BigDann
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Apple should keep Lightning for now, but USB-A has to die
randominternetperson said:rsantana said:Lighting cables has been Johnny Ive’s Achiles heel, an inexplicable engineering and design disgrace.
For decades, Apple cables (AppleTalk and ADB) represented the quality and sturdiness of Apple hardware. Nobody ever even think of one of those failing or breaking. Nowdays, you have to annualy (with luck) include in your family budget at least $150 to replace Apple lighting cables and laptop power bricks because cable failures. I love Apple computers...but man...their cables stinks..!
Power bricks are their own problem! If Apple had offered a connector on the MagSafe power adapter (as they do now) then I could see a lot of the failures could have been avoided and fixed a lot easier. Many a time a bad cable or MagSafe connector can damage the Mac system's charging logic which is an expensive repair. -
Apple should keep Lightning for now, but USB-A has to die
The USB standards group let us down!
The cables and the device both desperately need a marking system so you can figure out what cable should be used (just looking at the 1 meter cables or shorter) Then when it comes to longer cables the device needs to have a table so the effect of a longer cable is known.
Even the TIA working group which sets standards for UTP network cabling was smart enough to see they couldn't drop the RJ45 connector, What they did do is create a new connector standard to run in parallel for higher data rates.
The dependability of the connector is not as good as the Lightning! I'm not sure how the current connector can be fixed. This is one of many reasons the USB-A connector should be kept. While the idea of having one common connector is a lofty goal, in the real world its just not that practical! Slow speed devices don't need to waste the limited I/O of the system, in addition, these slow speed devices are the ones that are often constantly plugged in which wears the connector.
The last issue here is the world is based on USB-A, and will be for a long, long time! Thinking we can change on a dime is just fantasy! We need native USB-A support in all computers! We all have too much invested in USB-A devices of some form or other. -
Mac sales decline in Q3 as customers await new models [u]
Apple needs to get back into serviceable systems! The current MacBook Pro's are just not serviceable! Can't replace the keyboard, battery or even the display without spending $500 on the parts alone!
The new systems are just not useable with noisy & failing keyboards & failing displays. Missing key elements real PRO's need like USB-A ports, SDXC & Ethernet. Then the real bugaboo! Missing MagSafe!
The new i9 system is DOA! As it just can't run beyond base clock because of lack of cooling. Thats independent of the firmware issue it had day one.
Pro's want a system that work effectively, not a bling system to impress. Apple went down the Bling path with Form. They need to get back to the design that serves the real PRO market Function.
Apple has the pieces to make this work! A variation of the older Unibody 15" & 17" models which are a bit larger than the ultra thin models Apple is selling now. Which offers the needed space for a better cooling system. Give it four USB-C ports and two USB-A ports. The back two (L&R) are dual function, being a MagSafe type of connector. as well A magnet plug is inserted so you have a flat connection for the breakaway MagSafe connector, yet it's a recessed USB-C port. Take the FaceID system in the Xs iPhone instead of the iSight camera and even offer a rear facing wide angle camera for group FaceTime meetings. Leverage the T2 secure enclave storage for the primary drive (128 or 256 GB) then offer two NVMe/PCIe x4 interfaces allowing 256, 515 GB, 1, 2 & 4 TB SSD drives in either discreet or RAID setup. Give it a narrow bezel 4K screen.
The older silent! Blister keyboard and use the smaller Touch Pad so the system has a bit more room for the battery.
Now Apple build it and I will buy it! -
Apple isn't doomed because it didn't release new Macs and iPads at WWDC
Mike Wuerthele said:Rayz2016 said:k2kw said:AppleInsider said:Portent of the future
Speaking about telling developers what to expect in the future, Apple previewed the fruits of project "Marzipan" at WWDC. Instead of a straight emulation layer, it turned out to be a framework and API for porting over iPad apps to the Mac.
While I'm certain that this can be used for good or evil, skillfully or poorly, it isn't a regression. I also believe that it is an early step for migrating at least some of the Mac line to ARM, as the porting friction reduces even further as the technology is finally released to developers in full in 2019.
But, like we said on the AppleInsider Podcast on Friday, this reveal of what is rumored to be called Marzipan is about step two of a twenty step process.
For weeks, I've been wondering why AppleInsider has insisted that Apple was planning an emulation layer so that iOS apps can run on Macs, when the initial report they cribbed from, seasoned developers, experienced journalists, and just about everyone in between said that Apple was coming up with an API to make it easier for themselves and developers to port applications between iOS and MacOS. AI was getting it so badly wrong, I was starting to wonder if they were just saying it to generate page clicks. No they weren't; they really did just get it badly wrong.
It made no sense at all to me (and I suspect it had @StrangeDays shaking his head in wonder too).
But as it turns out, AppleInsider simply made the classic mistake of the inexperienced journalist and rookie police detective: they started with what they wanted to believe, and then worked in reverse to find evidence to make it fact.
In this case, AppleInsider (and you) want to believe that Apple will merge the Mac and the iPad into some sort of bastardised hybrid FrankenMacPad. The reason that you want this is the same reason that is behind every odd request that shows up here: price. Rather than caring if this would actually work, what folk are thinking is "if Apple made such a machine, then I wouldn't have to buy two machines". Any compromises such a device would suffer would be complained about endlessly of course, but at least you got it for a cheaper outlay than buying a Mac and an iPad.
But back to the original point: this pattern of thinking leads to two strange phenomena that are unique to the Mac world:- X-Files Case Number 7737228728: The Internal Reality Twist. When a senior Apple exec goes on stage and drops a twenty-foot on-screen "NO" to the question of merging MacOS and iOS, what folk here think is "Well, it was an on-screen "NO", rather than a real, touchable "NO" pressed from Apple-crafted ceramic and honed smooth with lasers and a Jony Ive talkover explaining, in soothing British tones, how the massive "NO" was made. Since it's not a tangible "NO" then it's not a real "NO", so that means that they're planning on merging iOS and MacOS two years from now!"
- X-Files Case Number 7737228729: The Historical Reality Twist. When Steve Jobs said Apple won't do something; then years later, Apple does it, then this is proof that they can change their minds.
Actually, I'm going to stop there, because point #2 is perfectly reasonable: if Apple didn't change their minds when they've taken the wrong path, then the company would never have survived this long, and that is an indisputable fact. The problem is the Historical Twist part. In this case, folk tend to make up their own words for what was actually said, so that it can reinforce what they're actually wishing for. Here's a video:
Jobs did not say "Stylus … yuk!"
What Jobs actually said was, "If you need a stylus then you've already failed."
The difference is subtle, but if you don't get it then you don't really understand why the iPad succeeded where so many before it did not. Jobs did not say that they would never have a stylus; what he actually said was that from day one the iPad was designed so that it wouldn't need one. This requirement shaped how the tablet was built, how iOS was designed, how apps would look and how folk would interact with them. Thanks to Jobs's insistence that Apple's designers would not assume a stylus would ever be available, they came up with a system that could happily work with a finger or a stylus.
The whole premise that Apple will make a FrankenMacPad because they once said they wouldn't make a stylus is flawed – because Apple didn't say they wouldn't make a stylus. In fact, if anything, Jobs statement about the stylus proves he believes that the best devices have to be designed from the ground up to support one overall style of interaction for the best possible user experience, so if anything, the stylus quote (the real one) actually points to a future without a FrankenMacPad
So, does this mean that Apple will never make a hybrid? No, of course not. As I've said, Apple can and does change its mind. But as things stand, they've already made prototypes; the ergonomics over long periods of use don't work. From my own experience, when I work with hybrids, I tend to just use them as laptops, and most of the folk around me tend to do the same thing. So is there is no current plan to make on? Nope. Sorry, there isn't. This Marzipan is not the first step to a hybrid, it's just another step along an endless road to make iOS and MacOS work better together, without compromising devices running either.
"But if Apple doesn't think touchscreens belong on the Mac, then what about the Touch Bar huh? Yeah, clever clogs! What about that??"
That is not a touch screen, it is a touch keyboard, and we know that Apple has loved touch keyboards for years.
One other thing: Jobs's statement on the need for a stylus bears greater weight when you remember that the iPad was actually conceived before the iPhone.
1) That I believe that a hybrid device is coming. I have never said that. ARM-powered Macs != hybrid Mac and iPad. It's just a Mac, running macOS, with an ARM processor. The Intel Macs were no longer PowerPC Macs, they were Intel Macs.
2) I am on record for well over a year saying that Marzipan isn't an emulation framework. Not just in multiple editorials, but on the AI podcast, and my own. AI is not some monolithic agency with planning meetings on common opinions and interpretations.
Those two make the rest of your assumptions about this editorial problematic.
Apple will continue to use them for specific tasks within the system, it won't supplant the primary CPU in the MacBook/iMac systems. The Apple A Series APU's are very good! But, they are not designed to scale to the level of a full laptop or desktop system in its current design.
More than likely Apple will create a half step system to compete with the Chromebook's. Basically, an iPad within a clamshell, keyboard & trackpad for the K-12 market. -
Pegatron likely to be Apple's manufacturer for future ARM Mac
Don't get your underwear twisted up! It's not going to compete against the Intel/MacOS systems.
Apple will continue using ARM co-processors like they did with the touch bar on the MacBook Pro's and the newer iMac Pro.
Apple is trying hard to get back into the educational space that Goggle's ChromeBook has managed to take a big bite out of. Apple will be producing an iPad clamshell type system to compete against the Chromebook. I also see this system as a good leader into poorer countries which want cheaper systems than what Apple sells today.
I can also see Apple creating a home server for HomePod & HomeKit devices using their APU's.