have realized that although that drive --
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because here's the thing, it's not like that drive was wrong.
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People do love big phones.
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Not everybody.
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And those people out there who don't love them
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are gonna roll their eyes at this.
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But it's like you can't argue with the sales.
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People love big phones.
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The moment Apple made a bigger iPhone,
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iPhone sales shot up, like, dramatically.
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People -- and we saw it with Samsung
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and other Android phone makers, big phones.
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There are a lot of people who just want a big phone.
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And so they made the right decision to go in that direction.
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But you've got to wonder if maybe at some point
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after that started to cool a little bit,
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they realized that there is also a section of the market
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that doesn't like the big phone.
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And so making something that is a little more in tune with them
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gives them another piece of the market
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that maybe they were ignoring.
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And when you're trying to get every last sale
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out of the iPhone, which remember,
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up until a couple of years ago,
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Apple wasn't even trying very hard with the iPhone.
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It did so well that Apple didn't really need even --
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they didn't try very hard in the stores.
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They weren't marketing the iPhone
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because it sold itself in huge quantities.
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And then their sales fell off a cliff, and they're like,
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"Oh, we need to work on sales with the iPhone."
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And then maybe in that era, they're like,
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"What are we missing here?"
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And they looked at the size and said,
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"That's a place where we can attack that corner of the market
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that seems dissatisfied with what we're doing."
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-There's one question I did have,
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'cause I actually had quite a few people
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write in to ask this.
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How does it feel to type on for you?
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-It's more cramped to type on, for sure,
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although I never really have felt super comfortable
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with typing on the iPhone X either.
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I mean, it's still not great.
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It's still not a huge expanse to type on,
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and you've got to wrestle with autocorrect.
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In fact, I can maybe make the argument
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that it's small enough that it might be more conducive
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to leaning into the autocorrect
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'cause you're just not gonna be precise
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on such a small keyboard.
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But in the end, all I can say is in my use,
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which is it's gonna differ for everybody,
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I thought it was fine to type on.
00:15:08
◼
►
I had my frustrations,
00:15:10
◼
►
but I had my frustrations typing on an iPhone, period.
00:15:13
◼
►
So I don't think it was any more frustrating than it would be.
00:15:17
◼
►
And, of course, for those who haven't used a big iPhone
00:15:21
◼
►
in a while, the iPhone 5,
00:15:26
◼
►
there was no swipe typing on the iPhone 5.
00:15:28
◼
►
It might actually be a better experience now, right,
00:15:30
◼
►
because you don't have to tap.
00:15:32
◼
►
You could also swipe if you want to get words out that way.
00:15:35
◼
►
So there's other options now.
00:15:36
◼
►
But it was, for me, not a big difference
00:15:40
◼
►
in that it was sort of equally frustrating
00:15:43
◼
►
to typing on a regular iPhone.
00:15:45
◼
►
But everybody's mileage might vary.
00:15:47
◼
►
It is a smaller keyboard, for sure.
00:15:50
◼
►
Can I talk about the Pro Max now?
00:15:52
◼
►
-Yeah, let me -- I have one thing to say about it
00:15:55
◼
►
before I hand it over to you,
00:15:56
◼
►
which is I got this thing last Monday.
00:16:00
◼
►
And the first thing I did -- like, the first thing I did,
00:16:03
◼
►
I picked it up, I looked at it, I held it in my hand,
00:16:06
◼
►
and then I went to Slack to a direct message to Myke Hurley,
00:16:10
◼
►
and I said, "You are going to love this."
00:16:14
◼
►
And the reason I said that is not only is it --
00:16:16
◼
►
I've got the gold model, it's pretty, it's shiny.
00:16:21
◼
►
But I picked it up, and the way it feels, it feels solid.
00:16:25
◼
►
It is heavy, it is huge, but it is like a gold bar, Myke.
00:16:30
◼
►
It's just like -- there's something really pleasing
00:16:35
◼
►
about the density of this thing
00:16:38
◼
►
and the uniformity of the density of this thing.
00:16:41
◼
►
It's so big that I feel like I can just --
00:16:43
◼
►
like, my hand doesn't just hold it,
00:16:45
◼
►
but it kind of, like, wraps around itself,
00:16:48
◼
►
and, you know, the fingers are against the back.
00:16:50
◼
►
Like, it's so large that I feel like I can hold it in two hands.
00:16:54
◼
►
And I don't know how to put it.
00:16:58
◼
►
And that's why I sent you that message,
00:16:59
◼
►
is because I feel like if you're going to make a big phone,
00:17:04
◼
►
just embrace it. Like, make a big phone.
00:17:07
◼
►
Don't go halfway and be like, "Well, it's larger,
00:17:10
◼
►
but we don't want to push it too far."
00:17:11
◼
►
It's like, push it.
00:17:13
◼
►
Make it a big slab of a phone with extra cameras,
00:17:17
◼
►
like, extra zoom.
00:17:18
◼
►
Do all of those things if you're going to do it.
00:17:21
◼
►
And that's what -- in my mind, that's what the Pro Max is,
00:17:23
◼
►
is that, like, more than any large iPhone ever,
00:17:27
◼
►
Apple has just embraced, it's huge.
00:17:29
◼
►
Like, you wanted a huge phone, and there is none more huge.
00:17:35
◼
►
So the phrase that has kept popping into my head --
00:17:40
◼
►
so I do have the Gold Pro Max.
00:17:44
◼
►
This is the ultimate iPhone.
00:17:47
◼
►
I'm not saying that my iPhone is better than yours,
00:17:51
◼
►
but, like, this iPhone, it is everything an iPhone
00:17:54
◼
►
has ever had and more of it.
00:17:56
◼
►
It feels like the most iPhone there has ever been.
00:18:01
◼
►
So ever since the original iPhone,
00:18:05
◼
►
I have always been the kind of person to plan and save money
00:18:09
◼
►
to make sure I buy the new phone every year,
00:18:11
◼
►
like so many of our listeners, right?
00:18:14
◼
►
Because I want the new phone.
00:18:15
◼
►
I always want the new phone.
00:18:17
◼
►
If I was living a completely different life
00:18:20
◼
►
where I was not a technology podcaster as a living,
00:18:25
◼
►
I would still get the new iPhone every year
00:18:27
◼
►
because it's what I did before, right?
00:18:29
◼
►
This is just one of the ways that I chose to spend money
00:18:32
◼
►
in my life to either buy it or be on some kind of phone contract
00:18:36
◼
►
that would make sure that I get it.
00:18:37
◼
►
You know, like, I would probably be on the iPhone upgrade program.
00:18:40
◼
►
That's probably what I would have chosen to do.
00:18:44
◼
►
So for me, this phone, if it had nothing but the new design,
00:18:51
◼
►
I would be completely happy.
00:18:53
◼
►
The new design is, in my opinion,
00:18:57
◼
►
the very best thing about this phone.
00:19:00
◼
►
And I think that that might be the same for the whole line.
00:19:03
◼
►
It's kind of strange because I feel like for the last few weeks,
00:19:08
◼
►
I have overlooked it, the new design,
00:19:11
◼
►
because it was an inevitability.
00:19:13
◼
►
We all knew it was going to be the case,
00:19:15
◼
►
that it was going to have these flat sides.
00:19:17
◼
►
And I kind of just didn't really think about it.
00:19:20
◼
►
I heard a bunch of people say, you know, like, you've said it.
00:19:22
◼
►
I heard every review that I've listened to said it's like,
00:19:25
◼
►
it changes the way that it feels to hold.
00:19:27
◼
►
Some people like it, some people don't.
00:19:30
◼
►
But for me, I absolutely adore it.
00:19:34
◼
►
So I think this is definitely enhanced by the fact
00:19:38
◼
►
that I have the flashiest one, which is the gold one.
00:19:41
◼
►
So I feel like I am visually more aware of it.
00:19:45
◼
►
Like, if I look at my phone face on,
00:19:48
◼
►
I still see a hint of gold around the edge.
00:19:51
◼
►
And I feel like maybe on some of the other phones,
00:19:54
◼
►
especially the darker ones,
00:19:55
◼
►
you maybe wouldn't see that so much,
00:19:57
◼
►
but I can always see a glimpse of the gold.
00:20:00
◼
►
- Oh yeah, it's there.
00:20:02
◼
►
Like, I'm looking at this one and it's that same thing,
00:20:04
◼
►
which is when you're looking at it from the front,
00:20:06
◼
►
there is no mistaking.
00:20:08
◼
►
- Even when it's just in your hand
00:20:10
◼
►
and you're looking at the screen,
00:20:11
◼
►
there's no mistaking that it's gold.
00:20:13
◼
►
- And I think that it makes it not only feel great,
00:20:17
◼
►
but it feels luxurious.
00:20:19
◼
►
Like, honestly, I know this phone is so expensive,
00:20:22
◼
►
but it feels like it's more,
00:20:24
◼
►
it should be more expensive than it is.
00:20:26
◼
►
This feels like a luxury product.
00:20:28
◼
►
This is the kind of look that you have seen companies
00:20:32
◼
►
mod phones and sell them for $10,000
00:20:36
◼
►
for the last few years, right?
00:20:37
◼
►
Like you'll see it on YouTube, right?
00:20:39
◼
►
Like some YouTuber will get sent
00:20:40
◼
►
like a 24 karat plated gold iPhone.
00:20:43
◼
►
And it's like, there's 10 of them.
00:20:44
◼
►
And you know, that's what this phone looks like.
00:20:47
◼
►
It is your call as to whether you want that.
00:20:50
◼
►
I do, right?
00:20:51
◼
►
And I think that this phone is stunning,
00:20:54
◼
►
but irrespective of the look,
00:20:57
◼
►
this is the best feeling iPhone.
00:21:01
◼
►
I absolutely love how this phone feels in my hand.
00:21:05
◼
►
It feels so much more usable than some of,
00:21:09
◼
►
like from a sense of being able to grip it.
00:21:11
◼
►
I feel like I can hold it much easier than before.
00:21:15
◼
►
And even though this phone, I know it's physically bigger,
00:21:19
◼
►
it feels just as usable to me.
00:21:21
◼
►
I don't feel like I'm struggling with this phone.
00:21:25
◼
►
And I picked up my 11 Pro Max yesterday
00:21:27
◼
►
and it felt small already, which is hilarious.
00:21:30
◼
►
But I genuinely, like you said, I'm not kidding.
00:21:32
◼
►
I picked it up and I thought that I picked up
00:21:34
◼
►
a Dinos old 11.
00:21:35
◼
►
It like took me a minute.
00:21:37
◼
►
I was like, oh no, that's mine.
00:21:39
◼
►
The camera bump is absolutely ginormous on this.
00:21:44
◼
►
Like it is astronomically large.
00:21:48
◼
►
You cannot conceive of it until you've seen it.
00:21:51
◼
►
I look at it in images and it didn't register to me
00:21:55
◼
►
that it was bigger, but it is so much bigger.
00:21:57
◼
►
- It's bigger and deeper too, right?
00:21:59
◼
►
Like it's not just that the square is big
00:22:02
◼
►
and the square is big, but also the lenses
00:22:05
◼
►
are protruding more from the square.
00:22:07
◼
►
This is what I mean by, if you're gonna do a giant phone,
00:22:11
◼
►
embrace it, just embrace it.
00:22:14
◼
►
- But this to me though, is like, it's kind of proven
00:22:16
◼
►
that the camera differences, they're here to stay again.
00:22:20
◼
►
Because you couldn't put this on another phone.
00:22:24
◼
►
It's too big.
00:22:25
◼
►
So I expect they will find ways to trickle the technology
00:22:29
◼
►
down once they can get it smaller.
00:22:31
◼
►
But I think all it's going to mean now
00:22:33
◼
►
for the foreseeable future is that the Max phone
00:22:37
◼
►
will have some kind of differences
00:22:39
◼
►
to the regular size phone in the camera now.
00:22:42
◼
►
Because they've ripped the bandaid off
00:22:44
◼
►
and it's massive.
00:22:46
◼
►
And so they've given themselves the space
00:22:49
◼
►
and the excuse to do new things with that.
00:22:53
◼
►
So I expect that too to continue.
00:22:56
◼
►
So the camera itself, this is a difficult one for me to test.
00:23:01
◼
►
Because the way that I would usually test out
00:23:04
◼
►
how good a camera is, is to go out into the world
00:23:07
◼
►
and take lots of pictures, mostly of architecture.
00:23:09
◼
►
That's how I like to test the camera.
00:23:12
◼
►
This is not really something that I'm doing.
00:23:14
◼
►
I've been taking some photos inside of boring things.
00:23:18
◼
►
And I can see differences in sharpness, detail and color
00:23:22
◼
►
with indoor photos.
00:23:24
◼
►
I can see it, it's there.
00:23:27
◼
►
The sharpness especially.
00:23:28
◼
►
Like I take a picture of my office
00:23:31
◼
►
and I can zoom in and more clearly see text, for example,
00:23:34
◼
►
on certain images.
00:23:35
◼
►
And that's great.
00:23:37
◼
►
But there are, I think, more tangible benefits than those.
00:23:40
◼
►
So the two biggest benefits that I've felt
00:23:43
◼
►
with the camera system on the Pro Max,
00:23:45
◼
►
one is the telephoto.
00:23:48
◼
►
It's a noticeable difference, the 2.5 over the two.
00:23:51
◼
►
And I like to have more zoom.
00:23:55
◼
►
I hope to see Apple do something more aggressive
00:23:57
◼
►
with this in the future,
00:23:59
◼
►
but I'm happy to have an increased zoom.
00:24:02
◼
►
But honestly, my favorite thing is the fact that,
00:24:06
◼
►
and this is on both Profones, I believe,
00:24:09
◼
►
it might be on all of them, I don't remember,
00:24:10
◼
►
maybe you can correct me,
00:24:12
◼
►
night mode on the front facing camera.
00:24:15
◼
►
- Night mode on the front facing camera.
00:24:17
◼
►
- I think it's on all of them.
00:24:18
◼
►
I think that was part of the A14,
00:24:20
◼
►
like all the phones got this.
00:24:21
◼
►
- Yeah, it's the night mode portrait that's different
00:24:25
◼
►
and you've got to have the LIDAR scanner for that.
00:24:27
◼
►
And so it's only the pros.
00:24:28
◼
►
- But night mode is on all the cameras now.
00:24:32
◼
►
And night mode, just a one second night mode exposure
00:24:37
◼
►
on a selfie is night and day different,
00:24:41
◼
►
like unbelievably different.
00:24:43
◼
►
Like I will take pictures on my old phone
00:24:46
◼
►
and select the texture of my skin is just this blurred mush.
00:24:52
◼
►
But with a one second night mode exposure,
00:24:55
◼
►
there's so much more detail in selfies.
00:24:58
◼
►
And so that is like, I've been testing that out a bunch.
00:25:01
◼
►
It's like, that is a big difference.
00:25:03
◼
►
And that kind of thing is something
00:25:05
◼
►
that you won't see a lot of like,
00:25:09
◼
►
hi, I'm doing my camera review for you kind of thing,
00:25:12
◼
►
because it's not really exciting.
00:25:15
◼
►
But those are the types of differences like that one,
00:25:18
◼
►
this is a front facing camera.
00:25:19
◼
►
That's gonna make a bigger difference on people
00:25:21
◼
►
because people take lots of selfies.
00:25:23
◼
►
And better selfies indoors is a good thing all the time.
00:25:27
◼
►
And so that I saw that as like a real cool thing
00:25:31
◼
►
and a big difference.
00:25:34
◼
►
But look, the biggest change in the camera system
00:25:38
◼
►
is the HDR video.
00:25:39
◼
►
It is fantastic.
00:25:41
◼
►
It looks so good.
00:25:43
◼
►
And it's a combination of what the camera can do
00:25:45
◼
►
and what screens can show.
00:25:46
◼
►
But video on these phones just looks so gorgeous
00:25:51
◼
►
because the screen is lit up so well.
00:25:54
◼
►
And I think it's absolutely fantastic.
00:25:57
◼
►
So the camera is an interesting one.
00:25:59
◼
►
And I'm kind of keen to see how it goes.
00:26:04
◼
►
I mean, everything else, you know,
00:26:06
◼
►
I don't have a 5G plan,
00:26:07
◼
►
I have no desire to upgrade to 5G.
00:26:10
◼
►
A14 and LiDAR, I'm sure will be helpful when I need them.
00:26:14
◼
►
MagSafe is not a thing that I'm using
00:26:17
◼
►
because I like to use pop sockets
00:26:18
◼
►
and there isn't an option there.
00:26:19
◼
►
So I just have my pop socket on
00:26:21
◼
►
and I can kind of get it to work,
00:26:24
◼
►
but like I'm not interested.
00:26:26
◼
►
I'm excited to try out the Apple Pro Raw
00:26:28
◼
►
when I was 14.3 ships
00:26:30
◼
►
and just see like, what can I make this camera system do?
00:26:33
◼
►
But overall for me, like it is the physical attributes
00:26:37
◼
►
of this phone that make it what I want.
00:26:41
◼
►
It is bigger.
00:26:42
◼
►
I get a little bit more detail,
00:26:43
◼
►
a little bit more information on the screen, but not a lot.
00:26:45
◼
►
But it is the overall design
00:26:47
◼
►
and the way it feels in my hand
00:26:49
◼
►
and the way it looks when I look at it.
00:26:52
◼
►
This is without a doubt my favorite iPhone design
00:26:55
◼
►
of all time.
00:26:57
◼
►
Like hands down, it is in my opinion,
00:27:00
◼
►
the best iPhone that they have made.
00:27:02
◼
►
And I am talking personally,
00:27:04
◼
►
specifically about this gold Pro Max.
00:27:07
◼
►
I think the Pro Max is great overall,
00:27:09
◼
►
but this gold one is amazing.
00:27:12
◼
►
- So what you're saying is, I was right.
00:27:16
◼
►
Yep, your instinct was bang on.
00:27:20
◼
►
And I was worried because when you said that,
00:27:23
◼
►
my expectations got set really high.
00:27:25
◼
►
And so I was concerned, right?
00:27:29
◼
►
That it's like, oh no, am I gonna,
00:27:31
◼
►
as Jason kind of put that in my brain now,
00:27:34
◼
►
but no, you were completely right.
00:27:37
◼
►
I frigging love this phone.
00:27:38
◼
►
It's fantastic.
00:27:40
◼
►
- Yeah, it is.
00:27:41
◼
►
Like, it's not for me,
00:27:43
◼
►
but what it is is so,
00:27:47
◼
►
you know, I've been doing this in the 20 Max for 2020 series.
00:27:53
◼
►
I've been revisiting a lot of the kind of classic Max
00:27:56
◼
►
from the early days of Steve Jobs and Johnny Ive.
00:27:59
◼
►
And there is this thing that they say,
00:28:03
◼
►
which is a product should be true to itself
00:28:07
◼
►
and the elements of it should be true to itself.
00:28:08
◼
►
So in the, what, the G4 iMac with a floating screen,
00:28:13
◼
►
that was the example they used.
00:28:15
◼
►
It's like, you want the elements to be true to themselves
00:28:17
◼
►
and the product needs to live its best life, basically.
00:28:19
◼
►
It needs to be what it should be, what it needs to be.
00:28:25
◼
►
And looking at this phone, the 12 Pro Max,
00:28:30
◼
►
makes me think that as successful as Apple was
00:28:35
◼
►
with its large phones, with the Plus and then Max models,
00:28:40
◼
►
that Apple was always a little embarrassed
00:28:44
◼
►
about having a big phone.
00:28:46
◼
►
Like, they were always like, well, it's a compromise,
00:28:49
◼
►
but we'll do it because people want it.
00:28:53
◼
►
And I'm not saying that those phones were bad.
00:28:55
◼
►
They weren't, but I felt like Apple,
00:28:58
◼
►
Apple wants everything to be smaller
00:28:59
◼
►
and thinner and lighter, and they're like,
00:29:00
◼
►
okay, bigger phone, like almost apologetic,
00:29:04
◼
►
or like, how do we mitigate the fact
00:29:06
◼
►
that this is such a big phone?
00:29:08
◼
►
And when I started using this Pro Max, the 12 Pro Max,
00:29:11
◼
►
I thought they have any remaining embarrassment
00:29:16
◼
►
or limitation has been dropped.
00:29:22
◼
►
Like, they have fully embraced that it's an enormous phone.
00:29:27
◼
►
And I know that that sounds, it's almost intangible.
00:29:29
◼
►
It's like, well, what makes you say that?
00:29:30
◼
►
And it's like, I don't know, you kinda gotta feel it
00:29:32
◼
►
and look at it.
00:29:33
◼
►
Like, they leaned all the way in to making a gigantic,
00:29:37
◼
►
full-featured, heavy slab of technology,
00:29:41
◼
►
like as much as they could possibly.
00:29:45
◼
►
And so I see where you're coming from,
00:29:48
◼
►
which is if you like a large phone,
00:29:51
◼
►
this is Apple giving you everything you like about it
00:29:55
◼
►
to their fullest extent.
00:29:57
◼
►
So it's not for everybody,
00:29:58
◼
►
it doesn't have to be for everybody.
00:29:59
◼
►
But if you like that kind of phone, and I know you do,
00:30:02
◼
►
they really did a great job with this one.
00:30:04
◼
►
It is unabashedly an enormous slab of technology,
00:30:09
◼
►
and that's what it should be.
00:30:13
◼
►
- This episode of Upgrade is brought to you by SaneBox.
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It really helps to filter out a lot of the email
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that I don't need to be in my inbox.
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This can be good and bad stuff.
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So, you know, there's the SaneLater folder,
00:31:20
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which collects up stuff that SaneBox believes
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that I don't want to see.
00:31:23
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Maybe it's from first-time people
00:31:25
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who are contacting me out of the blue, that kind of stuff,
00:31:27
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so I can get to those when I need to later on,
00:31:29
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keeping my inbox focused on the conversations
00:31:32
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and the emails that I'm exchanging with people frequently.
00:31:35
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But also, SaneNews is where all my newsletters get collected.
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You know, I want to read the email newsletters.
00:31:41
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That's why I subscribe to them.
00:31:42
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But if they're in my inbox,
00:31:43
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it can be crowding things up,
00:31:45
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so I might be more likely to remove them.
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That's S-A-N-E-B-O-X.com/UpgradeFM.
00:32:13
◼
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Our thanks to SaneBox for their support
00:32:15
◼
►
of this show and Relay FM.
00:32:17
◼
►
All right, so now we would like to welcome back to Upgrade,
00:32:20
◼
►
Tim Millet, Vice President of Platform Architecture,
00:32:23
◼
►
and Tom Boger, Apple's Senior Director
00:32:25
◼
►
of Mac and iPad Product Marketing, to Upgrade.
00:32:29
◼
►
To help you tell their voices apart,
00:32:30
◼
►
the first question is going to be answered by Tim.
00:32:33
◼
►
We had the pleasure of being able to sit down
00:32:36
◼
►
with Tim and Tom a few days ago
00:32:38
◼
►
to have a great conversation about the new M1 Macs.
00:32:43
◼
►
Gentlemen, welcome back to Upgrade again.
00:32:46
◼
►
We're so happy to have you back.
00:32:47
◼
►
It is great to be back.
00:32:49
◼
►
So yeah, we got to speak not too long ago about the A14,
00:32:52
◼
►
but now we have the first Apple Silicon for the Mac,
00:32:55
◼
►
which is the M1.
00:32:56
◼
►
The performance gains that we saw in the event
00:32:58
◼
►
a few days ago, they feel like a real generational shift,
00:33:02
◼
►
like a huge leap.
00:33:04
◼
►
And I kind of wanted to know from your perspective
00:33:07
◼
►
what it's been like to see the M1 chip come together
00:33:10
◼
►
and how it felt when you first started to see the results
00:33:14
◼
►
that you were looking for.
00:33:15
◼
►
- Well, I mean, as you can imagine,
00:33:17
◼
►
such a great feeling for me, but for my team
00:33:20
◼
►
and for the broader Silicon development team at Apple,
00:33:22
◼
►
this was a huge, huge step forward for us.
00:33:25
◼
►
And we've obviously been seeing the results
00:33:29
◼
►
in the lab a lot longer.
00:33:30
◼
►
And so, you know, our excitement has been building
00:33:33
◼
►
for yesterday for a long time.
00:33:36
◼
►
And I think we couldn't be happier with how it's executed.
00:33:39
◼
►
Now, that said, I think really what I have to give credit to
00:33:43
◼
►
is the full broader engineering teams at Apple,
00:33:46
◼
►
because we don't build chips to sell chips.
00:33:50
◼
►
We build systems and we always do it
00:33:52
◼
►
in an integrated collaborative way across hardware,
00:33:55
◼
►
software, the industrial design teams,
00:33:57
◼
►
the product design teams.
00:33:58
◼
►
And so really it's a celebration from every perspective,
00:34:02
◼
►
because, you know, in the end, if it comes out and works,
00:34:05
◼
►
it's because every corner of Apple has participated in it.
00:34:09
◼
►
- Yeah, and if I could add some color to that,
00:34:12
◼
►
Tim sees this stuff a lot earlier than we do,
00:34:16
◼
►
but as we got, you know, prototype systems in our hands
00:34:19
◼
►
and we started working with him on the product marketing
00:34:23
◼
►
side, when you first turn one of these systems on
00:34:27
◼
►
and start using it, you are just blown away.
00:34:31
◼
►
And you realize that, oh my gosh,
00:34:34
◼
►
this is gonna be an amazing experience, you know,
00:34:38
◼
►
from the how snappy and how performant the system is
00:34:43
◼
►
and how fast apps launch and just everything about it
00:34:47
◼
►
is incredible.
00:34:49
◼
►
And then as you're using the system, you start realizing,
00:34:53
◼
►
my gosh, my battery is not going down.
00:34:56
◼
►
I mean, the battery life on these systems are insane.
00:34:59
◼
►
And so we've been using these systems for a while now
00:35:03
◼
►
and on a daily basis, we're blown away by what they can do.
00:35:07
◼
►
And you start to get very excited about,
00:35:12
◼
►
I can't wait to introduce this to the world.
00:35:16
◼
►
And I can't wait for our customers to get these
00:35:19
◼
►
in their hands because they're gonna love it.
00:35:21
◼
►
- You know what happens at the end of the book
00:35:23
◼
►
and everybody else has to wait.
00:35:24
◼
►
- Exactly, it's a very good analogy, but we have to,
00:35:27
◼
►
you know, we have to bite our tongue and wait for our moment
00:35:30
◼
►
and tell the world all about it.
00:35:33
◼
►
And then it's really interesting because you,
00:35:37
◼
►
you know, you keep things under wraps
00:35:39
◼
►
and you keep things a secret.
00:35:40
◼
►
And then in an instant, the whole world knows
00:35:43
◼
►
what you've known and you just feel the excitement
00:35:46
◼
►
and you get, you know, the text messages
00:35:48
◼
►
and you see the posting on Twitter and everything.
00:35:52
◼
►
And it's just incredibly exciting for us.
00:35:54
◼
►
And, you know, it was such a big moment on Tuesday
00:35:58
◼
►
for what we announced and it was a huge day for the Mac
00:36:03
◼
►
and a huge day for Apple.
00:36:05
◼
►
- So now on the Mac, we are all going to have to change
00:36:09
◼
►
the way we think of describing Macs and what's in a Mac.
00:36:13
◼
►
And I'm thinking in particular of how we're so used
00:36:16
◼
►
to seeing specs when we're looking at Macs about, you know,
00:36:20
◼
►
it's got the i3 or the i5 or the i7,
00:36:23
◼
►
or it's got a particular gigahertz clock speed
00:36:27
◼
►
that's attached to it and all of that.
00:36:28
◼
►
And one of the things that I think is notable
00:36:31
◼
►
about the announcement is we got the M1
00:36:35
◼
►
and that's the story is it's the M1 with a slight variation
00:36:39
◼
►
on the low end MacBook Air having seven GPU cores
00:36:41
◼
►
instead of eight, otherwise this is the M1.
00:36:44
◼
►
So I wanted to ask you directly,
00:36:46
◼
►
is there truly just one M1?
00:36:49
◼
►
And if we see speed differences across these systems,
00:36:53
◼
►
is that mostly due to the thermal envelope,
00:36:56
◼
►
just as we saw some speed differences between the iPad Air
00:36:59
◼
►
and the iPhone with the A14?
00:37:02
◼
►
Yes, there is one M1, that chip.
00:37:06
◼
►
As you mentioned, there is a variant to it on the MacBook Air
00:37:09
◼
►
where the 999 config of MacBook Air starts
00:37:12
◼
►
with a seven core GPU and the 1249 configuration
00:37:16
◼
►
has an eight core GPU for even more performance.
00:37:19
◼
►
But it's the same chip from the Air to the Mini to the Pro,
00:37:24
◼
►
and you will see differences in performance
00:37:26
◼
►
based on the thermal characteristics of the system.
00:37:29
◼
►
Now in the MacBook Air, as we talked about in the keynote,
00:37:33
◼
►
it is incredible the performance that the Air now has
00:37:37
◼
►
with the M1 chip.
00:37:39
◼
►
It's the largest generational leap in performance
00:37:42
◼
►
the Air has ever gotten, three and a half times faster CPU,
00:37:47
◼
►
five times faster GPU, nine times faster ML performance.
00:37:51
◼
►
It is crazy how much the performance of the Air
00:37:55
◼
►
has gotten with M1.
00:37:57
◼
►
And it literally means that you can do things
00:37:59
◼
►
you would never think of doing with a MacBook Air.
00:38:03
◼
►
One of the stories I tell is,
00:38:05
◼
►
I think your listeners all know
00:38:07
◼
►
that we have a pro workflow team.
00:38:09
◼
►
And one of the guys on our pro workflow team,
00:38:11
◼
►
he's a professional photographer.
00:38:14
◼
►
And he got one of the MacBook Airs with M1 in it.
00:38:18
◼
►
And he said, you know what?
00:38:19
◼
►
I'm gonna just try to move my entire pro workflow onto this,
00:38:23
◼
►
my photography workflow.
00:38:24
◼
►
And using things like Lightroom, et cetera.
00:38:28
◼
►
And he was blown away.
00:38:30
◼
►
He could take his whole workload, put it on an Air.
00:38:33
◼
►
And he's one of those photographers that goes out
00:38:36
◼
►
and shoots on location all the time.
00:38:38
◼
►
And so now he's gonna bring an Air with him
00:38:41
◼
►
wherever he goes.
00:38:42
◼
►
And he is incredibly excited about it.
00:38:44
◼
►
But when you get to the other part of the product lines,
00:38:48
◼
►
like Mac mini and the 13 inch MacBook Pro,
00:38:52
◼
►
they have an active cooling system.
00:38:53
◼
►
So what you're gonna see is for those demanding workloads
00:38:56
◼
►
that are more sustained workloads,
00:38:58
◼
►
workloads that operate over time,
00:39:01
◼
►
that active cooling system is gonna allow that M1
00:39:04
◼
►
to just maintain that great performance indefinitely.
00:39:07
◼
►
And so customers will see the difference there.
00:39:11
◼
►
But it is profound how much performance
00:39:15
◼
►
the M1 is bringing to these systems.
00:39:18
◼
►
And I'm sure we're about to talk about it,
00:39:19
◼
►
but what's even more profound
00:39:21
◼
►
is the incredible power efficiency that these systems have
00:39:25
◼
►
because of M1 at the same time,
00:39:27
◼
►
they're getting a gigantic increase in performance.
00:39:30
◼
►
- Right, one of the things that we've been talking about
00:39:33
◼
►
and speculating about Apple Silicon since WWDC
00:39:36
◼
►
and before that when we called it our Macs
00:39:39
◼
►
is this idea of what will Apple choose?
00:39:41
◼
►
Will Apple choose more performance
00:39:44
◼
►
and to blow us away with the performance
00:39:46
◼
►
in the first Apple Silicon Macs?
00:39:47
◼
►
'Cause we knew you could do that if you wanted to.
00:39:50
◼
►
And then there was this tantalizing idea that these,
00:39:54
◼
►
the chips that you use in the iPhone and the iPad
00:39:56
◼
►
are so well optimized for power consumption
00:40:00
◼
►
because those are battery devices
00:40:03
◼
►
and you wanna have good battery life.
00:40:04
◼
►
And so there were a lot of conversations that were which,
00:40:07
◼
►
where will Apple choose to land
00:40:10
◼
►
in terms of performance and battery life?
00:40:13
◼
►
And in looking at what you've rolled out here,
00:40:16
◼
►
it's kind of funny.
00:40:17
◼
►
It feels like the answer was both.
00:40:20
◼
►
- Yeah, it's interesting to hear this question
00:40:24
◼
►
because the idea of optimizing performance
00:40:27
◼
►
without considering power is sort of,
00:40:29
◼
►
it almost doesn't make sense to us
00:40:32
◼
►
because we have been so focused
00:40:34
◼
►
over so many generations of iOS products
00:40:37
◼
►
where you don't get to deliver more performance
00:40:41
◼
►
unless you've managed the power.
00:40:42
◼
►
We think about them together.
00:40:45
◼
►
You kind of heard that in some of the keynotes
00:40:47
◼
►
from www.dc and in the keynote on Tuesday
00:40:51
◼
►
where efficiency equals performance.
00:40:54
◼
►
That's the way we think about it.
00:40:55
◼
►
If you're not introducing performance in an efficient way
00:40:59
◼
►
in an Apple product,
00:41:00
◼
►
you're not gonna get to recognize the performance
00:41:03
◼
►
because in an iPhone,
00:41:04
◼
►
my team doesn't get to go talk
00:41:06
◼
►
to the industrial design team to say,
00:41:07
◼
►
"Hey, could you make it a little bit thicker
00:41:08
◼
►
"and maybe add a fan?"
00:41:10
◼
►
Because we really wanna boost the performance of the machine.
00:41:12
◼
►
So instead, what we do is we focus obsessively
00:41:15
◼
►
on moving the performance up
00:41:17
◼
►
and locking in on that power target.
00:41:19
◼
►
And for M1, the beautiful thing
00:41:23
◼
►
about an active cooling system
00:41:25
◼
►
is not that we built a bigger power burning chip,
00:41:28
◼
►
it's that we always build some margin into the chips
00:41:33
◼
►
to make sure that we can get the burst performance
00:41:35
◼
►
on something like an iPad Pro, for example.
00:41:38
◼
►
And that burst performance is huge
00:41:39
◼
►
because you can do a really interesting scroll
00:41:42
◼
►
or a very complex game transition.
00:41:44
◼
►
And if you're doing it in a brief period of time,
00:41:46
◼
►
you can sustain that, you can absorb that power.
00:41:49
◼
►
But what's beautiful about the active cooling system,
00:41:51
◼
►
that extra boost, that margin on top of the CPU and GPU,
00:41:54
◼
►
we can sustain it now.
00:41:56
◼
►
We can actually, for pro-like workloads,
00:41:58
◼
►
you can run at that performance level for a lot longer.
00:42:01
◼
►
And so that's super exciting.
00:42:02
◼
►
- Would it be fair to say that the discipline
00:42:04
◼
►
that you had to exercise in building chips for a phone
00:42:09
◼
►
is sort of what has led to this philosophy?
00:42:11
◼
►
That you were in a limited space with limited battery,
00:42:15
◼
►
you needed to be as efficient as possible in that context.
00:42:17
◼
►
- Absolutely.
00:42:19
◼
►
Like I said, we didn't have an option.
00:42:21
◼
►
And so our focus on delivering increased performance
00:42:24
◼
►
for user experience,
00:42:25
◼
►
'cause that's what it's all about at Apple.
00:42:26
◼
►
It's not about selling chips,
00:42:27
◼
►
it's about participating in the delivery
00:42:30
◼
►
of this amazing product and the amazing experience.
00:42:32
◼
►
Well, our part, we deliver the performance
00:42:34
◼
►
that software needs to deliver the experience
00:42:36
◼
►
that our HI team wants to deliver.
00:42:39
◼
►
And so for us, the only way,
00:42:41
◼
►
it's really in the end, it's those constraints.
00:42:44
◼
►
It's the thermal constraints and the power constraints
00:42:46
◼
►
that led to the invention,
00:42:49
◼
►
the methodologies that have led us to this point,
00:42:52
◼
►
because it wasn't that we didn't want
00:42:54
◼
►
to increase performance every generation.
00:42:56
◼
►
It's just that we had to do it
00:42:57
◼
►
with that one hand tied behind our back.
00:42:59
◼
►
And so, okay, that's fine.
00:43:00
◼
►
We're gonna get really good at designing these chips
00:43:03
◼
►
within those constraints.
00:43:05
◼
►
And frankly, I think great designs
00:43:08
◼
►
come from those kinds of constraints.
00:43:10
◼
►
And I think that's really, really what led us to,
00:43:13
◼
►
the culmination where we were able
00:43:14
◼
►
to deliver our first SoC into the Mac.
00:43:17
◼
►
- And as we said in the keynote,
00:43:19
◼
►
M1 was specifically designed for our most popular
00:43:24
◼
►
and affordable systems where power efficiency
00:43:27
◼
►
is incredibly important, right?
00:43:29
◼
►
And so M1 going into the MacBook Air,
00:43:34
◼
►
13 inch MacBook Pro and Mac Mini,
00:43:35
◼
►
those were conceived from the beginning.
00:43:38
◼
►
And so to Tim's point, they're perfectly matched
00:43:42
◼
►
in terms of providing this tremendous increase
00:43:45
◼
►
in performance while at the same time,
00:43:47
◼
►
giving our customers ridiculously good battery life.
00:43:51
◼
►
- While we're talking about performance and efficiency,
00:43:54
◼
►
you have four cores of each of those things in this.
00:43:57
◼
►
This is a new thing for Mac users to experience.
00:43:59
◼
►
We've had multi-core computers for a long time,
00:44:02
◼
►
but what we haven't had is the balance
00:44:04
◼
►
that's been in existence on the iOS side for a while now
00:44:08
◼
►
of cores that are focused on performance
00:44:10
◼
►
and cores that are focused on efficiency.
00:44:12
◼
►
Just as the system has to arbitrate what goes on what core,
00:44:16
◼
►
and that's been true for a long time,
00:44:18
◼
►
these systems have to arbitrate sort of what goes where
00:44:21
◼
►
in terms of performance and efficiency.
00:44:24
◼
►
How does that work?
00:44:26
◼
►
And is there a way for individual apps
00:44:30
◼
►
or individual user preferences or anything to influence
00:44:34
◼
►
what gets prioritized?
00:44:35
◼
►
Or is it more that the system handles it
00:44:37
◼
►
and it's a black box?
00:44:38
◼
►
- Yes and yes.
00:44:43
◼
►
- The efficiency cores have been a part of the story
00:44:45
◼
►
for iOS, like you said, for many years.
00:44:47
◼
►
And part of my group and the architecture team
00:44:51
◼
►
is to build part of that power controller.
00:44:54
◼
►
You hear about the power management controller
00:44:56
◼
►
that works very tightly with the operating system scheduler
00:45:01
◼
►
to try to figure out what to place where
00:45:03
◼
►
and how to make decisions about that.
00:45:05
◼
►
It is a new domain for the Mac
00:45:06
◼
►
and it's gonna be an interesting experience
00:45:09
◼
►
to see developers get their heads around what it means.
00:45:12
◼
►
We think for multi-threaded workloads,
00:45:14
◼
►
it's gonna look like an extension of the high performance
00:45:19
◼
►
that we're getting from our performance cores,
00:45:21
◼
►
just like it does, for example, on our iPad Pros.
00:45:24
◼
►
I think in other cases, we have more control
00:45:28
◼
►
over background tasks that the operating system can schedule
00:45:31
◼
►
and we can constrain them and say,
00:45:32
◼
►
"Hey, we can make choices about where we place these things
00:45:36
◼
►
because we think this would be a more appropriate thread
00:45:38
◼
►
to run on an E-core if we're in control of it."
00:45:41
◼
►
Ultimately though, I think we do try to figure out
00:45:44
◼
►
how to just treat those cores
00:45:45
◼
►
as just part of the scheduling targets.
00:45:48
◼
►
It's giving us that additional performance and efficiency
00:45:52
◼
►
in the background when it's necessary.
00:45:54
◼
►
And we find that we try to drive as much as possible
00:45:57
◼
►
down into the E-cores.
00:45:59
◼
►
I mean, that's sort of the philosophy.
00:46:00
◼
►
If you can run something on the E-core, why not?
00:46:01
◼
►
Because it's gonna end up, on average,
00:46:04
◼
►
giving you a better, efficient story.
00:46:06
◼
►
And frankly, these are not to be trifled with.
00:46:08
◼
►
These E-cores are, I think there was a comment,
00:46:11
◼
►
if you turned off the P-cores and just ran the E-cores,
00:46:13
◼
►
you'd still have an amazing experience.
00:46:15
◼
►
- Yeah, but what we said in the keynote was, on their own,
00:46:18
◼
►
the four efficiency cores is providing the performance
00:46:22
◼
►
equivalent to the dual-core,
00:46:25
◼
►
previous generation dual-core Mac with GARE.
00:46:27
◼
►
- That was easily my favorite stat.
00:46:28
◼
►
Like, I felt like I was having to bring myself
00:46:33
◼
►
back to Composure again, 'cause it was like, wait a second.
00:46:36
◼
►
Is that what they said?
00:46:37
◼
►
Yeah, that was the thing, I think, that really,
00:46:40
◼
►
like 2x, 3x, 5x, they sound great, right?
00:46:43
◼
►
But that was really something where it was a great statistic
00:46:47
◼
►
for contextualizing, just the sheer power of these chips.
00:46:51
◼
►
I thought that was super cool.
00:46:53
◼
►
So we asked for some questions from our audience,
00:46:55
◼
►
and we got lots of questions
00:46:58
◼
►
about the new unified memory architecture.
00:47:01
◼
►
So I wanted to dig into that a little bit.
00:47:03
◼
►
We're all used to RAM and, more recently, video RAM,
00:47:08
◼
►
and that becoming a thing that people think about
00:47:10
◼
►
in the products that they may or may not purchase.
00:47:13
◼
►
Does the new system, the M1,
00:47:15
◼
►
does it change how we should think about RAM,
00:47:18
◼
►
RAM amounts, and what they're capable of?
00:47:20
◼
►
- Yeah, I love this question.
00:47:22
◼
►
As you can imagine, we've been, for the iOS computers,
00:47:25
◼
►
we've been living in this unified memory world
00:47:26
◼
►
from the beginning.
00:47:28
◼
►
And the challenge and opportunity of a unified memory system
00:47:32
◼
►
is we need to make sure the graphics system, the GPU,
00:47:36
◼
►
has the bandwidth it needs to really demonstrate its strength.
00:47:40
◼
►
In a lot of ways, the bandwidth from the main memory system
00:47:43
◼
►
is the fuel that allows the GPU to do its work,
00:47:46
◼
►
and we build them in balance.
00:47:47
◼
►
We make sure that the great eight-core GPU inside M1
00:47:52
◼
►
is balanced with the bandwidth it needs to be great.
00:47:55
◼
►
Those go hand in hand.
00:47:57
◼
►
We also appreciate CPUs.
00:47:59
◼
►
We need to make sure the memory system has the capacity
00:48:02
◼
►
to make a reasonable platform.
00:48:04
◼
►
And I think the 16-gigabyte capacity that we get out of M1
00:48:08
◼
►
is a really great solution for the broad set
00:48:12
◼
►
of the MacBook Airs, the MacBook Pro 13,
00:48:15
◼
►
and the Mac Mini that we released.
00:48:16
◼
►
But what unified memory does, and the opportunity really,
00:48:20
◼
►
is that if you were a developer who was ever frustrated
00:48:23
◼
►
by the fact that the memory system the CPU had access to
00:48:26
◼
►
was relatively low bandwidth and was limiting
00:48:28
◼
►
your multi-threaded performance,
00:48:30
◼
►
well, a unified memory system gives you the bandwidth
00:48:33
◼
►
of a GPU, but it's available to the CPU.
00:48:36
◼
►
And if you were ever a GPU developer
00:48:38
◼
►
and you were always frustrated by the capacity
00:48:40
◼
►
that you ever got out of a video RAM,
00:48:42
◼
►
because they tended to be high bandwidth
00:48:45
◼
►
but relatively low capacity
00:48:46
◼
►
compared to the main memory system,
00:48:48
◼
►
well, all of a sudden, you got the capacity
00:48:49
◼
►
of the main memory system at the bandwidth that the GPU needs.
00:48:53
◼
►
That by itself is super interesting,
00:48:55
◼
►
because now developers don't have to choose.
00:48:57
◼
►
But the third dividend is, from a performance perspective,
00:49:00
◼
►
if you're a developer that's using both engines
00:49:03
◼
►
and you have a mixed workload,
00:49:04
◼
►
then you're trying to move frame buffers back and forth
00:49:06
◼
►
between CPU and GPU, you're kind of constrained,
00:49:09
◼
►
both in performance and copying the data back and forth,
00:49:12
◼
►
and in the extra energy it takes
00:49:14
◼
►
to copy the data back and forth.
00:49:15
◼
►
So it's a double whammy in a constrained platform.
00:49:19
◼
►
So unified memory is, in a lot of ways, a developer's dream.
00:49:23
◼
►
- This is super interesting.
00:49:25
◼
►
It's also, it's complicated because it is challenging
00:49:30
◼
►
something that I feel like I've known about
00:49:32
◼
►
for as long as I've known about computers, right?
00:49:34
◼
►
Which is like what memory is and how we think about it.
00:49:38
◼
►
But it does seem, I mean, like with the way
00:49:40
◼
►
that you explain it, it seems incredibly interesting.
00:49:44
◼
►
And I guess, you know, like something that,
00:49:46
◼
►
you mentioned iOS devices, you know,
00:49:48
◼
►
like iOS devices have long outperformed,
00:49:52
◼
►
like Android devices that claim huge amounts of RAM in them.
00:49:55
◼
►
I imagine it's a similar idea, right?
00:49:58
◼
►
Which is, I think it was Craig in the presentation
00:50:00
◼
►
who mentioned the line about like the software
00:50:02
◼
►
and hardware working together
00:50:04
◼
►
and how that's Apple's greatest strength.
00:50:06
◼
►
And it seems like that the M1 is really allowing that
00:50:09
◼
►
better than ever for the Mac.
00:50:10
◼
►
And I guess this is one of those things, right,
00:50:12
◼
►
that comes out of that.
00:50:13
◼
►
- Absolutely. I think the Metal,
00:50:15
◼
►
the software team that does the Metal API frameworks
00:50:19
◼
►
and the drivers for the GPU,
00:50:21
◼
►
this is, again, we've been working in concert
00:50:24
◼
►
with those same, that team really from the beginning
00:50:27
◼
►
in the iOS chips and the transition into M1
00:50:31
◼
►
has really just been a long dream come true
00:50:34
◼
►
for both our teams.
00:50:36
◼
►
And we think developers are gonna love it.
00:50:38
◼
►
- Yeah, one of the very important points
00:50:41
◼
►
that was made in the keynote is,
00:50:43
◼
►
and Craig made this point,
00:50:45
◼
►
is this is the first time where we've been able
00:50:48
◼
►
to optimize macOS for our own silicon, right?
00:50:53
◼
►
And we also talked about the fact that
00:50:55
◼
►
as we've been designing M1,
00:50:58
◼
►
we've been analyzing and running workloads from macOS
00:51:02
◼
►
so it can inform the design.
00:51:04
◼
►
And so this unified memory architecture
00:51:07
◼
►
is a perfect example of the synergy of that.
00:51:10
◼
►
So Craig mentioned the fact that,
00:51:12
◼
►
first of all, we use similar data types in Big Sur
00:51:16
◼
►
to make sure that we're not doing expensive copying
00:51:20
◼
►
and translation of the data.
00:51:22
◼
►
And also we can make more memory available to apps
00:51:27
◼
►
for graphics so that they can run at incredible speeds.
00:51:32
◼
►
So this ability, the strategic advantage we have
00:51:37
◼
►
of designing and building our own hardware
00:51:40
◼
►
and integrating it with our software
00:51:43
◼
►
really, really shines now that we have brought
00:51:46
◼
►
our own silicon architecture to the Mac.
00:51:49
◼
►
- Follow up for that, listener Zach asked,
00:51:52
◼
►
Craig Federighi mentioned that some apps
00:51:54
◼
►
will perform better on the M1,
00:51:57
◼
►
even though they're Intel apps running under Rosetta 2,
00:52:01
◼
►
which is the translation engine,
00:52:03
◼
►
better than they do natively on Intel machines.
00:52:07
◼
►
Now you've mentioned the metal team.
00:52:10
◼
►
I think that that's what's going on here,
00:52:11
◼
►
but could you talk a little bit about how it's possible
00:52:14
◼
►
that you're gonna have scenarios where software
00:52:17
◼
►
not written for this platform,
00:52:21
◼
►
at least the chip architecture,
00:52:22
◼
►
is actually gonna outperform on it?
00:52:25
◼
►
- Absolutely, so one of the great stories of the Mac
00:52:28
◼
►
and Apple software in general is that we develop
00:52:30
◼
►
these rich set of frameworks
00:52:32
◼
►
for application developers to leverage.
00:52:34
◼
►
So if you're thinking about a typical application
00:52:37
◼
►
that, especially something that's using metal,
00:52:40
◼
►
well, metal is actually,
00:52:42
◼
►
if they're calling into the metal framework,
00:52:44
◼
►
that is native code.
00:52:46
◼
►
Though their application might be an Intel native code base,
00:52:49
◼
►
when they make that framework call,
00:52:51
◼
►
it calls into the operating system
00:52:53
◼
►
and it's taken over by the native metal code.
00:52:56
◼
►
Now, if it's a metal app, it's probably using the GPU.
00:52:59
◼
►
It doesn't take much time spent on a 5X faster GPU
00:53:03
◼
►
for you to accelerate an application
00:53:05
◼
►
that's depending on GPU performance.
00:53:07
◼
►
So there's another explanation for why.
00:53:10
◼
►
Though on the surface, it might seem surprising.
00:53:12
◼
►
You can kind of get your head around,
00:53:14
◼
►
ah, I see how this is happening.
00:53:16
◼
►
And the third, just to be clear,
00:53:19
◼
►
Rosetta 2 is really something special.
00:53:22
◼
►
This is a tool that we developed starting in my group,
00:53:27
◼
►
just at the same time we started thinking
00:53:29
◼
►
about this transition, just to make sure.
00:53:31
◼
►
And we developed really, really something special
00:53:34
◼
►
from a translation perspective.
00:53:35
◼
►
It shares the name with Rosetta 1.
00:53:37
◼
►
It's a complete rewrite from scratch,
00:53:40
◼
►
focused on this transition,
00:53:42
◼
►
and we couldn't be happier with how well it's performing.
00:53:44
◼
►
So it's quite good,
00:53:46
◼
►
even for code that isn't running through the frameworks.
00:53:50
◼
►
- When it comes to apps on M1, along with Big Sur,
00:53:54
◼
►
one of the things that I'm really excited about
00:53:57
◼
►
is iOS apps running on the Mac.
00:54:00
◼
►
Kind of wanted to get a little bit of discussion about that.
00:54:03
◼
►
Like, how are these apps running?
00:54:06
◼
►
What kind of experience can people see?
00:54:09
◼
►
I just wanted to kind of get your feelings
00:54:10
◼
►
on that a little bit,
00:54:11
◼
►
'cause I know it's something that I, many of our listeners,
00:54:14
◼
►
are really excited to try out.
00:54:15
◼
►
- Yeah, this is one of the great features
00:54:18
◼
►
that every Mac with M1 will get,
00:54:21
◼
►
and that's the ability to run unmodified iPhone
00:54:25
◼
►
and iPad apps, right?
00:54:27
◼
►
So this is the great benefit
00:54:29
◼
►
of having this scalable architecture
00:54:32
◼
►
that we bring over from our iOS devices to the Mac.
00:54:35
◼
►
And so customers will be able to simply
00:54:38
◼
►
go to the Mac App Store and search for their favorite app.
00:54:43
◼
►
And if the developer has agreed
00:54:47
◼
►
to let it be available on the Mac App Store,
00:54:49
◼
►
they just download it and it runs, and away they go.
00:54:52
◼
►
And so it is gonna open up hundreds of thousands of apps
00:54:57
◼
►
to our Mac users on day one.
00:55:01
◼
►
And it means that a Mac with M1
00:55:05
◼
►
is gonna be able to run a wider variety of software
00:55:09
◼
►
than any Mac ever.
00:55:11
◼
►
- I think the translation of some of these apps
00:55:13
◼
►
into the Mac, if you needed the gyro,
00:55:16
◼
►
obviously there's gonna be certain applications
00:55:17
◼
►
that we didn't add a bunch of stuff to the Mac,
00:55:20
◼
►
as far as I know, to make it something
00:55:23
◼
►
you could pick up and turn.
00:55:25
◼
►
They've really done a nice job
00:55:26
◼
►
in doing the translation of the touch UI,
00:55:27
◼
►
and I think a lot of the great work we've done on iPad
00:55:30
◼
►
in the last few years has really helped make that
00:55:33
◼
►
even better.
00:55:34
◼
►
- Got a couple of questions from listeners
00:55:36
◼
►
who are concerned about changes to the platform
00:55:39
◼
►
going into the new Apple Silicon era.
00:55:42
◼
►
Listener Ben wanted to know about if there is any support
00:55:46
◼
►
or plan for it for virtualizing Windows
00:55:49
◼
►
on Apple Silicon Macs.
00:55:51
◼
►
And Leighton wanted to know about support for eGPUs,
00:55:56
◼
►
external GPUs, because that doesn't seem to be supported
00:55:58
◼
►
in this first round at least.
00:56:00
◼
►
Things that Mac users are maybe used to
00:56:02
◼
►
from previous generations, what's the status of these?
00:56:06
◼
►
- Virtualization technology is built in M1,
00:56:09
◼
►
and we've been working closely with Parallels
00:56:13
◼
►
so that they could bring the ability to Mac users
00:56:17
◼
►
to run other environments like Linux and Docker.
00:56:20
◼
►
And so that's one of the foundational features of M1
00:56:24
◼
►
is virtualization.
00:56:26
◼
►
In terms of Windows, nothing's been announced
00:56:29
◼
►
at this point.
00:56:30
◼
►
And in terms of eGPUs, eGPUs are not supported
00:56:35
◼
►
on systems with M1.
00:56:37
◼
►
Keep in mind that the systems with M1
00:56:40
◼
►
are getting a massive, massive increase in performance
00:56:45
◼
►
from the incredible GPU that we have in M1.
00:56:49
◼
►
5x faster on Air, 5x faster on the 13-inch Pro,
00:56:54
◼
►
and 6x faster on Mac Mini.
00:56:56
◼
►
And so we think our customers who are using those products
00:57:01
◼
►
are gonna see phenomenal graphics performance
00:57:05
◼
►
on those systems.
00:57:05
◼
►
- We're all using video conferencing more and more and more.
00:57:10
◼
►
So one of the things that everybody cares about
00:57:12
◼
►
maybe more now than they ever have is their webcam.
00:57:16
◼
►
It doesn't appear that there was any change
00:57:18
◼
►
to the webcam itself, but there was talk in the presentation
00:57:22
◼
►
about some additional work that's been done.
00:57:25
◼
►
What kind of improvements do the laptops see?
00:57:28
◼
►
And is there kind of any reason for the time being
00:57:31
◼
►
why there's been no change to the actual camera hardware?
00:57:34
◼
►
- So the 13-inch MacBook Pro and the MacBook Air
00:57:38
◼
►
do have 720p cameras.
00:57:39
◼
►
However, the ISP in the M1 chip
00:57:44
◼
►
does a phenomenal job increasing the quality
00:57:49
◼
►
of the video experience from those cameras.
00:57:52
◼
►
Our users are gonna see a noticeable difference.
00:57:55
◼
►
It brings auto white balance and greater dynamic range
00:57:58
◼
►
and face detection and other things that you're gonna see.
00:58:03
◼
►
The camera's quality on these systems really look great.
00:58:07
◼
►
And on the MacBook Air, we even made some changes
00:58:12
◼
►
to the display itself to allow more light
00:58:17
◼
►
to get to the sensor in the camera.
00:58:20
◼
►
So we think our customers are gonna be really delighted
00:58:24
◼
►
with the camera quality in these new systems.
00:58:28
◼
►
- Yeah, I think that Tom strikes that point.
00:58:30
◼
►
I think the ability for us to leverage all the work
00:58:34
◼
►
we're doing on the camera software for the ISP
00:58:38
◼
►
and our iOS products is now finally coming to the Mac
00:58:40
◼
►
in full force.
00:58:42
◼
►
This is just gonna create the foundation
00:58:45
◼
►
on which we're gonna make it even better.
00:58:46
◼
►
But I think the M1 systems are already gonna see
00:58:49
◼
►
a huge uplift from that.
00:58:50
◼
►
- So this is obviously step one was said in the event.
00:58:54
◼
►
Step one of a, Apple has a two year process.
00:58:58
◼
►
This is the first set of products, the first processor.
00:59:01
◼
►
There's a lot of runway here.
00:59:03
◼
►
What are you most excited about when you think about
00:59:06
◼
►
what Apple Silicon and the M1 and future,
00:59:10
◼
►
the future path this is setting us on
00:59:13
◼
►
is gonna bring to the Mac?
00:59:14
◼
►
What makes you excited when you're thinking about
00:59:16
◼
►
the world we're just entering right now,
00:59:18
◼
►
which is the Apple Silicon Mac world?
00:59:21
◼
►
What excites you about that?
00:59:23
◼
►
- So from the beginning, and we've talked about this
00:59:27
◼
►
relentlessly over the number of years.
00:59:29
◼
►
At Apple, we're all about the user experience, right?
00:59:33
◼
►
And that's what's most important to us.
00:59:36
◼
►
And with the advent of Apple Silicon,
00:59:39
◼
►
and in this case, M1 in the Mac,
00:59:42
◼
►
the user experience that our customers are gonna have
00:59:45
◼
►
is what we're incredibly excited about.
00:59:48
◼
►
As I mentioned earlier, you're gonna,
00:59:51
◼
►
first of all, you're gonna open,
00:59:52
◼
►
if you have one of the notebooks,
00:59:53
◼
►
you're gonna open it and you're gonna get instant wake.
00:59:56
◼
►
It's like, wow, just like my iPhone, just like my iPad,
00:59:59
◼
►
boom, it's ready.
01:00:00
◼
►
And then you're gonna start noticing how incredibly snappy
01:00:05
◼
►
and fast and fluid it is.
01:00:07
◼
►
You're gonna launch an app and bam, it's there.
01:00:10
◼
►
And bam, it's there.
01:00:11
◼
►
You're gonna open large apps like Final Cut Pro,
01:00:15
◼
►
and it's gonna open like instantaneously,
01:00:17
◼
►
and you're gonna be blown away.
01:00:18
◼
►
You're gonna say to yourself, did that really just happen?
01:00:20
◼
►
I'm gonna quit it again and I'm gonna launch it again.
01:00:24
◼
►
And you're gonna be able to do things on these Macs
01:00:26
◼
►
that you've never even thought you could do before
01:00:29
◼
►
on an Air, on a Mini, on a 13-inch MacBook Pro.
01:00:32
◼
►
So you're gonna be blown away with the performance.
01:00:34
◼
►
And then you may use a feature in an app like Pixelmator
01:00:39
◼
►
where you can sharpen the resolution of a photo
01:00:43
◼
►
and the neural engine's gonna kick in and bam,
01:00:46
◼
►
it's gonna happen so fast
01:00:47
◼
►
and you're gonna be blown away about how fast that is.
01:00:51
◼
►
And this whole time as you're using your Mac,
01:00:55
◼
►
it's the Mac that you know and love,
01:00:56
◼
►
but there's so much better in every way.
01:00:59
◼
►
And the whole time you're using it and experiencing it,
01:01:02
◼
►
you're gonna be just so delighted by that.
01:01:05
◼
►
And then at some point you're gonna look up
01:01:06
◼
►
to the upper right and you're gonna look
01:01:07
◼
►
at your battery indicator.
01:01:09
◼
►
And you're gonna go, is something wrong?
01:01:12
◼
►
I've been using this system for a couple hours now
01:01:14
◼
►
and my battery hasn't really even ticked down.
01:01:18
◼
►
And then each day you're gonna be blown away with,
01:01:21
◼
►
I can't believe I just did that.
01:01:23
◼
►
And I can't believe how much battery life
01:01:25
◼
►
I have this system has.
01:01:27
◼
►
And it's almost like discovering your Mac all over again.
01:01:31
◼
►
It really is.
01:01:33
◼
►
And that's what I can't wait for customers
01:01:36
◼
►
to get these products in their hands
01:01:38
◼
►
because they're just gonna be blown away.
01:01:40
◼
►
- I couldn't agree more.
01:01:42
◼
►
And the other shout out I would make,
01:01:45
◼
►
and we talked a little bit about this in the last time
01:01:47
◼
►
where my brother sort of sent in that trick question.
01:01:49
◼
►
My brother and I were hackers on the Apple II early.
01:01:53
◼
►
There was that TRS-82 weeks, but we put that behind us.
01:01:57
◼
►
But the exciting part for me as a person
01:01:59
◼
►
who's been building into this iOS
01:02:01
◼
►
and just the surprise and delight
01:02:02
◼
►
we've been able to deliver is,
01:02:04
◼
►
well, now we're able to expose some of the cool stuff
01:02:06
◼
►
we're doing to the tinkerers, the hackers,
01:02:08
◼
►
the Mac is this great platform for people
01:02:12
◼
►
who are scientists and students and developers
01:02:15
◼
►
who really just wanna understand
01:02:16
◼
►
what's going on underneath the hood.
01:02:18
◼
►
And now they're gonna get access to our neural engine
01:02:20
◼
►
and they're gonna be able to do really, really cool,
01:02:23
◼
►
interesting things on that platform
01:02:25
◼
►
in ways that are beyond the amazing things
01:02:28
◼
►
they're doing on the iOS products.
01:02:30
◼
►
They're gonna be able to learn and explore.
01:02:33
◼
►
And that's one of the other big differences
01:02:35
◼
►
that the Mac has always played for Apple and for the world
01:02:40
◼
►
is this really great hobbyist spirit is there.
01:02:43
◼
►
And now we're gonna be able to expose
01:02:44
◼
►
some of this cool stuff to them as well.
01:02:46
◼
►
- I'll give you another example of what this means,
01:02:51
◼
►
kind of a more personal example.
01:02:53
◼
►
I can still remember to this day,
01:02:55
◼
►
and it was a long, long time ago when I got my first Mac.
01:02:59
◼
►
And I took it up to my room.
01:03:02
◼
►
I was much, much younger than I am today.
01:03:04
◼
►
And I opened it up and I was so blown away by it,
01:03:08
◼
►
I literally pulled an all-nighter
01:03:10
◼
►
and used it till the next morning.
01:03:12
◼
►
And that feeling that you get
01:03:14
◼
►
when you first experienced in that.
01:03:16
◼
►
And with these Macs with M1, it's the same feeling, right?
01:03:21
◼
►
It's like, oh my gosh, this is incredible.
01:03:24
◼
►
I love this thing.
01:03:25
◼
►
And I'm just so looking forward to people
01:03:29
◼
►
to get it in their hands
01:03:31
◼
►
because they're gonna have the same feeling.
01:03:33
◼
►
And that's what's so exciting.
01:03:35
◼
►
- I know that I speak for so many people,
01:03:39
◼
►
our entire audience to say,
01:03:40
◼
►
this is a very exciting thing.
01:03:42
◼
►
And we have an audience of people
01:03:45
◼
►
that are diehard Mac users.
01:03:47
◼
►
And this really feels like something super exciting and new.
01:03:52
◼
►
So we're really excited to see it.
01:03:55
◼
►
Can't wait until we can start using them.
01:03:57
◼
►
And I wanna thank you both for the work that you've done
01:04:01
◼
►
in making this happen and also for coming on the show today
01:04:03
◼
►
to share some of these stories of our audience.
01:04:06
◼
►
Thank you so much guys.
01:04:07
◼
►
- Well, this is why we do what we do.
01:04:10
◼
►
It is just making our users' lives better
01:04:15
◼
►
and just giving them that delight
01:04:18
◼
►
when they use our products.
01:04:19
◼
►
And that's why we do what we do and we work so hard.
01:04:21
◼
►
And we just hope that they love these systems
01:04:26
◼
►
as much as we do and we're very confident they will.
01:04:29
◼
►
- Yeah, and thank you for the opportunity
01:04:31
◼
►
to come in and talk about it.
01:04:33
◼
►
- My favorite subject.
01:04:35
◼
►
- To paraphrase Apple, we can't wait to see
01:04:37
◼
►
what you will do next so that you can come back here
01:04:40
◼
►
and talk about that too.
01:04:41
◼
►
- Okay, we'll make this a regular thing.
01:04:44
◼
►
Yep, great talking to you guys again.
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◼
►
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01:06:23
◼
►
Jason Snell, you have all the Macs.
01:06:25
◼
►
- I have all the Macs.
01:06:28
◼
►
I've had them for a while.
01:06:30
◼
►
I just, not to lord it over everybody,
01:06:31
◼
►
but for the last kind of week,
01:06:34
◼
►
I've had a MacBook Air, a MacBook Pro,
01:06:36
◼
►
and a Mac Mini surrounding me running M1 chips.
01:06:39
◼
►
I got all the M1 chips everywhere.
01:06:42
◼
►
- You did send me an iMessage
01:06:45
◼
►
with just a picture of a huge box.
01:06:48
◼
►
- Oh God. - I was like, oh man.
01:06:51
◼
►
So let's review these things.
01:06:53
◼
►
Let's talk about them.
01:06:54
◼
►
I wanna get probably the most boring part out of the way
01:06:57
◼
►
first, which is just to talk about the hardware real quick,
01:07:00
◼
►
and then we'll dig into what's inside of these machines.
01:07:03
◼
►
Do you have any real thoughts on the hardware?
01:07:06
◼
►
I mean, I know they haven't really changed anything,
01:07:10
◼
►
but what are your kind of thoughts
01:07:12
◼
►
about the way these things look,
01:07:13
◼
►
the ports that they have, that kind of stuff?
01:07:17
◼
►
- Well, I feel like it is, you could call them boring
01:07:20
◼
►
or you could call it reassuring and familiar.
01:07:23
◼
►
And I think that's what Apple is going for, right?
01:07:27
◼
►
They want to reassure everyone that these are just Macs.
01:07:31
◼
►
And so the MacBook Air looks like a MacBook Air,
01:07:36
◼
►
couldn't tell it apart.
01:07:37
◼
►
The MacBook Pro looks like a MacBook Pro,
01:07:38
◼
►
couldn't tell it apart.
01:07:39
◼
►
The only way you can tell the Mac Mini apart is
01:07:41
◼
►
it's silver and not space gray,
01:07:43
◼
►
and it only has two instead of four Thunderbolt ports on it.
01:07:46
◼
►
But the laptops are just, they're the same,
01:07:50
◼
►
and that's on purpose, right?
01:07:52
◼
►
Apple has decided with this round
01:07:54
◼
►
not to try and reinvent the personal computer
01:07:58
◼
►
on the outside anyway.
01:08:00
◼
►
And I think Apple's goal is that if somebody were
01:08:04
◼
►
to make an Apple Store order or in parts of the world
01:08:09
◼
►
where they could do this, go into an Apple Store
01:08:12
◼
►
and buy a MacBook Air before Christmas,
01:08:15
◼
►
bring it home, that they would basically not notice
01:08:20
◼
►
that it was using a new chip architecture,
01:08:22
◼
►
that most people don't care.
01:08:24
◼
►
All they should really care about is the speed
01:08:26
◼
►
and the battery life, really.
01:08:29
◼
►
And even then they probably don't care about speed as much,
01:08:32
◼
►
which means they'll just notice
01:08:33
◼
►
that the battery lasts longer.
01:08:35
◼
►
And I think that's the goal, is like, it's just a Mac,
01:08:37
◼
►
but it is better, and otherwise it's exactly the same.
01:08:40
◼
►
So in that way, it's not much of a story.
01:08:45
◼
►
Writing a review about these products is fascinating
01:08:47
◼
►
because they mean a lot, and yet a lot of the things
01:08:49
◼
►
that normally are interesting and different
01:08:51
◼
►
about new computers are not interesting
01:08:54
◼
►
or different about these.
01:08:56
◼
►
It's clear that the M1 is constrained.
01:09:01
◼
►
It is, you know, we'll get into the details
01:09:04
◼
►
of how fast they are, but they are low-end chips.
01:09:09
◼
►
These are low-end models with a low-end chip in them.
01:09:13
◼
►
And the first Apple Silicon chip we're seeing is the M1.
01:09:17
◼
►
It is the slowest M1, the slowest Apple Silicon chip ever.
01:09:21
◼
►
To ever be made in a Mac, right?
01:09:25
◼
►
It will very rapidly be outpaced by other chips.
01:09:28
◼
►
There's no doubt about it, right?
01:09:31
◼
►
And this is how they've chosen to go out.
01:09:33
◼
►
What gets confusing is, in some ways,
01:09:36
◼
►
these are the fastest Macs ever, with a few exceptions.
01:09:40
◼
►
And so it gets really confusing.
01:09:43
◼
►
It's like, well, they're so limited, but they're so fast.
01:09:46
◼
►
And the answer is, well, yes,
01:09:47
◼
►
the next ones will be even faster.
01:09:50
◼
►
But this is the new floor.
01:09:53
◼
►
And so they are constrained.
01:09:54
◼
►
It's eight or 16 gigs of RAM.
01:09:56
◼
►
Like, clearly, this chip can't do more than that.
01:09:59
◼
►
It can't do more than two Thunderbolt ports.
01:10:02
◼
►
It's got two full-channel, full-speed Thunderbolt ports
01:10:05
◼
►
that it can do, and that's it.
01:10:07
◼
►
And then the Mac Mini, they're using another means
01:10:11
◼
►
to do HDMI out and two USB-A on top of it.
01:10:15
◼
►
But it's limited in that way.
01:10:18
◼
►
It'll only support two displays.
01:10:19
◼
►
So on the Mac Mini, you can do two external displays,
01:10:22
◼
►
and on the laptops, you can do one external display,
01:10:24
◼
►
and then the laptop display.
01:10:25
◼
►
Like, that's just, it's how they're built.
01:10:28
◼
►
So in all those ways, it's funny, 'cause they're familiar,
01:10:33
◼
►
they're low-end, but they feel high-end
01:10:36
◼
►
when you put them in the context of Intel Macs.
01:10:39
◼
►
They're limited because these are the first models out,
01:10:41
◼
►
and presumably, they can handle these limitations
01:10:45
◼
►
and the future computers and future Apple Silicon processors
01:10:48
◼
►
won't have those limitations.
01:10:50
◼
►
And then the other funny thing about them just in general
01:10:52
◼
►
is that they are all the same.
01:10:53
◼
►
They're not only the same compared to the look and feel
01:10:57
◼
►
of the previous models, but they're the same
01:10:58
◼
►
with each other.
01:10:59
◼
►
Like, performance-wise, they really don't differ that much.
01:11:02
◼
►
These are kind of the same computer
01:11:04
◼
►
in a few different wrappers.
01:11:06
◼
►
- Yeah, it's kind of funny, really, right,
01:11:10
◼
►
that this high-end, low-end in the same product
01:11:14
◼
►
is such a strange thing.
01:11:16
◼
►
It's like, these are all the most basic Macs that Apple make,
01:11:20
◼
►
but they are absolutely unbelievably powerful.
01:11:26
◼
►
- Yeah. - Right, and that mixture
01:11:28
◼
►
is so strange, and that's kind of like the,
01:11:32
◼
►
I guess, the story behind these Macs, right?
01:11:36
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, it is, Apple had to do it one way or another,
01:11:40
◼
►
and this is the way that they chose to do it.
01:11:41
◼
►
I think it makes sense.
01:11:42
◼
►
The first Apple Silicon Mac chip out the door, the M1,
01:11:47
◼
►
is, you know, it's kind of a baby step in a way.
01:11:50
◼
►
It really is, I think, based on everything we know,
01:11:54
◼
►
the equivalent of the A14X, right?
01:11:59
◼
►
It's the A12X and Z are the chip used in the iPad Pros.
01:12:05
◼
►
And as far as we can tell, this is sort of the descendant
01:12:10
◼
►
of that two chip generations forward.
01:12:13
◼
►
Obviously, Apple has done some additional work
01:12:15
◼
►
knowing that this was gonna be used in Macs.
01:12:16
◼
►
There are features that the Mac needs
01:12:18
◼
►
that maybe an iPad doesn't need that they've rolled in here.
01:12:20
◼
►
That's why they've chosen to call it the M1.
01:12:23
◼
►
But if you look at it that way, look at it as kind of
01:12:27
◼
►
the next generation iPad chip,
01:12:28
◼
►
but with some added Mac compatibility.
01:12:31
◼
►
Like, we've been saying for a couple of years now,
01:12:33
◼
►
well, obviously you could use an iPad chip in a low-end Mac,
01:12:36
◼
►
but what about the higher-end Macs?
01:12:37
◼
►
And we can still say that,
01:12:38
◼
►
'cause that's essentially where we are.
01:12:39
◼
►
These are the low-end Macs.
01:12:41
◼
►
And if you look at the benchmark scores
01:12:44
◼
►
and all the different tests and see how fast they are,
01:12:47
◼
►
it's very easy to get caught up in them and say,
01:12:51
◼
►
well, these are high-end, obviously,
01:12:54
◼
►
because they're so much faster than the other,
01:12:56
◼
►
like that MacBook Air is faster than all the MacBook Pros
01:12:59
◼
►
that run Intel chips.
01:13:00
◼
►
But it's still a low-end, still MacBook Air, right?
01:13:03
◼
►
It's still a 999 MacBook Air.
01:13:05
◼
►
That doesn't change.
01:13:06
◼
►
It's just that we're in a chip transition for two years
01:13:08
◼
►
and they've started at the low end.
01:13:11
◼
►
And that's exciting,
01:13:13
◼
►
'cause imagine where they go from here, they go up.
01:13:16
◼
►
But also it's frustrating, I get it,
01:13:20
◼
►
because we're looking at this new generation
01:13:24
◼
►
and being like, oh, it's only two Thunderbolt ports,
01:13:27
◼
►
oh, it's only 16 gigs of RAM and all those things,
01:13:30
◼
►
or memory, if you wanna call it memory,
01:13:31
◼
►
since the memory is all shared now.
01:13:32
◼
►
- Unified memory.
01:13:34
◼
►
- Unified memory, although we'll see how they approach that
01:13:36
◼
►
going forward, if it's all unified memory
01:13:38
◼
►
or if there are some configurations
01:13:39
◼
►
that aren't in the future.
01:13:40
◼
►
But in these systems, they kept it simple,
01:13:42
◼
►
because they're the first ones
01:13:44
◼
►
and they got them out the door shortly after announcing
01:13:47
◼
►
that they were doing this transition.
01:13:49
◼
►
I think that makes sense.
01:13:49
◼
►
And any more radical changes and future steps forward
01:13:54
◼
►
will have to wait for '21.
01:13:57
◼
►
- Let's talk about performance
01:13:59
◼
►
and let's talk about benchmarks.
01:14:01
◼
►
This is not a thing that we typically
01:14:03
◼
►
would pay any attention to,
01:14:06
◼
►
except when there's some kind of outlier.
01:14:09
◼
►
I cannot remember ever talking about a new Mac with you
01:14:13
◼
►
and we've spoken about Geekbench numbers.
01:14:15
◼
►
- I'm sure it's come up, I'm sure it's come up.
01:14:17
◼
►
- But not with the focus that we're gonna put on it now.
01:14:21
◼
►
And the reason for that is because
01:14:23
◼
►
these scores are particularly outstanding.
01:14:30
◼
►
So do you wanna tell me kind of what is going on?
01:14:33
◼
►
We don't need numbers, but just to stack them up
01:14:36
◼
►
against where they're sitting
01:14:38
◼
►
with other Macs and general competition.
01:14:40
◼
►
- There are a couple charts that are in my review
01:14:43
◼
►
that are not, so I did the usual charts
01:14:45
◼
►
with the little green bars for people who see my charts
01:14:48
◼
►
on six colors, green means Mac, orange means iPad.
01:14:52
◼
►
Like I have a, there's a system,
01:14:53
◼
►
there's a method to my madness.
01:14:55
◼
►
So there are the green bars that are like,
01:14:57
◼
►
here are these three M1 computers,
01:14:59
◼
►
which are almost identical.
01:15:01
◼
►
The variance has to do with the variance on the computer.
01:15:04
◼
►
Like if we tested them a thousand times,
01:15:06
◼
►
I think that they would have exactly the same scores
01:15:09
◼
►
with the exception of the GPU test on the seven core GPU
01:15:12
◼
►
on the MacBook Air, which is,
01:15:14
◼
►
you'll be shocked to discover one eighth slower.
01:15:18
◼
►
It's like seven eighths the speed of the others.
01:15:21
◼
►
Funny that the seven core is literally that much slower.
01:15:26
◼
►
Like it's just, that's just what it is,
01:15:29
◼
►
which means it's still way faster
01:15:32
◼
►
than the other integrated Intel graphics computers
01:15:36
◼
►
that Apple makes or has made.
01:15:38
◼
►
But the other set of charts that I made
01:15:41
◼
►
are these charts about where the M1 fits
01:15:43
◼
►
in the existing sort of Mac product line.
01:15:46
◼
►
And I did two of those,
01:15:48
◼
►
single core and multi-core for Geekbench,
01:15:50
◼
►
where I went through the Geekbench browser
01:15:52
◼
►
and I found like historic scores
01:15:54
◼
►
for mostly sort of shipping products
01:15:57
◼
►
and then compared them to the M1 Macs.
01:15:59
◼
►
And this is where it gets kind of wild,
01:16:02
◼
►
but I think this also puts them in the best context,
01:16:05
◼
►
which is the single core.
01:16:07
◼
►
Apple, when they announced this product last week said,
01:16:11
◼
►
it's the fastest core in the world, basically,
01:16:15
◼
►
in a computer.
01:16:16
◼
►
And the tests bear that out.
01:16:18
◼
►
The single core score,
01:16:20
◼
►
where you're only running one processor core,
01:16:22
◼
►
is faster on the M1 than any Mac
01:16:25
◼
►
that is made with an Intel chip in it.
01:16:29
◼
►
Now, performance is generally,
01:16:31
◼
►
on an eight core system, right?
01:16:33
◼
►
Performance is not on one core,
01:16:35
◼
►
it's on all the cores.
01:16:36
◼
►
So this is academic in a way,
01:16:38
◼
►
although there are inefficient processes
01:16:41
◼
►
that only run on one core,
01:16:42
◼
►
and those will run really fast on these,
01:16:44
◼
►
but you wanna look at the multi-core, right?
01:16:45
◼
►
Because that's where you've got a 28 core Mac Pro, right?
01:16:49
◼
►
Or an 18 core iMac Pro.
01:16:50
◼
►
And they're so fast
01:16:52
◼
►
because they have so many processor cores to do the work.
01:16:55
◼
►
And these M1 Macs have eight cores.
01:16:58
◼
►
They've got the four efficiency cores
01:17:00
◼
►
and the four performance cores,
01:17:01
◼
►
and they can use all eight at a time if they want to.
01:17:03
◼
►
And if you look at the Geekbench scores there,
01:17:06
◼
►
this is, I think,
01:17:07
◼
►
the most interesting thing about these computers,
01:17:09
◼
►
which is they are what we thought they would be, by the way.
01:17:13
◼
►
They are faster than any Mac ever made
01:17:18
◼
►
in multi-core performance,
01:17:19
◼
►
with the exception of the Mac Pro,
01:17:24
◼
►
the current Mac Pro,
01:17:27
◼
►
the iMac Pro,
01:17:29
◼
►
so the Xeon processor-based multi-core Pro
01:17:32
◼
►
workstation monsters, the Mac Pro and the iMac Pro.
01:17:35
◼
►
And this year's i9 iMacs,
01:17:40
◼
►
the high-end build-to-order configurations
01:17:43
◼
►
of i9 at eight and 10 cores,
01:17:45
◼
►
and last year's i9 iMac
01:17:50
◼
►
with, I think, eight cores.
01:17:53
◼
►
So basically, those are the only Macs that I could find
01:17:56
◼
►
that actually beat the M1 Macs.
01:17:58
◼
►
It's the highest end.
01:17:59
◼
►
- It's basically all desktop professional Macs.
01:18:02
◼
►
- Yeah, right, 'cause those high-end iMacs
01:18:04
◼
►
are essentially the ones
01:18:06
◼
►
that touch the iMac Pro in performance,
01:18:08
◼
►
and that's literally the highest configuration,
01:18:10
◼
►
and then you need to spec up the processor even higher
01:18:13
◼
►
to get there, and that's it.
01:18:15
◼
►
Like, everything else, every MacBook Pro,
01:18:18
◼
►
every other iMac,
01:18:19
◼
►
every other Mac Mini is slower at multi-core performance
01:18:25
◼
►
than the M1 Macs.
01:18:26
◼
►
And keep in mind, these are the low-end Macs.
01:18:30
◼
►
- It's unbelievable.
01:18:32
◼
►
I knew they were gonna be good.
01:18:33
◼
►
- Like, if you draw the chart,
01:18:34
◼
►
like I've done on "Six Colors" a couple of times,
01:18:37
◼
►
sort of like plotting out A series performance
01:18:41
◼
►
and A series X performance,
01:18:44
◼
►
it was gonna be kinda in this ballpark,
01:18:47
◼
►
but it's one thing to see that and be like,
01:18:49
◼
►
"Oh, theoretically, they could do this,"
01:18:50
◼
►
and it's another thing to see them land it
01:18:53
◼
►
and land it where they did,
01:18:55
◼
►
where a 999 MacBook Air is, for most tasks,
01:19:00
◼
►
faster than any Mac ever made
01:19:02
◼
►
that isn't a Mac Pro or an iMac Pro.
01:19:05
◼
►
- Well, let's talk about that, though, 'cause you say,
01:19:08
◼
►
it's one thing to think it,
01:19:10
◼
►
it's one thing to see the benchmark scores,
01:19:15
◼
►
but it's a whole other thing to see the performance
01:19:19
◼
►
doing tasks that you do on a computer, right?
01:19:23
◼
►
Because scores don't mean anything, right?
01:19:26
◼
►
- Yes, I have no context.
01:19:29
◼
►
So what have you been able to do?
01:19:32
◼
►
How has it performed, and how has it performed
01:19:35
◼
►
against not only just old Macs, but the three Macs,
01:19:39
◼
►
the three M1 Macs, how have they performed
01:19:41
◼
►
against each other?
01:19:42
◼
►
- Well, against each other, they're almost identical.
01:19:44
◼
►
I mean, that's the bottom line,
01:19:46
◼
►
other than the graphics part,
01:19:47
◼
►
and the battery is less in the MacBook Air
01:19:51
◼
►
than in the MacBook Pro, and that does show up.
01:19:53
◼
►
And I did a battery test,
01:19:56
◼
►
and definitely the MacBook Pro has a better battery.
01:19:59
◼
►
It's pretty simple.
01:20:00
◼
►
But what I tried to do is some tasks
01:20:04
◼
►
that would show off this power
01:20:08
◼
►
in kind of conditions you would actually do, right?
01:20:12
◼
►
Because a benchmark chart isn't doing work.
01:20:15
◼
►
It's trying to simulate doing work.
01:20:16
◼
►
So for the 20 Macs for 2020 series,
01:20:20
◼
►
I've been editing all of those in Final Cut Pro,
01:20:24
◼
►
and there was a new Final Cut Pro update
01:20:27
◼
►
for Apple Silicon last week that I downloaded
01:20:30
◼
►
and I used to edit this week's 20 Macs for 2020 video,
01:20:34
◼
►
which is from a new batch that Steven and I shot.
01:20:37
◼
►
We shot our last batch of those for the top six.
01:20:40
◼
►
We shot them in 4K.
01:20:42
◼
►
He shot his in 4K HDR,
01:20:45
◼
►
which we talked about earlier.
01:20:47
◼
►
You said how great the HDR video was,
01:20:49
◼
►
and I'll just say matching HDR video
01:20:52
◼
►
to non-HDR video is not fun.
01:20:55
◼
►
- Yeah, that's a pain.
01:20:57
◼
►
I understand that the idea of the new,
01:21:00
◼
►
it can be difficult to take the HDR video from iPhones
01:21:04
◼
►
and edit them into non-HDR purposes,
01:21:08
◼
►
but most people are not doing that.
01:21:11
◼
►
- No, exactly right.
01:21:12
◼
►
It's a lesson that I learned.
01:21:13
◼
►
Anyway, it's 4K video that we've got,
01:21:17
◼
►
and I've been editing these videos on my iMac Pro,
01:21:21
◼
►
and some of them not even 4K, some of them just 1080,
01:21:24
◼
►
but I think the last one I shot in 1080
01:21:27
◼
►
and Steven shot in 4K, so his file was 4K,
01:21:30
◼
►
and I had to make a proxy workflow
01:21:32
◼
►
where I re-encoded those videos at a lower resolution
01:21:36
◼
►
and edited using the lower resolution
01:21:39
◼
►
because otherwise I got way too many hiccups
01:21:42
◼
►
when I was editing on my iMac Pro.
01:21:44
◼
►
- It just couldn't handle the file size, right?
01:21:47
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, exactly.
01:21:48
◼
►
It's just like, it's a lot of data,
01:21:50
◼
►
and it has to decode the video, and it was too much,
01:21:53
◼
►
so I stepped down the quality, essentially.
01:21:55
◼
►
So on the Mac Mini, I brought my project over,
01:22:00
◼
►
and I set it to use the non-optimized,
01:22:06
◼
►
full resolution files, and even the setting
01:22:09
◼
►
that was a better quality instead of better performance,
01:22:12
◼
►
to have the video look crystal clear while I was editing it.
01:22:16
◼
►
And I never had a hiccup, not one, the whole time.
01:22:22
◼
►
And that was that moment where I thought,
01:22:24
◼
►
oh, this little Mac Mini that costs whatever, 699,
01:22:28
◼
►
I'm not sure which configuration I have,
01:22:29
◼
►
I'll have to look that up, but--
01:22:30
◼
►
- Let's just say it was $750, right?
01:22:32
◼
►
I just pluck a number out, yeah.
01:22:34
◼
►
- Sure, it did all these things
01:22:36
◼
►
that the $5,000 iMac Pro from three years ago
01:22:39
◼
►
behind me couldn't handle.
01:22:41
◼
►
- It's unbelievable, unbelievable, because, right,
01:22:45
◼
►
what you are doing there is exactly
01:22:48
◼
►
what the iMac Pro is made for, right?
01:22:51
◼
►
- I know, yeah, that was two streams of 4K video,
01:22:53
◼
►
and it didn't flinch, it was not a problem.
01:22:56
◼
►
- And so I did that, I also did a video in code
01:23:00
◼
►
where I took an Apple ProRes file of actually that episode
01:23:06
◼
►
of 20 Macs for 2020 video, and I encoded that,
01:23:10
◼
►
I just used QuickTime to encode an H.264 1080 version of it.
01:23:15
◼
►
And again, it's an eight-core iMac Pro, it's good at this,
01:23:20
◼
►
and it was about 10 seconds slower at it
01:23:25
◼
►
than the other systems.
01:23:26
◼
►
And again, it's not a lot, but the fact that they're,
01:23:31
◼
►
even in the ballpark of my eight-core, now deprecated,
01:23:34
◼
►
but eight-core iMac Pro is ridiculous,
01:23:37
◼
►
because these are low-end systems.
01:23:39
◼
►
Another test that I hear,
01:23:42
◼
►
'cause we know a lot of developers, is Xcode compile.
01:23:46
◼
►
- And I did an Xcode compile, our friend James Thompson
01:23:50
◼
►
sent me the source code to dice by PCALC.
01:23:52
◼
►
It's very nice of him to trust me not to sell that
01:23:57
◼
►
on the black market, but I ran an Xcode archive
01:24:03
◼
►
where it's basically building everything
01:24:05
◼
►
that it needs to build for a project.
01:24:07
◼
►
And people complain a lot about how slow Xcode is
01:24:10
◼
►
at compiling software.
01:24:12
◼
►
And it's another one of those cases where compared to,
01:24:17
◼
►
so they did that job in a little less than 30 seconds.
01:24:20
◼
►
My iMac Pro did it in 42 seconds, which is really fitting,
01:24:24
◼
►
given that it's James Thompson.
01:24:27
◼
►
The 2020 high-end 13-inch MacBook Pro,
01:24:30
◼
►
the 13-inch that they released earlier this year
01:24:34
◼
►
with four ports, 51 seconds.
01:24:37
◼
►
And I think that that says it all right.
01:24:38
◼
►
This year's top-of-the-line 13-inch MacBook Pro Intel system
01:24:43
◼
►
was almost twice as long to do it.
01:24:48
◼
►
Not quite, but in that ballpark.
01:24:51
◼
►
And I can't tell you how impressive that is.
01:24:54
◼
►
That's huge.
01:24:57
◼
►
Like if you bought a 13-inch high-end MacBook Pro
01:25:00
◼
►
earlier this year thinking, this is really great.
01:25:05
◼
►
I mean, it's fine, but that MacBook Air,
01:25:09
◼
►
I did it by a lot.
01:25:11
◼
►
And that's the story, right?
01:25:14
◼
►
Like across anything that you need that kind of performance.
01:25:17
◼
►
Obviously, if you're just editing text
01:25:19
◼
►
or doing Microsoft Word or something like that,
01:25:21
◼
►
or working with graphics,
01:25:22
◼
►
you're not necessarily gonna notice it.
01:25:23
◼
►
You're gonna notice the places
01:25:24
◼
►
where it used to stutter a little that it doesn't,
01:25:27
◼
►
or that there used to be a pause that there now isn't.
01:25:30
◼
►
But when you're using it for like these higher-end things,
01:25:34
◼
►
it's just a lot faster than computers
01:25:39
◼
►
that by all accounts in the past
01:25:42
◼
►
should have beaten the pants off
01:25:44
◼
►
of these little low-end Macs.
01:25:46
◼
►
And they just, they don't.
01:25:47
◼
►
This is the new...
01:25:49
◼
►
In fact, I'm starting to wonder
01:25:50
◼
►
if we need to redefine what a low-end task is,
01:25:52
◼
►
because obviously a MacBook Air can handle,
01:25:55
◼
►
and a 699 Mac Mini can handle editing
01:26:00
◼
►
multiple 4K video streams.
01:26:01
◼
►
So is that a low-end task now?
01:26:02
◼
►
Probably not, but that's the kind of thing you need to do
01:26:06
◼
►
to stress these things out.
01:26:07
◼
►
- So it makes the Mac Mini a kind of a weird outlier to me,
01:26:12
◼
►
because, all right, so the MacBook Pro,
01:26:15
◼
►
it's the clues in the name,
01:26:16
◼
►
it's a machine for professionals.
01:26:18
◼
►
Do your professional work here.
01:26:19
◼
►
And now that professional machine can do these tasks
01:26:24
◼
►
so much more efficiently than ever before.
01:26:26
◼
►
And the MacBook Air is typically a machine
01:26:29
◼
►
for the majority of people.
01:26:31
◼
►
I mean, I'm sure lots of MacBook Airs
01:26:33
◼
►
use Photoshop, for example,
01:26:34
◼
►
which I'm sure will run much nicer
01:26:36
◼
►
when Adobe put the version of Photoshop out there
01:26:40
◼
►
that is native for the M1.
01:26:42
◼
►
But the MacBook Air benefits from much greater battery life,
01:26:46
◼
►
which is something that people, all MacBook Air users
01:26:50
◼
►
will benefit from.
01:26:50
◼
►
But the Mac Mini is in this weird spot, right?
01:26:53
◼
►
Where it's not really a professional machine,
01:26:56
◼
►
neither does it have to worry about battery life.
01:26:59
◼
►
It's like it is in this peculiar, in the middle spot here
01:27:03
◼
►
with kind of what we expect of it,
01:27:06
◼
►
where these other two machines, the two laptops,
01:27:09
◼
►
maybe are more catered to this particular benefits
01:27:13
◼
►
when you think about where it lives in the overall lineup,
01:27:16
◼
►
which is kind of like a funny little anomaly.
01:27:18
◼
►
- It's gonna work its way out, right?
01:27:20
◼
►
Like, eventually Apple will, once the transition is over,
01:27:25
◼
►
I think you'll look at the product line
01:27:26
◼
►
and it'll make more sense than it does now.
01:27:27
◼
►
But yes, this is another one of those leaps
01:27:30
◼
►
where it used to be, you said,
01:27:32
◼
►
"Oh, well, you need a pro laptop to do that work."
01:27:35
◼
►
And there'll be new work.
01:27:36
◼
►
You know, Apple was talking about like 8K video and so like,
01:27:39
◼
►
there will always be new high-end work
01:27:41
◼
►
that the low-end systems aren't gonna be able to accomplish.
01:27:45
◼
►
But the story of computing over the last couple of decades,
01:27:48
◼
►
you know, even longer, three or four decades,
01:27:51
◼
►
is always there's this task that is impossible to perform
01:27:54
◼
►
and then it's only possible to perform it
01:27:55
◼
►
on a high-end system.
01:27:57
◼
►
And then you just wait long enough
01:27:58
◼
►
and it's possible to do it on a low-end system.
01:28:00
◼
►
- Right, but isn't it wild that Apple is the company
01:28:06
◼
►
that's first to being able to produce the machines
01:28:10
◼
►
that can run this future work, whatever it is?
01:28:13
◼
►
That doesn't seem like the normal way
01:28:14
◼
►
that things have been done.
01:28:15
◼
►
- Well, the overarching story of the M1
01:28:18
◼
►
and of the Intel to Apple Silicon transition in general
01:28:22
◼
►
is going to be that Apple came up from the streets.
01:28:27
◼
►
And by that, I mean the mean streets
01:28:30
◼
►
of smartphone development,
01:28:33
◼
►
where every bit of processing power
01:28:36
◼
►
and every bit of energy savings was vitally important.
01:28:39
◼
►
And they're trying to make the iPhone and the iPad
01:28:42
◼
►
as successful as possible through their own chips.
01:28:44
◼
►
And like, that's tough.
01:28:47
◼
►
And you get to the end of that story
01:28:48
◼
►
and you've got something really remarkable
01:28:52
◼
►
that you could apply to the Mac and see huge benefits.
01:28:55
◼
►
So if you've been following Apple story,
01:28:57
◼
►
it actually does kind of make sense,
01:28:59
◼
►
but from the, you know, it's an advantage
01:29:03
◼
►
that came from the other side of the street,
01:29:06
◼
►
basically from the mobile side
01:29:09
◼
►
and now is being applied to the Mac
01:29:10
◼
►
because Apple has done such a good job
01:29:12
◼
►
with their chips on the other side
01:29:15
◼
►
that they've rocketed past where Intel was on this side.
01:29:19
◼
►
And I feel like I mentioned this in my review,
01:29:22
◼
►
I feel like that moment at that Brooklyn event in 2018,
01:29:26
◼
►
where they started boasting about how the iPad Pro
01:29:29
◼
►
was faster than most PC laptops,
01:29:31
◼
►
that was the clear moment where we all went,
01:29:33
◼
►
oh, they're doing this.
01:29:35
◼
►
'Cause like if they've reached the point
01:29:36
◼
►
where they can compare themselves to Intel's processors
01:29:41
◼
►
favorably, then it's only a matter of time
01:29:45
◼
►
before they just replace Intel's processors.
01:29:47
◼
►
And that's where we are.
01:29:48
◼
►
- Unified memory, I think is something that,
01:29:50
◼
►
I mean, you know, we got so many questions about it
01:29:52
◼
►
and we asked Tim and Tom a little bit about it too,
01:29:55
◼
►
but I think this is something that a lot of our audience
01:29:57
◼
►
is really getting hung up on.
01:30:00
◼
►
I know that it might be too difficult to tell right now
01:30:02
◼
►
with just a week's worth of usage,
01:30:04
◼
►
but did you come across any scenario
01:30:07
◼
►
where you felt the machine struggling in a way
01:30:11
◼
►
that you could attribute it to differences in RAM?
01:30:15
◼
►
- I haven't.
01:30:17
◼
►
I think this is one of those things that's very hard
01:30:20
◼
►
I haven't noticed anything like that.
01:30:22
◼
►
I'm sure that there are people who load enormous files
01:30:27
◼
►
into memory who are going to be curious about it.
01:30:30
◼
►
I would say that the combination of having
01:30:33
◼
►
this memory, which is very fast
01:30:35
◼
►
and doesn't have to do some of the tricks that you do
01:30:39
◼
►
when the memory is off the die, off of the package.
01:30:44
◼
►
Also, the SSD speed,
01:30:50
◼
►
a lot of times I hear people complain about
01:30:54
◼
►
running out of RAM who are using like
01:30:57
◼
►
traditional hard drives instead of SSD.
01:30:59
◼
►
Like it's easier to page out to SSD.
01:31:01
◼
►
It's not the same, but it's better.
01:31:04
◼
►
I am sure there are workflows and people who use
01:31:06
◼
►
huge amounts of RAM who will look at these systems at 16
01:31:10
◼
►
and will run into some walls and say,
01:31:14
◼
►
"Oh, this is frustrating."
01:31:15
◼
►
And to them, I would say,
01:31:17
◼
►
"Yeah, there will be pro systems later,
01:31:22
◼
►
"clearly that will support more memory than this."
01:31:25
◼
►
But I never ran into any of those things.
01:31:28
◼
►
I did not open gigantic image files
01:31:32
◼
►
that I don't quite frankly, I don't have.
01:31:34
◼
►
I did not run 15 different apps
01:31:38
◼
►
and have a bunch of tabs open.
01:31:39
◼
►
I haven't done any of that.
01:31:40
◼
►
So I can't say on that side.
01:31:43
◼
►
All I'll say is that I think for most regular use,
01:31:46
◼
►
especially given that these are essentially low end systems,
01:31:49
◼
►
16, did I detect a difference between eight and 16?
01:31:53
◼
►
I didn't, but I still bought a MacBook Air with 16
01:31:56
◼
►
because I felt like that was something I wanted to do
01:31:59
◼
►
just because I do use my Mac for some more serious stuff,
01:32:03
◼
►
but I didn't run into anything.
01:32:05
◼
►
It's very hard to do that.
01:32:06
◼
►
And honestly, I'm probably not the best person.
01:32:10
◼
►
I'm not somebody who leaves a million tabs open.
01:32:12
◼
►
I'm not somebody who works with enormous image files.
01:32:15
◼
►
It's very rare that I run into a moment.
01:32:18
◼
►
It does happen occasionally,
01:32:19
◼
►
but it's very rare that I run into a moment
01:32:21
◼
►
where I think, "Oh no, I've run out of RAM
01:32:23
◼
►
"and now everything is slow."
01:32:25
◼
►
It doesn't happen very often.
01:32:27
◼
►
And I haven't been able to coax these systems into doing that.
01:32:31
◼
►
- I think that that specific thing
01:32:35
◼
►
with the differences between the unified memory and the RAM
01:32:39
◼
►
and how that's gonna shake out,
01:32:41
◼
►
that's going to, I think that's gonna take a while
01:32:43
◼
►
and it's going to take people sharing very specific use cases
01:32:48
◼
►
for us to be able to see it.
01:32:49
◼
►
- Right, we're gonna see the edges
01:32:51
◼
►
'cause people are gonna push these things.
01:32:52
◼
►
But I will say if you're somebody who never, ever, ever,
01:32:55
◼
►
ever buys a Mac with less than 32 gigs of RAM, wait.
01:33:00
◼
►
At least wait until your colleagues who are more
01:33:04
◼
►
on the cutting edge than you dive into these things
01:33:09
◼
►
and say, "Oh, it's actually not so bad."
01:33:11
◼
►
Or, "Oh yeah, this doesn't work."
01:33:13
◼
►
And find out what they say.
01:33:15
◼
►
Or if failing that, wait until the next ones,
01:33:19
◼
►
which will presumably have a higher RAM limit.
01:33:23
◼
►
That's what I would say.
01:33:25
◼
►
These, I would not bet against these things surprising you,
01:33:29
◼
►
but also they are low end systems.
01:33:31
◼
►
That said, other than waiting
01:33:36
◼
►
'cause I know there's something better coming along
01:33:37
◼
►
'cause there always is, but there definitely is this time.
01:33:40
◼
►
I was thinking today about how if I really wanted
01:33:44
◼
►
to maximize the efficiency of my workflows,
01:33:49
◼
►
I would be better off using the Mac mini than my iMac Pro.
01:33:54
◼
►
Because it's faster.
01:33:57
◼
►
- What about battery life?
01:34:01
◼
►
- I only had a chance to do one test
01:34:03
◼
►
and battery life is so variable because the fact is,
01:34:06
◼
►
mostly what we use our laptops for is a lot of stuff
01:34:09
◼
►
and there are quiet times and there are more intense times
01:34:12
◼
►
and it depends on what set of apps you're using
01:34:15
◼
►
and what kind of data you're processing.
01:34:16
◼
►
And there's so many things there that it's unique.
01:34:19
◼
►
You can't really measure one person's battery life.
01:34:24
◼
►
That said, I wanted to sort of check Apple
01:34:28
◼
►
and check Apple's work because Apple makes these big claims
01:34:31
◼
►
and their video playback claim is based on the video playing
01:34:35
◼
►
in the TV app.
01:34:37
◼
►
My guess is that it's the most optimized experience,
01:34:40
◼
►
'cause Apple controls the app
01:34:42
◼
►
and has probably updated the TV app to use all
01:34:44
◼
►
of the decoders that are in the M1 and it's perfect.
01:34:49
◼
►
All right, and what I did was open a Safari window
01:34:54
◼
►
and stream video.
01:34:55
◼
►
I streamed it from Plex, but you know,
01:34:57
◼
►
basically web streaming video in a browser window.
01:35:00
◼
►
And the MacBook Air lasted for nine and a half hours,
01:35:06
◼
►
which I will tell you is a lot for a MacBook Air.
01:35:12
◼
►
It just kept going and I got 13 hours and 15 minutes
01:35:16
◼
►
out of the MacBook Pro.
01:35:18
◼
►
So these are numbers that are smaller
01:35:19
◼
►
than Apple's quoted numbers,
01:35:21
◼
►
but I would say suggest that Apple is not wrong
01:35:24
◼
►
when it says these things have long battery life,
01:35:27
◼
►
but exactly how much battery life it will be
01:35:29
◼
►
in the way that you use it.
01:35:30
◼
►
Like how long is it if you are intensely editing 4K video
01:35:34
◼
►
the whole time, how long is it gonna last?
01:35:37
◼
►
I didn't test that, I don't know.
01:35:38
◼
►
My guess is a lot less than nine and a half hours,
01:35:41
◼
►
but it's still probably a lot more
01:35:43
◼
►
than the last generation would be.
01:35:45
◼
►
But the battery life is very hard to test
01:35:47
◼
►
and I have not had enough time to do.
01:35:49
◼
►
It would literally have taken all my time
01:35:51
◼
►
just to run battery tests and I have to run other tests
01:35:54
◼
►
and write a whole review.
01:35:55
◼
►
So that's all I got.
01:35:56
◼
►
- Yeah, 'cause again, like, you know,
01:35:59
◼
►
like people could say like, hang on a minute,
01:36:01
◼
►
they said it was 17 hours for video or whatever,
01:36:04
◼
►
but it's what type of video did they use, you know?
01:36:08
◼
►
- And Apple is quoting the tests that best benefit Apple.
01:36:12
◼
►
- Yeah. - Right?
01:36:13
◼
►
They're not, I said this last week, they're not lying,
01:36:17
◼
►
but did their video test happen in their app
01:36:22
◼
►
that has been written, has been updated to perform the best
01:36:27
◼
►
and be the most efficient on M1?
01:36:31
◼
►
Of course, that's why they quoted that one.
01:36:34
◼
►
If they quoted Netflix in a browser window,
01:36:37
◼
►
they probably tested that and they're like,
01:36:38
◼
►
oh, this isn't as good, this is only 13 hours
01:36:40
◼
►
and we got 20 hours for the other one, so let's say 20,
01:36:43
◼
►
which is fine, I mean, it's the same battery.
01:36:46
◼
►
It's just that every use case is gonna be different.
01:36:48
◼
►
But I will say, as somebody who has used a Mac,
01:36:50
◼
►
we hear a lot and we have lots of MacBook Airs in my house,
01:36:54
◼
►
nine and a half hours of playing movies on Plex
01:36:57
◼
►
throughout a whole day, it's pretty good.
01:37:00
◼
►
That's pretty impressive.
01:37:01
◼
►
I do think that this is, depending on the workload,
01:37:04
◼
►
it's gonna vary, but like, this is the kind of computer
01:37:06
◼
►
where you're gonna sweat the battery a lot less.
01:37:09
◼
►
- All right, this episode is brought to you by Remote Works,
01:37:12
◼
►
a podcast that tells extraordinary stories of teams
01:37:15
◼
►
that have made the shift to working remotely.
01:37:18
◼
►
On this season, you'll hear how the pandemic didn't slow down
01:37:21
◼
►
Aston Martin Red Bull racing drivers and their teams,
01:37:24
◼
►
which I'm very excited to hear that episode personally,
01:37:26
◼
►
how two women working in a tiny trapper's cabin in the Arctic
01:37:30
◼
►
are dodging polar bears while fighting climate change,
01:37:33
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and digital nomads working from the beach in Barbados,
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Bali and beyond.
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But it's not just stories about remote work,
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every episode is full of insight and advice
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►
that you can apply to your work and your team,
01:37:45
◼
►
distributed work brings challenges,
01:37:47
◼
►
but it also brings opportunity.
01:37:49
◼
►
That's what Remote Works is all about,
01:37:51
◼
►
helping you find new ways to work, collaborate,
01:37:53
◼
►
and discover new possibilities.
01:37:55
◼
►
I got a sneak peek of season two of Remote Works,
01:37:59
◼
►
and the episode that I listened to was the one
01:38:02
◼
►
about the two women in the trapper's cabin in the Arctic.
01:38:05
◼
►
They're in Arctic Norway,
01:38:07
◼
►
and this is a beautifully produced episode.
01:38:10
◼
►
It has really great sound effects and music,
01:38:12
◼
►
helping to really like tell the story,
01:38:14
◼
►
and it really brings it to life.
01:38:16
◼
►
And some of these stories are absolutely wild,
01:38:18
◼
►
like how if you're remote enough,
01:38:21
◼
►
you could encounter a polar bear in your work day,
01:38:23
◼
►
and that's what happens to these people.
01:38:26
◼
►
It touches on how organisation in your workspace
01:38:28
◼
►
is super important, especially if you inhabit
01:38:30
◼
►
a 200 square foot building in Arctic Norway.
01:38:33
◼
►
The interesting stories are right here in this show,
01:38:36
◼
►
showing how remote work challenges can affect you
01:38:39
◼
►
no matter who you are,
01:38:40
◼
►
but it's still the same kind of challenges
01:38:42
◼
►
that we'll all come into on a daily basis.
01:38:44
◼
►
Search for Remote Works anywhere that you listen to podcasts
01:38:47
◼
►
and we'll include a link in the show notes.
01:38:50
◼
►
Our thanks to Remote Works for their support
01:38:52
◼
►
of this show and Relay FM.
01:38:53
◼
►
Okay, so we've spoken about how the machines look
01:38:59
◼
►
and how they perform,
01:39:01
◼
►
but there are apps that run on these machines.
01:39:03
◼
►
Now we've spoken about the most optimised applications,
01:39:06
◼
►
right, we've spoken about Apple's apps,
01:39:09
◼
►
you know, talking about Final Cut and stuff like that.
01:39:12
◼
►
What about apps in Rosetta 2?
01:39:13
◼
►
What do they like to use?
01:39:15
◼
►
How do they launch?
01:39:16
◼
►
What is the experience like?
01:39:17
◼
►
Well, the first time you launch them,
01:39:19
◼
►
it will say, "Would you like to install Rosetta 2?"
01:39:24
◼
►
And then you have to say yes,
01:39:25
◼
►
and then it installs Rosetta 2.
01:39:27
◼
►
And I think that's interesting
01:39:28
◼
►
that there's a little bit of a gap there
01:39:29
◼
►
where they wanna--
01:39:30
◼
►
Is that the first time for every app
01:39:32
◼
►
or just the first time-- No.
01:39:34
◼
►
The first time you launch a non-universal app,
01:39:38
◼
►
that's what they do.
01:39:39
◼
►
And then they launch and it's fine,
01:39:40
◼
►
but they make you go through that one,
01:39:42
◼
►
that one little extra step.
01:39:44
◼
►
And then after that, it's just apps.
01:39:47
◼
►
And they're a little bit slower.
01:39:49
◼
►
I mean, it's gonna vary.
01:39:51
◼
►
So what it's doing as far as I can tell
01:39:53
◼
►
is it's caching like common commands, essentially.
01:39:58
◼
►
And so if the app is really repetitive
01:40:01
◼
►
and it only really does the same thing,
01:40:03
◼
►
it's gonna be a lot faster.
01:40:05
◼
►
And if it's really sort of having to change
01:40:09
◼
►
based on big data sets and stuff like that,
01:40:10
◼
►
it's gonna be a little bit slower.
01:40:12
◼
►
But still, I managed to run the Intel test on Geekbench
01:40:17
◼
►
and the Intel benchmark test was still faster
01:40:23
◼
►
than the previous MacBook Air and the previous 13 inch,
01:40:27
◼
►
the four port 13 inch.
01:40:29
◼
►
So it's fast.
01:40:30
◼
►
It's gonna vary, but it's fast.
01:40:33
◼
►
I didn't find that I was frustrated.
01:40:36
◼
►
I'm sure again, if you're running an app that's not native
01:40:38
◼
►
that requires every ounce of CPU
01:40:40
◼
►
that you can possibly give it,
01:40:43
◼
►
that it's gonna slow it down.
01:40:46
◼
►
But keeping in mind that you're coming from a system,
01:40:48
◼
►
presumably that was much slower,
01:40:51
◼
►
you're gonna pick up some of that.
01:40:52
◼
►
So like if you're running a non-native app
01:40:55
◼
►
and you're coming from a two or three year old MacBook Air,
01:40:58
◼
►
I would wager it will probably be the same speed or faster,
01:41:00
◼
►
but it's gonna vary.
01:41:02
◼
►
What I would say is don't sweat Rosetta
01:41:06
◼
►
because I think Rosetta just works
01:41:08
◼
►
and it works fine.
01:41:09
◼
►
And in most use cases, it's not gonna matter.
01:41:12
◼
►
I also used it with command line stuff.
01:41:14
◼
►
I've got a couple of command line utilities
01:41:15
◼
►
that are compiled for Intel obviously
01:41:17
◼
►
that I use for like audio stuff.
01:41:19
◼
►
And they all just work because Rosetta.
01:41:22
◼
►
So it's pretty transparent.
01:41:26
◼
►
There are edges like Homebrew where people can like download
01:41:30
◼
►
and compile and build all sorts of command line apps.
01:41:33
◼
►
Homebrew first off, it doesn't really work on Big Sur
01:41:35
◼
►
and they're working out how to handle
01:41:37
◼
►
two different processor architectures.
01:41:39
◼
►
And like, it's gonna take a while
01:41:40
◼
►
for stuff like that to clear up.
01:41:41
◼
►
But for the regular person, it's just, you know,
01:41:43
◼
►
you take that old app and you double click it
01:41:45
◼
►
and it launches and it's fine.
01:41:47
◼
►
- Do you encounter anything that doesn't work like at all?
01:41:51
◼
►
- Not that I can think of.
01:41:53
◼
►
Like I said, Homebrew is a good example
01:41:55
◼
►
where that is still in this process of them updating it.
01:41:58
◼
►
And I think that they're gonna be some things like that
01:42:00
◼
►
that are really on the edge.
01:42:03
◼
►
- And then I guess like any virtualization stuff.
01:42:06
◼
►
- Is a thing that is still to come,
01:42:09
◼
►
although they have shown it and talked about it.
01:42:12
◼
►
And there's definitely gonna be parallels
01:42:13
◼
►
in VMware Fusion in Apple Silicon.
01:42:17
◼
►
The question is, what are they emulating?
01:42:19
◼
►
And right now all they've ever shown
01:42:20
◼
►
is they're emulating Linux, I think, in a virtual machine.
01:42:24
◼
►
I don't think they're even emulating it.
01:42:26
◼
►
They're virtualizing an ARM build
01:42:28
◼
►
of a Linux operating system.
01:42:30
◼
►
So it remains to be seen.
01:42:32
◼
►
Like, I feel like Apple's playing a little coy now
01:42:35
◼
►
about Microsoft.
01:42:37
◼
►
I'm still a believer that Windows running
01:42:40
◼
►
on Apple Silicon systems is going to happen.
01:42:43
◼
►
Not sure it'll happen on the M1,
01:42:46
◼
►
but I feel like everybody is inclined to make that work.
01:42:51
◼
►
Like the challenge is, do you wanna emulate Intel Windows,
01:42:55
◼
►
which is gonna be slow, as anybody who used soft Windows
01:42:59
◼
►
or virtual PC on PowerPC Max will tell you.
01:43:05
◼
►
And then in the long run, can Apple and Microsoft
01:43:07
◼
►
work together so that they might be able to virtualize
01:43:11
◼
►
Windows for ARM, which would run at full speed.
01:43:15
◼
►
And I feel like they will.
01:43:17
◼
►
- Windows for ARM exists in case people don't know that.
01:43:19
◼
►
It is a thing that exists.
01:43:21
◼
►
- It's, I think, inevitable.
01:43:23
◼
►
I really do.
01:43:24
◼
►
I don't think that this is a case.
01:43:25
◼
►
People wanna make drama about it and all that,
01:43:27
◼
►
but not only is Microsoft Office in beta
01:43:29
◼
►
with native versions for Apple Silicon now,
01:43:32
◼
►
but Microsoft knows that Apple's platforms
01:43:35
◼
►
are a place for them to pick up more customers
01:43:37
◼
►
and that some of their customers who use Windows
01:43:39
◼
►
also wanna use Mac.
01:43:41
◼
►
And they've had those customers for 15 years
01:43:44
◼
►
straddling those two platforms,
01:43:45
◼
►
and they would probably like to let them continue.
01:43:47
◼
►
And while I'm not sure I think we'll ever see bootcamp,
01:43:50
◼
►
although that's possible, but I doubt it,
01:43:53
◼
►
at least for a long time.
01:43:55
◼
►
Okay, at least for a while.
01:43:56
◼
►
But within a virtualization system,
01:44:01
◼
►
like Parallels of VMware,
01:44:02
◼
►
yeah, I think it's gonna happen.
01:44:05
◼
►
I just, I don't know the timeframe,
01:44:07
◼
►
and I don't know what all the technical hurdles will be
01:44:08
◼
►
and what Microsoft's priorities are,
01:44:10
◼
►
but I think that's almost inevitable.
01:44:14
◼
►
Like, I think Microsoft wants it.
01:44:15
◼
►
I think Apple wants it.
01:44:16
◼
►
I do think it will happen, but it's not today, right?
01:44:19
◼
►
Like, if you're relying on bootcamp
01:44:20
◼
►
or relying on running Windows in a virtual machine
01:44:25
◼
►
at near native speeds, do not buy Apple Silicon.
01:44:29
◼
►
Like, that's a simple one.
01:44:31
◼
►
- I'm nervous to ask this.
01:44:35
◼
►
- What are iOS apps like on the Mac?
01:44:38
◼
►
- So you get them by searching
01:44:42
◼
►
and then toggling over to like iOS from Mac,
01:44:45
◼
►
which is the default search.
01:44:46
◼
►
Or if you look in your purchased list,
01:44:48
◼
►
you can also click on iOS,
01:44:52
◼
►
and then it shows you your purchased iOS.
01:44:54
◼
►
There are a few things going on here.
01:44:56
◼
►
So first off, developers can opt out.
01:44:59
◼
►
So most of the apps I looked for
01:45:02
◼
►
the first time I got on one of these systems
01:45:04
◼
►
and the App Store had been turned on for iOS stuff,
01:45:08
◼
►
almost every app I looked for is just not there.
01:45:12
◼
►
- Like what, what were you looking for?
01:45:14
◼
►
- So, Ferrite, the audio editor that I love on the iPad,
01:45:19
◼
►
it's not there because the developer has opted out.
01:45:23
◼
►
You know, Netflix is a good example.
01:45:27
◼
►
When they highlight HBO Max,
01:45:28
◼
►
that is a strong suggestion that Netflix is not there.
01:45:32
◼
►
And that's an example of why you can just run Netflix
01:45:34
◼
►
in a browser.
01:45:35
◼
►
It's like, yeah, but I don't want to,
01:45:36
◼
►
I'd rather run it in the Netflix app,
01:45:37
◼
►
which is nice and is in its own app.
01:45:40
◼
►
And I don't know whether some of that is like paranoia
01:45:43
◼
►
on Netflix's part that it's gonna lead to piracy
01:45:46
◼
►
or something like that,
01:45:47
◼
►
which is dumb because there's piracy anyway,
01:45:48
◼
►
and not sure when the browser's any different.
01:45:50
◼
►
But like that's a little frustrating to me
01:45:52
◼
►
that there aren't more video apps available.
01:45:55
◼
►
And some of the productivity apps
01:45:56
◼
►
that I was looking for aren't there.
01:45:58
◼
►
So you end up with some games, which are nice.
01:46:00
◼
►
Like all of, all the games like Flip Flop
01:46:04
◼
►
and Really Bad Chess, all the Zach Gage games are there.
01:46:09
◼
►
And that's great 'cause they weren't on the Mac before.
01:46:13
◼
►
And I think that's maybe what Apple is really focusing on
01:46:17
◼
►
is getting a bunch of games
01:46:19
◼
►
that are just not on the Mac on the Mac.
01:46:21
◼
►
But when I was looking at productivity stuff,
01:46:23
◼
►
like yes, Timery is there.
01:46:28
◼
►
- At least last time I checked.
01:46:29
◼
►
But like a bunch of apps that I like are not there.
01:46:34
◼
►
And that bothers me, right?
01:46:36
◼
►
'Cause it's the developer's decision, of course.
01:46:39
◼
►
But I wonder like, are you not there
01:46:41
◼
►
because you just don't want to be on the Mac?
01:46:44
◼
►
Or are you not there because you're working on something?
01:46:48
◼
►
'Cause I do think, oddly,
01:46:50
◼
►
I do think that this is going to maybe give developers
01:46:53
◼
►
more of a reason to embrace Catalyst
01:46:56
◼
►
because they're gonna look at how their app runs on the Mac
01:47:02
◼
►
and think that's not good enough.
01:47:04
◼
►
And maybe we need to add some stuff in
01:47:07
◼
►
to make it more Mac-like
01:47:08
◼
►
and that leads down a path to Catalyst.
01:47:10
◼
►
It also maybe improves their iPad version.
01:47:13
◼
►
So that's all up in the air.
01:47:15
◼
►
And it took some of the wind out of my sails
01:47:17
◼
►
to find out that a lot of the apps
01:47:19
◼
►
that I was kind of interested in seeing
01:47:20
◼
►
how they worked on the Mac just don't work on the Mac,
01:47:23
◼
►
that they've been opted out.
01:47:24
◼
►
- I could imagine a lot of developers
01:47:25
◼
►
wanted to wait until they actually got one as well.
01:47:28
◼
►
- It could be, it could be.
01:47:30
◼
►
I am concerned that like Netflix was just saying,
01:47:33
◼
►
well, forget it.
01:47:34
◼
►
Forget it, we don't want to do that.
01:47:38
◼
►
But like HBO Max, I tried to do full screen.
01:47:43
◼
►
It doesn't do full screen.
01:47:44
◼
►
I tried to resize the window.
01:47:47
◼
►
I'm actually trying that right now.
01:47:48
◼
►
It doesn't resize the window.
01:47:49
◼
►
So you get like a single size sort of a window
01:47:51
◼
►
with a movie playing in it.
01:47:53
◼
►
It's just, I don't, why?
01:47:55
◼
►
Why would you do that?
01:47:57
◼
►
So that's frustrating, the ones that do work.
01:48:01
◼
►
Games, I've had some issues.
01:48:03
◼
►
Like I downloaded flip-flop solitaire
01:48:05
◼
►
and it shows up in like one orientation
01:48:09
◼
►
and it's covered by the dock at the bottom
01:48:15
◼
►
and I can't resize it.
01:48:16
◼
►
So I have to hide the dock in order to get it to show up
01:48:19
◼
►
like the part where the cards are,
01:48:21
◼
►
which is kind of important.
01:48:23
◼
►
- Can you not full screen it?
01:48:24
◼
►
- If I hit the full screen, oh, this is great.
01:48:26
◼
►
If I hit the full screen, it changes orientation
01:48:29
◼
►
into a better orientation, which is a landscape.
01:48:33
◼
►
Then I can play it.
01:48:35
◼
►
- Oh, that's better.
01:48:36
◼
►
- But when it opens, it opens in portrait
01:48:38
◼
►
and it's under the dock.
01:48:39
◼
►
And I would argue that the full screen widget
01:48:42
◼
►
is not made for changing orientation.
01:48:45
◼
►
That's weird.
01:48:46
◼
►
There's just, it's a lot of that.
01:48:48
◼
►
A lot of that stuff is weird.
01:48:49
◼
►
There's this whole touch alternatives mode,
01:48:53
◼
►
which is like, I don't fully understand it,
01:48:55
◼
►
but like there's a second mode that makes,
01:48:58
◼
►
that changes how the app behaves
01:49:00
◼
►
in order to better emulate a touch experience.
01:49:03
◼
►
And then you have to like use the track pad
01:49:05
◼
►
or hold down the option key to like essentially emulate
01:49:09
◼
►
touches on the screen.
01:49:12
◼
►
And if you turn that mode on a bunch of other things,
01:49:16
◼
►
turn off and break.
01:49:18
◼
►
So don't turn it on.
01:49:20
◼
►
So I use Twitterific, which is an app I wanted to try out
01:49:23
◼
►
because I use it on the Mac all the time.
01:49:25
◼
►
And I started using it and I was like,
01:49:27
◼
►
why is it not working right?
01:49:28
◼
►
It's the keyboard shortcuts aren't working
01:49:31
◼
►
and I can't scroll right and all that.
01:49:32
◼
►
And it turns out I had touch alternatives turned on.
01:49:35
◼
►
Now I turned it off and it was like,
01:49:36
◼
►
oh, now it scrolls fine.
01:49:38
◼
►
Now it's got all of the same keyboard shortcuts
01:49:41
◼
►
that it had on the iPad.
01:49:42
◼
►
And they're taking advantage of all of those features
01:49:46
◼
►
that they made available on the iPad.
01:49:47
◼
►
So there's a lot to learn as a user
01:49:53
◼
►
and I think developers have a lot to learn.
01:49:55
◼
►
And I guess what I would say is it's really early days
01:50:00
◼
►
for iOS apps on the Mac.
01:50:02
◼
►
And you're probably going to be disappointed
01:50:05
◼
►
that some of the apps that you wanted to see aren't there.
01:50:08
◼
►
Some of the apps you see are gonna work great.
01:50:11
◼
►
Some of them are gonna work less than great.
01:50:13
◼
►
Some games will probably be good.
01:50:16
◼
►
Some things you'll get frustrated by
01:50:17
◼
►
because they have a Mac version and an iPad version
01:50:20
◼
►
and you bought the iPad version,
01:50:22
◼
►
you don't get the Mac version.
01:50:23
◼
►
Buy it again, I guess.
01:50:24
◼
►
So they've taken those out of the store.
01:50:26
◼
►
So there's gonna be indications.
01:50:29
◼
►
You know, it's gonna be a rough ride, I think.
01:50:30
◼
►
I think this is the place where it's untested.
01:50:33
◼
►
Developers are gonna have to learn about it.
01:50:35
◼
►
My hope is that it drives people who are developers
01:50:38
◼
►
to make their Mac apps better and maybe support Catalyst
01:50:41
◼
►
and get them to be a little bit better.
01:50:44
◼
►
Because even a really good iPad app
01:50:47
◼
►
running on Apple Silicon,
01:50:49
◼
►
like Twitterrific's got all the keyboard shortcuts,
01:50:51
◼
►
but it doesn't have any menus, right?
01:50:53
◼
►
Like, 'cause it has no menus on iOS.
01:50:57
◼
►
- I expect we're gonna see a big take-up
01:51:00
◼
►
in Catalyst post Apple Silicon Mac.
01:51:02
◼
►
- I think some developers are gonna just not bother.
01:51:06
◼
►
And they're gonna take their apps out of the store
01:51:07
◼
►
and they're gonna be like, "We're not gonna play that game.
01:51:08
◼
►
Use the web browser," or whatever.
01:51:10
◼
►
But I do think you're right.
01:51:11
◼
►
I think some developers are gonna look at their apps
01:51:14
◼
►
on the Mac and be like, "Oh, we can make this better."
01:51:18
◼
►
And that's what Catalyst is meant to do.
01:51:19
◼
►
In fact, looking through what we see now,
01:51:23
◼
►
I would say maybe this is what Catalyst
01:51:25
◼
►
was really meant to do all along,
01:51:26
◼
►
which is have you run iOS apps on the Mac
01:51:29
◼
►
and then make them look more like Mac apps.
01:51:32
◼
►
Because now you can see,
01:51:34
◼
►
with an app that is not running Catalyst really,
01:51:37
◼
►
it's just stock loaded from the app store off of an iPad.
01:51:41
◼
►
You look at it and you're like,
01:51:42
◼
►
"This could really use some fit and finish from the Mac."
01:51:44
◼
►
That's what Catalyst is, right?
01:51:46
◼
►
That's literally what Catalyst is.
01:51:47
◼
►
So it's weird and yeah, it's weird,
01:51:52
◼
►
but it's got potential.
01:51:57
◼
►
It's gonna take a while to shake out.
01:51:59
◼
►
And people should prepare to be a little disappointed
01:52:02
◼
►
when some of the apps that they're kind of hoping
01:52:04
◼
►
will run on their Mac may not be there.
01:52:07
◼
►
And if they are there,
01:52:08
◼
►
they may not work like you're hoping they will.
01:52:10
◼
►
But I do think in the long run,
01:52:12
◼
►
opening up the app store and getting those apps on the Mac
01:52:15
◼
►
is gonna be a good thing.
01:52:16
◼
►
It may take a little while.
01:52:17
◼
►
- Yeah, I think this still remains something
01:52:21
◼
►
that I'm really interested by
01:52:22
◼
►
'cause there aren't a lot of apps that I want,
01:52:23
◼
►
but there are apps that I do want.
01:52:25
◼
►
And the reason I want them is because
01:52:27
◼
►
there is not a good Mac app for it, right?
01:52:29
◼
►
And I still believe a kind of wonky iOS app
01:52:34
◼
►
is better than no app, right?
01:52:38
◼
►
Or a very bad Mac app.
01:52:39
◼
►
Like for example, you mentioned Timery,
01:52:41
◼
►
which is the time tracking app that I love.
01:52:44
◼
►
You sent me a screenshot of that.
01:52:46
◼
►
- Yeah. - That it's there
01:52:46
◼
►
in the app store.
01:52:48
◼
►
And that's one that I really want
01:52:52
◼
►
because the toggle, which is the service that I use,
01:52:55
◼
►
their Mac app is garbage.
01:52:58
◼
►
And so even if Timery only kind of works,
01:53:01
◼
►
I know I'm gonna be happier than what I got.
01:53:04
◼
►
But the stuff that's, you know,
01:53:05
◼
►
there's no shortcuts for the Mac, right?
01:53:07
◼
►
And so like, I wonder how that's going
01:53:10
◼
►
to affect my experience.
01:53:11
◼
►
And I think that you're right.
01:53:13
◼
►
I think that there might be things that developers see
01:53:15
◼
►
and then like, oh, you know what?
01:53:17
◼
►
If I make this change to my iOS app,
01:53:19
◼
►
it will actually impact the way that it works on the Mac here
01:53:22
◼
►
and stuff like that.
01:53:23
◼
►
Like, I think this is going to be a thing
01:53:25
◼
►
that's going to take a little bit of time to shake out
01:53:27
◼
►
and is also going to take a lot of time to test,
01:53:30
◼
►
you know, like over the next few weeks
01:53:32
◼
►
to see how these things operate.
01:53:35
◼
►
I still remain excited about it.
01:53:38
◼
►
I lowered my expectations
01:53:42
◼
►
when I heard about how you get these apps, right?
01:53:46
◼
►
So that you mentioned how they're downloaded
01:53:48
◼
►
and I'd heard that last week,
01:53:50
◼
►
that it's like a very conscious choice you have to make
01:53:56
◼
►
to get one, right?
01:53:57
◼
►
Like you go to the app store and you hit the toggle
01:53:59
◼
►
or you go to the purchases thing and you choose.
01:54:01
◼
►
It's like, that's not as front and center as I was expecting
01:54:05
◼
►
and that would indicate to me,
01:54:07
◼
►
I mean, that along with the fact that Apple
01:54:09
◼
►
haven't really shown these things off in running in any way.
01:54:13
◼
►
It's just like, here's a picture of a iOS app.
01:54:17
◼
►
Kind of made me feel like, okay, this is very 1.0
01:54:20
◼
►
and there's a thing they're doing because they can do
01:54:23
◼
►
and is hopefully another kind of carrot on the stick
01:54:28
◼
►
for developers to take advantage of Apple's tools
01:54:32
◼
►
that are meant to generate better
01:54:34
◼
►
cross-platform applications.
01:54:36
◼
►
So I'm just hoping that this is just like another step
01:54:39
◼
►
in that kind of a larger push of making applications
01:54:43
◼
►
that work and run great everywhere.
01:54:45
◼
►
- Also, this just in for people who are looking for this,
01:54:48
◼
►
I believe Twitterific, which I described,
01:54:51
◼
►
which actually is in better shape on Mac OS
01:54:55
◼
►
with Apple Silicon than I thought,
01:54:57
◼
►
appears to have been removed from the Mac app store on iOS.
01:55:02
◼
►
So they seem to have opted out just a little bit later,
01:55:06
◼
►
but I got it.
01:55:07
◼
►
You can't take this away from me.
01:55:09
◼
►
But I don't know what that means either.
01:55:13
◼
►
So we'll see, it's just, it's gonna be like that.
01:55:14
◼
►
I think it's gonna be like that where you're gonna have apps
01:55:16
◼
►
that like the developers like, oh, what, we're where?
01:55:18
◼
►
No, take that down.
01:55:21
◼
►
And that's honestly, that was my first disappointment
01:55:25
◼
►
with this whole thing was just a lot of the apps
01:55:27
◼
►
that I thought would be there aren't there
01:55:29
◼
►
because the developers have opted out.
01:55:31
◼
►
And they probably have good reasons for it.
01:55:33
◼
►
I get it, but it's also disappointing
01:55:35
◼
►
when it might've been good enough for me,
01:55:37
◼
►
but it's not good enough for them.
01:55:39
◼
►
I hope that's what it is and not just, let's just pull it
01:55:42
◼
►
and not be there on the Mac.
01:55:46
◼
►
That would make me sad.
01:55:47
◼
►
But I can't explain HBO Max though.
01:55:49
◼
►
I can't explain that there's a video app
01:55:51
◼
►
that can't go full screen as far as I can tell
01:55:53
◼
►
and that can't be resized.
01:55:55
◼
►
I don't know why that app exists
01:55:58
◼
►
other than for Apple to point to a video app.
01:56:00
◼
►
- But anyway, to wrap this up,
01:56:03
◼
►
overall, how does this first set of M-chip Macs
01:56:08
◼
►
make you feel about the future of the Mac platform?
01:56:12
◼
►
- I think the future of the Mac is really bright.
01:56:13
◼
►
I think that Apple is going to be able to dominate
01:56:17
◼
►
PC performance at a bunch of levels
01:56:20
◼
►
in a way that they've dominated smartphone
01:56:22
◼
►
and tablet performance.
01:56:24
◼
►
I think that there are long-term questions
01:56:25
◼
►
about the highest of the high end,
01:56:27
◼
►
but we're going to have to see,
01:56:29
◼
►
like this is the famous, what is an Apple Silicon Mac Pro
01:56:33
◼
►
and how does that work and what does that product look like
01:56:35
◼
►
and who is it for?
01:56:37
◼
►
And we also have to see the mid range, right?
01:56:40
◼
►
We need to see what an iMac looks like
01:56:42
◼
►
and what a higher end MacBook Pro looks like.
01:56:46
◼
►
We don't have the answers to those questions either,
01:56:48
◼
►
but I think that this is,
01:56:50
◼
►
given how impressive these are as low end systems,
01:56:54
◼
►
that the future is incredibly bright,
01:56:56
◼
►
but there's still work to do.
01:56:58
◼
►
Like, I do think that it's a real question
01:57:00
◼
►
about how is Apple's architecture going to handle,
01:57:03
◼
►
are they going to scale up their GPU?
01:57:06
◼
►
Are they going to do discrete graphics?
01:57:08
◼
►
How do they do expansion cards in a Mac Pro?
01:57:11
◼
►
Is that a thing they're going to do?
01:57:12
◼
►
Are they going to leave Pros behind
01:57:14
◼
►
or are they going to cater to the Pros?
01:57:16
◼
►
My gut feeling is they will cater to the Pros
01:57:19
◼
►
and give them what they want
01:57:20
◼
►
because that's why they embarked
01:57:21
◼
►
on the whole Mac Pro thing in the first place.
01:57:24
◼
►
So, and it also, as we mentioned earlier,
01:57:28
◼
►
sets Apple up to be more innovative
01:57:31
◼
►
with its hardware in the future
01:57:33
◼
►
now that it's got this platform.
01:57:35
◼
►
We may see touchscreen Macs.
01:57:36
◼
►
We may see Mac laptops that are convertible
01:57:40
◼
►
and turn into things that are more like iPads
01:57:43
◼
►
and then back into laptops again,
01:57:45
◼
►
which is not a design
01:57:47
◼
►
that Apple has experimented with before.
01:57:50
◼
►
We may see an iMac that also supports touch
01:57:53
◼
►
or supports Apple Pencil and is more like a Surface Studio.
01:57:57
◼
►
There are lots of things we have an opportunity
01:58:02
◼
►
to see in the Mac that maybe we didn't have before.
01:58:05
◼
►
And I don't believe that it's going to be a case
01:58:09
◼
►
where Apple rests on its laurels
01:58:11
◼
►
and gets surpassed by other chip makers
01:58:16
◼
►
just because it's in Apple's best interest
01:58:18
◼
►
to keep this whole architecture moving forward
01:58:22
◼
►
for the iPhone and the iPad, as well as the Mac.
01:58:25
◼
►
And they all, you know, the Mac is,
01:58:27
◼
►
the processor inside the Mac
01:58:28
◼
►
is now central to Apple strategy,
01:58:30
◼
►
whereas the Intel processors
01:58:31
◼
►
were not remotely central to Apple strategy.
01:58:34
◼
►
And when you're a company that is making unified products
01:58:37
◼
►
that are software and hardware
01:58:40
◼
►
and all the product of your process,
01:58:43
◼
►
you can get better products.
01:58:47
◼
►
Apple has showed that on the iOS side for a while now,
01:58:50
◼
►
and now the Mac gets to do that too.
01:58:52
◼
►
So I think it's really exciting.
01:58:55
◼
►
- This episode of Upgrade is brought to you by DoorDash.
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'cause when you're hungry and you're ordering food,
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you make things, you make mistakes.
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Jason Snell, "Should we finish out today's episode
02:00:57
◼
►
with some #AskUpgrade questions?"
02:00:59
◼
►
Andrew asks, "Do you think that Space Gray or other colors
02:01:04
◼
►
will come back to the Mac Mini
02:01:05
◼
►
when Apple Silicon chips are available
02:01:07
◼
►
in high-end configurations,
02:01:09
◼
►
maybe as like a Mac Mini Pro or something like that?"
02:01:15
◼
►
So last week, apparently,
02:01:17
◼
►
I was skeptical about whether there would be other Mac Minis.
02:01:22
◼
►
I don't actually remember saying that,
02:01:24
◼
►
but I did listen to Connected last week where Steven said,
02:01:27
◼
►
"I know Jason says that there's not gonna be
02:01:28
◼
►
any other Mac Minis, but I don't think he's right."
02:01:30
◼
►
And I was like, "One, how dare you?
02:01:32
◼
►
And two, I agree with you."
02:01:33
◼
►
So if I said that, I'm gonna recant it now
02:01:37
◼
►
and agree with Steven, which is,
02:01:39
◼
►
I think that the fact that the Intel Mac Mini
02:01:43
◼
►
remains in the product line
02:01:44
◼
►
because the M1 Mac Mini only supports up to 16 gigs of RAM
02:01:49
◼
►
and only has the two Thunderbolt ports.
02:01:51
◼
►
In every instance where Apple
02:01:54
◼
►
has left an Intel product behind,
02:01:56
◼
►
I think that's a sign that Apple doesn't think
02:02:00
◼
►
they've got a product to replace that product.
02:02:02
◼
►
So there's still the four-port 13-inch MacBook Pro.
02:02:05
◼
►
There's still the space gray four-thunder-port Mac Mini.
02:02:10
◼
►
All of those still are there.
02:02:13
◼
►
So the answer is yes.
02:02:17
◼
►
I suspect that at some point
02:02:20
◼
►
there will be a pro-ish Mac Mini again.
02:02:25
◼
►
When remains to be seen.
02:02:27
◼
►
Is it in the spring or summer
02:02:30
◼
►
where they do a potentially modified M1 chip
02:02:34
◼
►
that enables higher-end, sort of mid-range Macs?
02:02:38
◼
►
Is it next year sometime, in the next cycle,
02:02:42
◼
►
an M2 of some form that has more features,
02:02:45
◼
►
and they do that and roll out a Mac Mini?
02:02:47
◼
►
But I now would say it's more likely than not
02:02:51
◼
►
that they will have a more capable Mac Mini at some point
02:02:54
◼
►
because that's why that Intel Mac Mini is still there.
02:02:58
◼
►
And would they choose to have that be a space gray
02:03:01
◼
►
instead of a silver?
02:03:03
◼
►
Maybe so, that might be the tell there.
02:03:05
◼
►
So, and I like that because,
02:03:08
◼
►
remember one of the criticisms of the Intel Mac Mini
02:03:10
◼
►
when it got updated last time was it was too expensive.
02:03:15
◼
►
And that's because Apple really sold it
02:03:17
◼
►
as being this product for pros.
02:03:19
◼
►
And that like a lot of pro environments,
02:03:21
◼
►
people wanted more power in the Mac Mini
02:03:22
◼
►
and they wanted to give that to them, which is great.
02:03:26
◼
►
Except the other part of the market is mad
02:03:30
◼
►
because the Mac Mini used to be more affordable.
02:03:33
◼
►
So I wonder if this is where they're heading,
02:03:35
◼
►
which is now they've made a Mac Mini
02:03:37
◼
►
that's more of a truly low-end Mac Mini
02:03:39
◼
►
using Apple Silicon and in silver.
02:03:43
◼
►
And it leaves open the space to do a more capable Mac Mini,
02:03:47
◼
►
maybe in space gray down the road.
02:03:49
◼
►
And I would be surprised if the Mac Mini
02:03:54
◼
►
didn't end up with a more capable
02:03:56
◼
►
Apple Silicon version eventually.
02:03:58
◼
►
- I go back and forth on this a little bit
02:04:02
◼
►
because that like professional Mac Mini
02:04:07
◼
►
only really existed because they had a hole to fill
02:04:11
◼
►
that might not be a hole in the future.
02:04:14
◼
►
So like, depending on what the iMacs look like,
02:04:20
◼
►
depending on if the Mac Pro changes,
02:04:22
◼
►
you know, like they could bring the starting price
02:04:25
◼
►
down a bit, they might not need that Mac Mini Pro anymore.
02:04:29
◼
►
- The Mark Gurman report about the smaller Mac Pro, right?
02:04:34
◼
►
They might not need a pro-level Mac Mini.
02:04:36
◼
►
I still feel like, yeah, something has to replace
02:04:39
◼
►
that higher-end Mac Mini and it might not be a Mac Mini.
02:04:42
◼
►
That's true, that's true.
02:04:44
◼
►
That is one of the uncertainties here.
02:04:46
◼
►
- It could be that really the Mac Mini becomes
02:04:49
◼
►
what it has always been again, which is the entry Mac,
02:04:53
◼
►
right, the switcher's Mac, 'cause like this is a thing
02:04:55
◼
►
that exists or for people that, you know,
02:04:57
◼
►
have interesting use cases and that we still have
02:05:02
◼
►
a desktop professional machine,
02:05:04
◼
►
but it's more like what it used to be,
02:05:09
◼
►
which was the Mac Pro wasn't cheap to get into,
02:05:13
◼
►
but it was much cheaper than it is now.
02:05:16
◼
►
And I could imagine it going that way.
02:05:19
◼
►
Like I think there will be something
02:05:22
◼
►
on a higher-end configuration for a lower starting price.
02:05:26
◼
►
Could be a Mac Mini, might not be the Mac Mini.
02:05:29
◼
►
We've only ever had the thought of a professional Mac Mini
02:05:33
◼
►
once, which is the current one.
02:05:36
◼
►
And our needs were served by other products before that.
02:05:39
◼
►
So we'll see.
02:05:40
◼
►
Brian asks, "The Air, the new MacBook Air
02:05:44
◼
►
does not have a fan, the MacBook Pro does.
02:05:46
◼
►
Do you think there will be thermal issues
02:05:48
◼
►
in the future with the Air?
02:05:50
◼
►
Could you give specific use cases in which a user
02:05:52
◼
►
might consider the Pro rather than the Air?"
02:05:55
◼
►
- Well, it's hard to say, but my guess is that Apple,
02:06:01
◼
►
like Apple makes the chip and Apple makes the computer
02:06:04
◼
►
and Apple chose not to put a fan in it.
02:06:06
◼
►
So are there gonna be thermal issues?
02:06:08
◼
►
I don't think issues is the way I would phrase it,
02:06:11
◼
►
but it's very clear that because the Pro has a fan,
02:06:15
◼
►
the Pro will be able to do sustained performance
02:06:18
◼
►
at longer, at higher clock speeds.
02:06:22
◼
►
Whereas the Air, eventually it's gonna get so hot in there
02:06:26
◼
►
that they're gonna have to scale it down
02:06:28
◼
►
and reduce the clock speed.
02:06:31
◼
►
And it won't be as fast as the Pro,
02:06:34
◼
►
but having the MacBook Air not be as fast as the Pro
02:06:37
◼
►
in certain circumstances when there's sustained actions,
02:06:41
◼
►
like I don't know what video encoding
02:06:42
◼
►
or something like that,
02:06:43
◼
►
something that super stresses the processor for a long time.
02:06:46
◼
►
Like, I mean, to me, that is a natural distinction
02:06:51
◼
►
between the Air and the Pro.
02:06:53
◼
►
When Brian uses the word issues here,
02:06:57
◼
►
I think it's suggestive of what's happened
02:07:01
◼
►
with some of the Macs with Intel processors in them,
02:07:04
◼
►
which have had to really severely constrain themselves
02:07:09
◼
►
because of the thermal limitations of Apple's designs.
02:07:12
◼
►
And I guess to that, I would say the MacBook Air
02:07:15
◼
►
was designed by the company that made the chip
02:07:17
◼
►
that they put in it and they took the fan out on purpose.
02:07:21
◼
►
So I don't think there's anything
02:07:22
◼
►
that you would call an issue there.
02:07:23
◼
►
I think that Apple must be exactly aware
02:07:27
◼
►
of how that performs and they don't have a problem with it.
02:07:31
◼
►
- Yeah, and I think people are focusing on the fan
02:07:36
◼
►
too much as a differentiating thing
02:07:38
◼
►
between the Air and the Pro.
02:07:40
◼
►
Like there is more, right?
02:07:42
◼
►
The battery life is longer and it has a touch bar.
02:07:45
◼
►
These can be benefits.
02:07:48
◼
►
I personally do consider the touch bar a benefit
02:07:52
◼
►
as you've spoken about in the past.
02:07:53
◼
►
I actually kind of like it.
02:07:55
◼
►
I think that it adds something.
02:07:57
◼
►
It can be very frustrating, but I think it adds something
02:07:59
◼
►
and some people will want that.
02:08:01
◼
►
Like these are different products.
02:08:03
◼
►
And I give you, so like the issues thing,
02:08:05
◼
►
I can see why you might say that.
02:08:06
◼
►
There have been thermal issues
02:08:07
◼
►
with some Apple products in the past,
02:08:09
◼
►
but I think that they must have been very aware
02:08:13
◼
►
of this going into it.
02:08:14
◼
►
They didn't have to do this.
02:08:16
◼
►
They chose to do this.
02:08:17
◼
►
- Yeah. - Right?
02:08:18
◼
►
I can't imagine that they put something else
02:08:20
◼
►
to fill that space up really.
02:08:22
◼
►
- It seems unlikely that Apple said,
02:08:26
◼
►
"Well, what happens if we take the fan out?"
02:08:29
◼
►
And then looked at it and said,
02:08:30
◼
►
"Oh no, it's a disaster, let's ship it."
02:08:32
◼
►
Like that's not, because it's their chip
02:08:35
◼
►
and they're aware of it.
02:08:36
◼
►
And let's just say it, it's a mobile chip.
02:08:40
◼
►
It's not gonna do what the Intel chips do.
02:08:44
◼
►
It is that they're taking advantage of the fact
02:08:46
◼
►
that they've been making iPads
02:08:49
◼
►
with no cooling system in them and getting along just fine.
02:08:53
◼
►
So they should be able to do the same.
02:08:55
◼
►
But again, that is also why the Air has no fan
02:08:59
◼
►
and the Pro has a fan is it's a differentiator.
02:09:01
◼
►
And that's basic chip logic
02:09:04
◼
►
that if you have the fan,
02:09:06
◼
►
you're gonna be able to sustain performance
02:09:07
◼
►
and not underclock the processor in order to cool it down.
02:09:09
◼
►
So that's why you get a Pro if you're worried about that.
02:09:14
◼
►
- Roger asks, "What do you think about the next iPad Pro
02:09:16
◼
►
becoming a dual boot machine with iOS and macOS?
02:09:20
◼
►
This could placate people who have been wanting a touch Mac."
02:09:23
◼
►
- I think it's not ever gonna happen
02:09:27
◼
►
or at least not anytime soon.
02:09:29
◼
►
I think Apple has been very clear
02:09:31
◼
►
that the iPad is the iPad.
02:09:33
◼
►
And it's a touch first device.
02:09:35
◼
►
The idea of making it a dual boot
02:09:38
◼
►
so you'd like go into the settings in the iPad
02:09:40
◼
►
and say, now be a Mac.
02:09:42
◼
►
And it would basically not work right
02:09:43
◼
►
unless you attached stuff to it and turned it into a Mac.
02:09:47
◼
►
I mean, there's nothing stopping Apple from doing it.
02:09:49
◼
►
I just can't envision.
02:09:51
◼
►
It would be a radical change in direction for Apple
02:09:55
◼
►
and in their product philosophy.
02:09:56
◼
►
I think it's far more likely that Apple would one day do
02:09:59
◼
►
something like a convertible Mac
02:10:01
◼
►
that you could fold over and put in touch mode
02:10:04
◼
►
and it would basically behave like an iPad.
02:10:06
◼
►
Then that you would take an iPad Pro and boot it into macOS.
02:10:10
◼
►
That seems super weird to me.
02:10:13
◼
►
And I'm not sure dual booting an iPad
02:10:15
◼
►
is gonna placate anyone who wants a touchscreen Mac
02:10:18
◼
►
of any kind.
02:10:21
◼
►
So I think it's highly unlikely in the short term anyway.
02:10:26
◼
►
And I would say even in the long term,
02:10:28
◼
►
it's not an iPad if it boots macOS, it's something else.
02:10:31
◼
►
And you wouldn't call it an iPad.
02:10:33
◼
►
- I think I've been seeing this argument a lot
02:10:36
◼
►
from people that don't want touchscreens on Macs.
02:10:40
◼
►
So the thinking is, oh, we'll just,
02:10:44
◼
►
the people that want touchscreens on Macs,
02:10:45
◼
►
what they really want is just an iPad, right?
02:10:48
◼
►
Like the people can't conceive of these things
02:10:50
◼
►
as being able to be shared.
02:10:51
◼
►
So the solution is just put macOS on the iPad Pro.
02:10:56
◼
►
Like, well, that, I didn't really solve the problem
02:10:58
◼
►
that I was looking for.
02:10:59
◼
►
What I want and what I do want is a touchscreen on my Mac
02:11:03
◼
►
so I can use the touchscreen when I want to,
02:11:05
◼
►
not that I assume that I will be using a touchscreen
02:11:08
◼
►
all the time.
02:11:09
◼
►
Like, I do firmly believe touchscreens are coming
02:11:14
◼
►
I do 100% without a shadow of a doubt.
02:11:16
◼
►
And I think to think that that's not happening
02:11:19
◼
►
is wild to me.
02:11:20
◼
►
Like the march of progress will suggest
02:11:24
◼
►
that this is something that is happening.
02:11:26
◼
►
It is wild to me that it is argued differently from that.
02:11:29
◼
►
Like we don't have them yet, it's coming.
02:11:33
◼
►
- I believe it.
02:11:34
◼
►
- Let's not forget too that Apple's whole kind of direction
02:11:37
◼
►
in terms of development is toward catalyst
02:11:41
◼
►
and toward running iOS apps on the Mac under Apple Silicon.
02:11:45
◼
►
Apple's not making an effort to back port,
02:11:49
◼
►
to build a bridge backward from Mac to iOS.
02:11:54
◼
►
And I know that implicit in this question is dual boot.
02:11:59
◼
►
Which is basically saying,
02:12:00
◼
►
can I make my iPad not an iPad
02:12:03
◼
►
so I can run Mac software on it?
02:12:05
◼
►
And not only do I think Apple wouldn't do that,
02:12:07
◼
►
I also have a hard time imagining that Apple
02:12:09
◼
►
would make any sort of bridge to bring old Mac software
02:12:12
◼
►
back to the iPad.
02:12:13
◼
►
'Cause what Apple wants to do is push people forward
02:12:16
◼
►
to adopting new technologies and new ways of developing apps
02:12:20
◼
►
that run across all their platforms,
02:12:22
◼
►
instead of providing this sort of backward bridge
02:12:25
◼
►
for Mac compatibility.
02:12:27
◼
►
So are there weird things that Apple could do?
02:12:29
◼
►
Sure, I mean, Apple could build a virtualization engine
02:12:33
◼
►
that ran Mac OS inside of iPad OS on iPad Pros
02:12:38
◼
►
so that you could have a virtual Mac that only worked
02:12:41
◼
►
when you had your, you know, a pointy device
02:12:43
◼
►
and a keyboard attached.
02:12:45
◼
►
They won't, but they could.
02:12:47
◼
►
I think it's far, far, far more likely that the Mac,
02:12:51
◼
►
you view the Mac as the set of Apple's technologies
02:12:54
◼
►
and the iPad as a subset.
02:12:55
◼
►
And that throwing the Mac inside the iPad
02:12:58
◼
►
is not what they would do.
02:12:59
◼
►
It's far more likely,
02:13:00
◼
►
since they're going down this route already,
02:13:02
◼
►
that you would have a Mac that would have a different shape,
02:13:05
◼
►
a different design in terms of the hardware
02:13:08
◼
►
than it currently does.
02:13:09
◼
►
Whether that's just a touchscreen on a laptop
02:13:11
◼
►
or whether that's something more like a convertible,
02:13:13
◼
►
it's already got the ability to run iOS apps.
02:13:16
◼
►
And so I feel like you already have a device
02:13:19
◼
►
and an operating system that does all of this, it's Mac OS.
02:13:22
◼
►
And I don't think the iPad is a product
02:13:25
◼
►
that's meant to run Mac OS.
02:13:26
◼
►
It's meant to be this simpler subset
02:13:30
◼
►
that is not gonna run old software like that.
02:13:33
◼
►
So I never say never, but I'm very,
02:13:36
◼
►
I think it's very unlikely.
02:13:38
◼
►
- Yeah, I don't see them going that way, right?
02:13:41
◼
►
Like I don't see them going iPad Pro to Mac,
02:13:44
◼
►
what they really are going.
02:13:45
◼
►
Like it's the other way around.
02:13:47
◼
►
Like iPad software is coming to the Mac,
02:13:50
◼
►
Mac software is not coming to the iPad
02:13:52
◼
►
because the future of Apple's platforms is that,
02:13:57
◼
►
well, now all of our software is gonna be closer
02:14:00
◼
►
to what iPad software is than the other way around.
02:14:03
◼
►
- And honestly, I was thinking about this.
02:14:05
◼
►
I advocated for a while for an iOS laptop,
02:14:07
◼
►
like just build a laptop that runs iPad OS
02:14:10
◼
►
and it's got a cursor now, cursor support and all that.
02:14:13
◼
►
You could totally do it.
02:14:14
◼
►
I think Apple is ever gonna do that
02:14:16
◼
►
because I think it's far more likely
02:14:18
◼
►
that Apple will just release.
02:14:20
◼
►
I mean, we already have this week Mac laptops
02:14:23
◼
►
that run iOS apps.
02:14:24
◼
►
There they are.
02:14:26
◼
►
So what's left?
02:14:29
◼
►
And the answer is, like I said,
02:14:31
◼
►
maybe you can fold the screen back
02:14:33
◼
►
or turn it around or something.
02:14:34
◼
►
Maybe we add a touch to the mix
02:14:36
◼
►
and Apple pencil support to the mix.
02:14:38
◼
►
But those are all things that Apple can do
02:14:39
◼
►
in the context of the Mac that already exists
02:14:42
◼
►
instead of building an iPad laptop or anything like that.
02:14:48
◼
►
And so I think Apple is gonna define the iPad
02:14:51
◼
►
as touch tablet that can be attached to other things.
02:14:54
◼
►
And I think that's great.
02:14:55
◼
►
I love the iPad, but I don't know if it,
02:14:59
◼
►
I just, I can't see it.
02:15:00
◼
►
I just can't see it.
02:15:01
◼
►
- All right, and final question today comes from Parker
02:15:04
◼
►
who asks, I always hear people say, quote,
02:15:07
◼
►
this is not a huge year on year upgrade
02:15:10
◼
►
when talking about new iPhones.
02:15:12
◼
►
In your opinion, which iPhone was the largest
02:15:15
◼
►
year over year upgrade?
02:15:17
◼
►
- Oh, largest year over year upgrade?
02:15:21
◼
►
- I have a thought on this if you'd like me to start.
02:15:23
◼
►
- Yes, please.
02:15:25
◼
►
- The iPhone 10, that was a massive year over year upgrade.
02:15:30
◼
►
- It's like, how about we take your iPhone,
02:15:33
◼
►
we get rid of the home button which you've had for years,
02:15:35
◼
►
we extend the screen out, we give you an OLED screen,
02:15:37
◼
►
it's got stainless steel sides and now has face ID,
02:15:41
◼
►
like massive year over year upgrade.
02:15:43
◼
►
- And two cameras for those of us
02:15:46
◼
►
who had not been using the Plus.
02:15:48
◼
►
- And it's bigger.
02:15:49
◼
►
- I think that's a good answer.
02:15:49
◼
►
- For the people that hadn't been using the Plus.
02:15:51
◼
►
My other one is the iPhone 6 because it included
02:15:55
◼
►
the larger screen, like the larger option, right?
02:15:58
◼
►
The iPhone 6 Plus, so like that was also like a huge step
02:16:01
◼
►
as well in my opinion because it added a whole new model
02:16:05
◼
►
but I think the biggest will, for a long time,
02:16:10
◼
►
will be the 10, it was like the biggest year over year jump.
02:16:13
◼
►
That was like a truly very different iPhone.
02:16:16
◼
►
Like honestly, I couldn't imagine another one bigger
02:16:22
◼
►
until they have another new form factor.
02:16:24
◼
►
You know, like if Apple ever do a folding phone,
02:16:28
◼
►
there have been rumors that apparently Apple
02:16:30
◼
►
are moving forward with this for something in 2022.
02:16:33
◼
►
I saw these today.
02:16:35
◼
►
That apparently they're getting their suppliers
02:16:37
◼
►
to do some testing on some demo units that they've made.
02:16:41
◼
►
That would probably be the next massive jump
02:16:43
◼
►
if they do change the form factor again.
02:16:46
◼
►
I think that's what it takes to be considered
02:16:48
◼
►
like year over year no brainer upgrades.
02:16:51
◼
►
It's like, well, you couldn't have had an iPhone
02:16:53
◼
►
that was even close to this one, right?
02:16:55
◼
►
Other than that, they are iterative
02:16:57
◼
►
because there is only so much you can do,
02:17:00
◼
►
just so much you can do every year
02:17:02
◼
►
and it still make sense as a product to continue pushing.
02:17:05
◼
►
So there you go.
02:17:09
◼
►
If you would like to send in a question
02:17:11
◼
►
for a future episode of the show,
02:17:13
◼
►
just send out a tweet with the hashtag #AskUpgrade
02:17:15
◼
►
or you can use question mark #AskUpgrade
02:17:18
◼
►
in the Relay FM members Discord.
02:17:20
◼
►
I want to thank again, Tim and Tom from Apple for joining us.
02:17:25
◼
►
It was a great conversation.
02:17:26
◼
►
I'm really happy that we got to be able to spend that time
02:17:29
◼
►
with them again to talk about the wonderful new Macs.
02:17:32
◼
►
I'm looking forward very much to next week's episode
02:17:35
◼
►
when we all talk about Big Sur
02:17:37
◼
►
and also I would have had some time as well
02:17:39
◼
►
with one of these M1 Macs.
02:17:40
◼
►
I cannot wait to get my hands on one, Jason, very excited.
02:17:44
◼
►
I also want to thank our sponsors for this episode,
02:17:48
◼
►
DoorDash, Remote Works, Pingdom and SaneBox.
02:17:51
◼
►
Don't forget, if you want to have longer episodes of Upgrade
02:17:55
◼
►
with additional bonus content and no ads every single week,
02:17:59
◼
►
go to getupgradeplus.com, become a member
02:18:02
◼
►
and support the show.
02:18:03
◼
►
And I want to thank everybody that has done that.
02:18:06
◼
►
If you want to find Jason's work online,
02:18:08
◼
►
go to sixcolors.com and he is @jsnell on Twitter,
02:18:11
◼
►
J S N E double L.
02:18:13
◼
►
I am @imike, I M Y K E, and we'll be back next week.
02:18:17
◼
►
Thank you so much for tuning in
02:18:19
◼
►
to this bumper episode of Upgrade.
02:18:21
◼
►
Until then, say goodbye Jason Snell.
02:18:23
◼
►
- Goodbye everybody.
02:18:24
◼
►
(upbeat music)
02:18:27
◼
►
(upbeat music)