WWDC unlikely to see debuts of any new hardware at all
A new report doubles-down on the improbability of new hardware debuts at WWDC -- and pushes back the rumored arrival of an Apple TV set-top box update.
Apple's next Mac Studio and Mac Pro models won't be announced at WWDC
Walking back one of its own predictions, Bloomberg now says that no new hardware will be announced at 2024's Worldwide Developer's Conference, which kicks off on June 10th. It also revised its forecast for the next version of the Apple TV hardware box.
The newsletter had previously said that it expected a new version to arrive in the first half of 2024. This would include an upgraded processor from the current model's A15 Bionic.
"There's no hardware slated to be announced at WWDC, unless Apple unexpectedly previews a new device launching later," the newsletter reported. The predicted new model of Apple TV is also no longer imminent.
Another analyst, Ming-Chi Kuo, had suggested that Apple might add a camera built directly into the next Apple TV box. The possible new feature would facilitate FaceTime calls, as well as third-party video-conferencing apps.
Currently, the Apple TV relies on a wireless connection to the back cameras of the iPhone to take advantage of videoconferencing.
An update to the Mac Pro and Mac Studio lines until sometime in 2025 has been previously reported. Both of those pro-level Macs are expected to use an M4 Max or M4 Ultra chip, neither of which have emerged yet.
When were the last Apple hardware updates?
It's been some time since an Apple TV update, and all of Apple's Mac laptops have been updated relatively recently.
- Apple TV: October 2022
- Mac mini: January 2023
- Mac Studio: June 2023
- Mac Pro: June 2023
- iMac: October 2023
- MacBook Pro: October 2023
- MacBook Air: March 2024
Apple has already said that it intends for all of its Mac products to be upgraded to some version of the M4 chip across 2024 and 2025. Following the reveal of the M4 chip in the iPad Pro, the low-end 14-inch MacBook Pro and 24-inch iMac are the next devices likely to upgrade to M4 chips.
This is expected to happen near the end of 2024. The higher-end MacBook Pro models and the Mac mini are expected to be updated either in late 2024 or early 2025.
The next update to the MacBook Air line is predicted for the spring or later in 2025. The Mac Studio and Mac Pro are rumored to be the last models to get M4 upgrades in mid-2025, or later that year.
Rumor Score: Likely
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Meanwhile their current computer does everything they need everyday.
No, I'm using a 2017 iMac Pro, and it's getting VERY long in the tooth. Yes, I DO need the power of a Mac Studio. I'm doing things now I never even dreamed of doing on the iMac Pro. Yes, Apple IS taking too long. Buying an M2-based Mac Studio would be foolish at his point. The M4 in the iPad Pro is 2.8x faster in single core and 1.74X faster in multicore than my old iMac Pro. So please don't make generalizations!
Thank goodness many of us here are the impatient upgrader types -- it helps pad the company's bottom line because we buy more often than the "normal attrition and switchers" crowd.
Yes, nobody's ever heard of buying the machine you need when you need it, and selling it for 80 percent of what you paid when the new one comes out ...
Since M3 Air was in March 2024, I'd guess M4 Pro/Max MBPs in October 2024, possibly mini. M4 Air in 2025. While they could launch M4 Ultra in October, they usually do Ultra later e.g March-June 2025 for Studio and Mac Pro.
2nm will be ready for iPhone 17 in September 2025:
https://www.gsmarena.com/iphone_17_pro_to_be_the_first_with_a_chipset_built_on_tsmcs_2nm_process-news-62387.php
M5 can be based on this with M5 Ultra in 2026.
WWDC will most likely be about new AI features in macOS and iOS accelerated for M4 and the systems will ship later in the year with the refreshed hardware.
One the one hand, it speaks to desktop computers being only 10% of their Mac units, but on the other hand, you'd think the effort to update the iMac, Mac mini and Mac Studio on a yearly basis to be minimal. It should be worth that effort, but sigh. Same with everything that is not iPhone, Watch or Macbook. iPads could go 18 months or more. Apple TV is every 2 years or more. Some story with the software too.
For the M Ultra, they need to find a way to put it into the MBP16 and for use as a server, to spread the development costs around so that they can have yearly Mac Studio and Mac Pro updates.
No. Most IPHONE users might be ok with that, but not Mac users.