Had a similar initial reaction, but I guess it's the idea that a 10yo computer for a third of the cost runs circles around the Neo in terms of flexibility and horsepower, which says something about the Neo's character, for sure. I'm certain the Neo was not intended to compete for those prizes, but for me it seems like a very practical benchmark to understand what lane it's in when otherwise not paying attention to Neo's or paleos.
I saw a post on a subreddit earlier where someone was considering getting rid of their 2019 Macbook Pro with an i9 and 32GB of ram, and so many of the comments were egging the poster on and saying it was an upgrade.
Terrible idea. It's cool that Apple are entering the budget space, but the hype around the Neo is nuts.
Was that the old or new keyboard? If it was the old one, I'd take the downgrade of everything else, to get a keyboard that doesn't jam up if you accidentally breathe on it.
Used hardware is always going to be a better deal than something brand new. You can get a used M1 MacBook Pro for a similar price to a new Neo, and that will blow it out of the water on all axes except bursted single-core CPU perf. And it'll have a much better screen and trackpad than a similarly priced thinkpad.
The main place the Neo makes sense is for buying a whole classroom full of machines, or for someone who really wants to unbox something new and shiny. It's a chromebook killer.
When framed that way, it makes a lot more sense. Apple got its start in education with the Apple II going to schools and hooking students for life. Looking at market penetration of Chromebooks in education, it makes a lot of sense for Apple to introduce a laptop for that arena to compete there.
I'm intrigued, unlike most slop they don't seem to be trying to sell anything, and it doesn't have most of the superficial tells. We'll find out if https://alexandmanu.com/photos/ ever exists.
Edit: I take it back, I clicked through to "all posts" which makes it much more obvious that it's slop.
> i paid $599 for this disappointment. the thinkpad cost me $180 on ebay like seven years ago and i think it’s mocking me now.
The guy is comparing a $200 ebay thinkpad with linux compared to a macbook with a modern operating system.
They're not the target demographic, I can tell you right now schools and (non-tech) parent's aren't going to buy their kids ebay laptops with linux on them.
You might as well say the neo sucks because a 6 year old m1 ebay macbok is a better deal. It's apples to oranges.
The Thinkpad also likely cost far more than $600 when new. Even a several-year-old flagship laptop is going to be superior in some respects than a brand new laptop designed and produced to cost as little as possible.
Thanks for the summary. Tech enthusiasts already know to how to get good performance out of older computers, how to reuse older computers, and how to do their own maintenance and repairs. The macbook neo is obviously not really for those tech enthusiasts, but is for regular people who might like a macbook, don't know tons about technology, and don't want to spend $1k.
I wonder if the target market for this thing is like my aged parents who basically use their phones for everything, even when it's obviously a painful experience, but they don't want a full-blown computer.
Kind of like a more intentional version of an ipad w/keyboard? I'm not sure I fully understand what the diff is between ipad w/keyboard and the Neo.. price, I suppose.
And macOS. The Neo's 8GiB of ram has been talked to death, but at the end of the day, iPadOS isn't macOS, which has a window manager with floating windows vs iPadOS' (hacky) side-by-side mode.
Pretty much yeah - it shares the same chip as the iPhone so you're not wrong. Biggest difference is it runs desktop apps (when it feels like it) and has a keyboard, but the DNA is the same.
I don't understand why installing 47 distros and it surviving two operating systems they didn't mean to install has anything to do with the hardware.
It seems like the main complaint is that it is slow. I am not sure what all the other bits are about.
Had a similar initial reaction, but I guess it's the idea that a 10yo computer for a third of the cost runs circles around the Neo in terms of flexibility and horsepower, which says something about the Neo's character, for sure. I'm certain the Neo was not intended to compete for those prizes, but for me it seems like a very practical benchmark to understand what lane it's in when otherwise not paying attention to Neo's or paleos.
I saw a post on a subreddit earlier where someone was considering getting rid of their 2019 Macbook Pro with an i9 and 32GB of ram, and so many of the comments were egging the poster on and saying it was an upgrade.
Terrible idea. It's cool that Apple are entering the budget space, but the hype around the Neo is nuts.
edit: found it https://old.reddit.com/r/macbookpro/comments/1s2tdrm/is_the_...
Was that the old or new keyboard? If it was the old one, I'd take the downgrade of everything else, to get a keyboard that doesn't jam up if you accidentally breathe on it.
It is the butterlfy I think but they had pretty much fixed it by that point, and OP wasn't complaining about the keyboard
Used hardware is always going to be a better deal than something brand new. You can get a used M1 MacBook Pro for a similar price to a new Neo, and that will blow it out of the water on all axes except bursted single-core CPU perf. And it'll have a much better screen and trackpad than a similarly priced thinkpad.
The main place the Neo makes sense is for buying a whole classroom full of machines, or for someone who really wants to unbox something new and shiny. It's a chromebook killer.
When framed that way, it makes a lot more sense. Apple got its start in education with the Apple II going to schools and hooking students for life. Looking at market penetration of Chromebooks in education, it makes a lot of sense for Apple to introduce a laptop for that arena to compete there.
> the keyboard actually feels pretty nice. apple did okay there.
I typed on a neo keyboard in store and coming from an M2 Air, the keyboard does not feel nice IMO.
Enough so that I would skip buying one for that reason alone. the keys feel more "squishy" than "clicky".
It really must suck if it doesn't even come with a shift key.
this isn’t a real story. check the OP’s account history. day old account, slop blog. OP posting slop replies
I'm intrigued, unlike most slop they don't seem to be trying to sell anything, and it doesn't have most of the superficial tells. We'll find out if https://alexandmanu.com/photos/ ever exists.
Edit: I take it back, I clicked through to "all posts" which makes it much more obvious that it's slop.
> i paid $599 for this disappointment. the thinkpad cost me $180 on ebay like seven years ago and i think it’s mocking me now.
The guy is comparing a $200 ebay thinkpad with linux compared to a macbook with a modern operating system.
They're not the target demographic, I can tell you right now schools and (non-tech) parent's aren't going to buy their kids ebay laptops with linux on them.
You might as well say the neo sucks because a 6 year old m1 ebay macbok is a better deal. It's apples to oranges.
The Thinkpad also likely cost far more than $600 when new. Even a several-year-old flagship laptop is going to be superior in some respects than a brand new laptop designed and produced to cost as little as possible.
https://web.archive.org/web/20260325183607/https://alexandma...
(archive because the site is down for me)
Summary: It's not as good as my old Thinkpad running Arch
Thanks for the summary. Tech enthusiasts already know to how to get good performance out of older computers, how to reuse older computers, and how to do their own maintenance and repairs. The macbook neo is obviously not really for those tech enthusiasts, but is for regular people who might like a macbook, don't know tons about technology, and don't want to spend $1k.
HN says your comment is 3 minutes old and the site is loading just fine for me. (But that was very thoughtful of you.)
I wonder if the target market for this thing is like my aged parents who basically use their phones for everything, even when it's obviously a painful experience, but they don't want a full-blown computer.
Kind of like a more intentional version of an ipad w/keyboard? I'm not sure I fully understand what the diff is between ipad w/keyboard and the Neo.. price, I suppose.
And macOS. The Neo's 8GiB of ram has been talked to death, but at the end of the day, iPadOS isn't macOS, which has a window manager with floating windows vs iPadOS' (hacky) side-by-side mode.
is it not basically just an iPhone? (I have not had a mac since the classic mac)
Pretty much yeah - it shares the same chip as the iPhone so you're not wrong. Biggest difference is it runs desktop apps (when it feels like it) and has a keyboard, but the DNA is the same.
I think this is a play to get more into schools and businesses.
The point is to get to "Macbooks with detatchable keyboards" then discontinue the iPad.