JP Morgan sees Apple further eating away at Windows PC market with sub-$1000 iOS notebook

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  • Reply 121 of 134
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member
    I have been a customer, reseller, co-developer, supplier, developer, observer and shareholder of Apple spanning almost 36 years – I think I understand how Apple works.

    I don't think you do. Apple doesn't participate in evey market. Hence no netbook, no dumb phone, no cheap junk smartphone. Is there really a market between a iPad and a MBA? People who need the power of OS X won't settle for under powered chip.
  • Reply 122 of 134
    dick applebaumdick applebaum Posts: 12,527member
    jungmark wrote: »
    I have been a customer, reseller, co-developer, supplier, developer, observer and shareholder of Apple spanning almost 36 years – I think I understand how Apple works.

    I don't think you do. Apple doesn't participate in evey market. Hence no netbook, no dumb phone, no cheap junk smartphone. Is there really a market between a iPad and a MBA? People who need the power of OS X won't settle for under powered chip.

    I believe there is a market between theI MBA and a ChromeBook, and junk tablets.
  • Reply 123 of 134
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    jungmark wrote: »
    I don't think you do. Apple doesn't participate in evey market. Hence no netbook, no dumb phone, no cheap junk smartphone. Is there really a market between a iPad and a MBA? People who need the power of OS X won't settle for under powered chip.

    Then why is the MBA so popular with it's ULTRA-LOW voltage CPU. Note that an Apple A-series chip in a 12" notebook would not be any slower than a MBA that came out just a couple years ago and probably do a lot of things much, much faster.

    And I doubt Meneer Applebaum is talking about a cheap notebook. I'm certainly not! I think we're both on the page of a lower-cost notebook that has plenty of performance for the average, casual user that needs something other than their iPad or iPhone from time-to-time. I wouldn't expect this to be any less than what the average WinPC sells for, which I think is about $700-750, which is pretty much doable in and of itself when you consider the cost of just using that Intel CULV SFF CPU and chipset. Add in the cost savings from getting to use a smaller battery with a lot more battery life and smaller chassis, smaller PSU, smaller box, cheaper shipping, more storage on shelves, etc. and Apple can not only increase their PC sale reach but also start to monopolize the $800 and $900 ranges, not just the $1000 and up range of the consumer PC market. That's a big deal!
  • Reply 124 of 134
    solipsismx wrote: »
    jungmark wrote: »
    I don't think you do. Apple doesn't participate in evey market. Hence no netbook, no dumb phone, no cheap junk smartphone. Is there really a market between a iPad and a MBA? People who need the power of OS X won't settle for under powered chip.

    Then why is the MBA so popular with it's ULTRA-LOW voltage CPU. Note that an Apple A-series chip in a 12" notebook would not be any slower than a MBA that came out just a couple years ago and probably do a lot of things much, much faster.

    And I doubt Meneer Applebaum is talking about a cheap notebook. I'm certainly not! I think we're both on the page of a lower-cost notebook that has plenty of performance for the average, casual user that needs something other than their iPad or iPhone from time-to-time. I wouldn't expect this to be any less than what the average WinPC sells for, which I think is about $700-750, which is pretty much doable in and of itself when you consider the cost of just using that Intel CULV SFF CPU and chipset. Add in the cost savings from getting to use a smaller battery with a lot more battery life and smaller chassis, smaller PSU, smaller box, cheaper shipping, more storage on shelves, etc. and Apple can not only increase their PC sale reach but also start to monopolize the $800 and $900 ranges, not just the $1000 and up range of the consumer PC market. That's a big deal!

    I've been ruminating on this for hours ...

    I think that this a strategic breakthrough opportunity for Apple -- to introduce the billions of PC users and millions of lower-end tablet users to the Apple way;

    Remember the days running up to the original iPad announcement in 2010, The specs of the iPad were pretty well known -- and the so-called experts were predicting a price point of $1,000-$1,100.

    Apple strutted their stuff, highlighting the iPad capabilities and advantages ... then, they dropped the bomb -- a starting price of $499 ...

    Every competitor went back to the drawing boards.


    I believe that the Apple technology exists to pull off another strategic coup!

    How about a laptop running OSX and the OSX free/iCloud apps starting at $499 (top end $799),

    Capable of running all major OSX apps from MS Office to Adobe Photoshop.

    A full-fledged member of the Apple ecosystem.


    Opportunities like this rarely occur -- Apple can disrupt the entire mid-lower mobile (and some desktop) market!

    1000

    And, Afrikans aside -- off to bed!
  • Reply 125 of 134
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,324moderator
    solipsismx wrote: »
    Did you take into account performance per Watt and the overhead reduction Monsieur Applebaum mentions? Even with the A7 at 1.3GHz it's doing very well.

    I definitely think Apple could squeeze better performance per dollar and per watt out of ARM but I think it would have to be a significant amount for it to be worth the headache of implementing some binary translation for compatibility with existing software and getting iOS software to work properly. Remember, iOS software isn't designed to be scalable, isn't designed to use external displays the same way, some software is designed with multiple inputs in mind, some for portrait-only so applying it to a laptop with a single input and a different, landscape-only resolution is troublesome.

    Look at this CPU:

    http://ark.intel.com/products/79053/Intel-Celeron-Processor-N2920-2M-Cache-up-to-2_00-GHz

    $107 (7.5W) vs the $315 (15W) CPU they use now:

    http://ark.intel.com/products/75028/

    The performance of the one they use now is roughly double the Celeron:

    http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i5-4250U+@+1.30GHz
    http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Celeron+N2920+@+1.86GHz&id=2134

    So they cut off over $200 from the build costs, end up with a $799 Air, performance is around the level of the Core 2 Duo Airs and they can make it passively cooled with increased battery life. It's not going to be a powerhouse by any stretch of the imagination but it'll have a PCIe SSD, 4GB RAM and basic apps like the browser, Office apps, email will run really smoothly. The margins would be the same but hits an extra 16-25% of laptop buyers.
  • Reply 126 of 134
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

     

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Marvin View Post





    I definitely think Apple could squeeze better performance per dollar and per watt out of ARM but I think it would have to be a significant amount for it to be worth the headache of implementing some binary translation for compatibility with existing software and getting iOS software to work properly.


    Do you mean something to get OSX apps to run on ARM hardware? That could be a very difficult project given the different machine instruction sets. ARM tends to rely on simpler design in general. They didn't even have hardware level branch prediction until a few years ago, many years after intel. That example came to mind due to that recent lawsuit article from some academic institution.

  • Reply 127 of 134
    dazabritdazabrit Posts: 273member
    It probably is still a little too early for this transition but we're close. 2 years and iOS X might be the answer?

    A10 (AX) processor with iOS X
  • Reply 128 of 134
    hmm wrote: »
    Marvin wrote: »
    I definitely think Apple could squeeze better performance per dollar and per watt out of ARM but I think it would have to be a significant amount for it to be worth the headache of implementing some binary translation for compatibility with existing software and getting iOS software to work properly.
    Do you mean something to get OSX apps to run on ARM hardware? That could be a very difficult project given the different machine instruction sets. ARM tends to rely on simpler design in general. They didn't even have hardware level branch prediction until a few years ago, many years after intel. That example came to mind due to that recent lawsuit article from some academic institution.

    I suspect that an Apple device at these price points ($499-$799) would include:
    • keyboard and touchpad
    • 12 inch display
    • USB 3/2
    • HDMI
    • HD card I/O not SSD storage
    • 64-bit Ax CPU/GPU
    • 4-8 GB RAM
    • 128-256 GB SSD
    • WiFi 11ac
    • Bluetoooth 4.1
    • Front camera 5 mp
    • optional cell radios

    I would be greatly surprised if Apple doesn't already have Mac OSX running on ARM with the following goals:
    • provide the same APIs and Frameworks available on current Mac OSX (intel) on OSX ARM -- to the Mac developer it looks the same
    • provide source-level XCode compatibility -- a Mac OSX app is recompiled to run on OSX ARM
    • provide guidelines to aid developers in porting their apps -- UI, I/O, and performance differences, debugging and tuning techniques
    • provide the full suite of standard Mac OSX apps on OSX ARM: iWork, iLife, iTunes, GarageBand, etc.
    • provide the Mac OSX UI on OSX ARM

    In addition, I suspect that Apple would have the following goals for iOS apps* running on OSX ARM:
    • provide the same APIs and Frameworks available on current iOS on OSX ARM -- to the iOS developer it looks the same
    • provide source-level XCode compatibility -- an iOS app is recompiled to run on OSX ARM
    • provide guidelines to aid developers in porting their apps -- UI, I/O, and performance differences, debugging and tuning techniques
    • provide the option to run any iOS app in a separate window on OSX ARM -- looks and acts like a Mac running an iOS app **
    • provide the option to run iOS apps full-screen, all sharing a single window (as in iOS) in OSX ARM - looks and acts ike an iPad

    * iOS apps requiring special hardware (gyroscope, compass, etc.) may not be supported on OSX ARM

    ** The current iOS simulator running on Mac OSX currently runs most iOS apps (simulates ARM on Intel) -- this should be better with less overhead on OSX ARM by eliminating the CPU/GPU simulation.


    Based on the above speculation, I don't think there would be any need for any runtime simulation/emulation nor any binary translation.
  • Reply 129 of 134
    dazabrit wrote: »
    It probably is still a little too early for this transition but we're close. 2 years and iOS X might be the answer?

    A10 (AX) processor with iOS X

    I kinda' agree ...

    The thing that makes me think that there is something going on is that last September Apple introduced the A7 a "desktop class chip".

    There is no need for this horsepower on the current iPads or iPhones -- and it is probably overkill the next iDevices, too ..

    It is very unApple to do something like this, and I assume that Apple is doing something other than playing a spec war.

    So, 7 months in, most iOS apps have been recompiled to [somewhat] exploit a "desktop class chip". But, where is the "desktop computer" to run these on -- something with more RAM, SSD, I/O...

    Does it make more sense to beef up the iDevices or downscale the Mac device? Short term? Long term?
  • Reply 130 of 134
    dazabritdazabrit Posts: 273member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Dick Applebaum



    So, 7 months in, most iOS apps have been recompiled to [somewhat] exploit a "desktop class chip". But, where is the "desktop computer" to run these on -- something with more RAM, SSD, I/O...



    Does it make more sense to beef up the iDevices or downscale the Mac device? Short term? Long term?

     

    Well... there's a 12.9" iPad on the horizon (apparently) so it sounds like there's still a huge focus on iOS hardware. 

     

    There must be lessons to learn from both iOS and OS X and I hope Apple are following the threads & using those lessons to imagine entirely new products. Products that take the best elements of traditional desktops/laptops combined with the sensor laden, ultra efficient mobile products.

     

    I admit I do have a fondness for another seemingly forgotten about concept of a 27" touchscreen Mac. A touchscreen that is angled/raised slightly like a trackpad or drawing board so you have the great MultiTouch gestures but expanded on with powerful apps such as Final Cut thrown in to the mix. A bit like Microsoft Surface done right (the same way Apple made the tablet work, after MS struggled for so long).



     

  • Reply 131 of 134
    joshajosha Posts: 901member

    Really???

    Our iPad2 with BT keyboard serves our laptop needs just fine.

    For more serious Mac'n   it's a new $599 mini, with oldies 22" LCD, KB and mouse.

    What's the problem with this?

  • Reply 132 of 134
    knowitallknowitall Posts: 1,648member
    hydrogen wrote: »

    OK, then I just have to wait for evolution to grow me a pen ? 
    Evolution is not restricted to the living.
  • Reply 133 of 134
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

    .

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Dick Applebaum View Post



    * iOS apps requiring special hardware (gyroscope, compass, etc.) may not be supported on OSX ARM



    ** The current iOS simulator running on Mac OSX currently runs most iOS apps (simulates ARM on Intel) -- this should be better with less overhead on OSX ARM by eliminating the CPU/GPU simulation.

     

    Well it's not just an issue of overhead. There is the issue of accuracy in performance. If it was the same architecture and instruction set, it might be possible to run the simulator as a real VM rather than something running on top of the OS. At least that seems logical.

  • Reply 134 of 134
    comleycomley Posts: 139member
    Apple should do a cheaper computer for my children it should be pink and blue

    Hahaha lol !?! Mmmm

    Well actually . Well it might keep my children of my new Mac Pro
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