Apple 27-inch mini LED display expected in early 2023
Supply chain rumors suggest Apple will launch a new 27-inch display with mini LED backlighting in the first quarter of 2023.
A new Studio Display-sized monitor with mini LED backlighting could be announced in 2023
Rumors of a pro-level 27-inch display have circulated since Apple revealed the more "affordable" Studio Display. It lacks HDR, ProMotion, and mini LED backlighting found in Apple's MacBook Pros and 12.9-inch iPad Pro.
According to Display Supply Chain Consultants analyst Ross Young, Apple will reveal a 27-inch mini LED display in early 2023. This information was shared with his super followers on Twitter, so the tweet is only visible to paying members.
Apple already sells the high-end Pro Display XDR with a 6K display, but it also lacks the latest pro-grade features found in other Apple products. That display is meant more for professionals who need expensive reference monitors where color accuracy is the most important detail.
For those who prioritize display refresh rates and optimized backlighting, there could be a new third monitor on its way. A 27-inch mini LED backlit display would target the market between Apple's other current monitors.
Read on AppleInsider
A new Studio Display-sized monitor with mini LED backlighting could be announced in 2023
Rumors of a pro-level 27-inch display have circulated since Apple revealed the more "affordable" Studio Display. It lacks HDR, ProMotion, and mini LED backlighting found in Apple's MacBook Pros and 12.9-inch iPad Pro.
According to Display Supply Chain Consultants analyst Ross Young, Apple will reveal a 27-inch mini LED display in early 2023. This information was shared with his super followers on Twitter, so the tweet is only visible to paying members.
Apple already sells the high-end Pro Display XDR with a 6K display, but it also lacks the latest pro-grade features found in other Apple products. That display is meant more for professionals who need expensive reference monitors where color accuracy is the most important detail.
For those who prioritize display refresh rates and optimized backlighting, there could be a new third monitor on its way. A 27-inch mini LED backlit display would target the market between Apple's other current monitors.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
I'm the kind of person who would love to have an Apple display, and I'm willing to pay a premium price for premium features, but the Studio Display they shipped last year fell too short of my expectations for features, given the price.
I'd very much like a higher-spec version, but making it even more expensive just won't work. Replacing the current one at the same price would be tempting, but it's hard enough to justify spending 3x the amount of a 4k display on a 5k one. There's no way I'd contemplate spending even more than that. £/$1500 is already beyond the upper limit for a 27" 5k monitor, I'm afraid.
And you mean 'high-end 4k monitor'.
Apple also cares about font quality which is displayed better on 5k than 4k. Apple cares the greater PC world does not.
https://www.digitalphotopro.com/gear/more-gear/hi-tech-studio-4k-vs-5k/
https://www.technochops.com/monitors/4359/4k-vs-5k-monitor/#What_Does_5K_Resolution_Mean
The TB4 solutions will be unsavory, like compression or multi-cable, and Apple isn't going to revert to ADC style cabling anymore, and compression doesn't sound good. A multi-cable DP2.0 and TB5 could be interesting, but Apple isn't going to do it.
And yes, $3k for miniLED 5K 120 Hz. Sandwiched in between a notional XDR at 6K 120 Hz at $5k.
Would the former work both more broadly and economically vs 5k, yet still 'retina' scale to the 110dpi of the WYSIWYG 27" Thunderbolt displays if wanted ?
I've always viewed the 5k option as being helpful to see full 4k video with room for menus, however that seems a specialized application.
Then there is the gpu question, which again has me asking if an eGPU is potentially faster (6900XT?) than even the Studio Ultra, and of course upgradable moving forward...
Do such custom resolutions contribute to debugging burden? I ask if support costs are a rationale to lock down everything 'onboard' as well... Since moving to Monterey (multiple attempts needed) I am still experiencing issues with many basic aspects of macOS from email to contacts to music to APFS to even announcing the time, despite being out of 'beta' for roughly a year @ v12.6. Additionally my main vertical apps are also still not native for ARM, with one still only supported for Intel... Should Apple slow down given the increasing complexity of 'innovation'...?
Moreover, Apple's Mac design goals are in opposition of gaming monitors. Apple wants high PPI monitors, where they've settled on 220 PPI. 27" means 5K, 32" means 6K. They should be moving to 250 PPI to match the MBP14/16 PPI, so more pressure for more pixels. At those resolutions, there isn't enough bandwidth in cables to push more than 60 Hz.
Having 120 Hz, 240 Hz monitors means they would have to drop resolutions to 2K or 4K. They really can't differentiate their products at those resolutions as anybody will undercut them at those resolutions. 5K and 6K? Very OEMs will even consider making a display with those resolutions. Much easier for them to sell.
Which circles back to macOS not having a competitive gaming library with which to sell a display...
For my own use, in the 27" form factor, going from 4K@60Hz to 4K@120 Hz is a much bigger improvement than going from 160 ppi to 220 ppi.
120Hz refresh rate would be fun to play with. I'd like to shoot 120Hz video and play it back at 120Hz, simple stuff like that. But that and other spec upgrades aren't enough to get me to buy another 27" display.