It was the worst of times, it was the worst of times: Tough to buy a new Mac

I wandered into a local Apple store this week to check out the latest goodies. Afraid that my resolve might be even weaker than my bank account, I left my wallet in the car. But I needn’t have worried. We’ve arrived at a point in time for Apple users where the shear number of ongoing transitions and uncertainties in the entire desktop/laptop product line has overwhelmed the possibility to make a wise decision for most ordinary consumers like me.

This state of confusion first surfaced ahead of Apple’s annual developer conference this year when the rumor mill got itself into quite a lather. Apple would use its keynote to introduce new laptops, new desktops, a new iPhone, a revolutionary television operating system — pretty much every product in Apple’s line up except the iPad, which was just revised in March, was possibly about to be reborn. In the end, there were new laptops and a minor desktop upgrade but on the whole, not quite the tsunami Apple storm some wanted to see.

The rumor mill has alway had a pretty mixed track record but it’s interesting how broadly the rumors stretched ahead of the 2012 WWDC. I think it offers an important window, pardon the metaphor, into our current extremely transitional state of computing. And with a few too many transitions in full swing, it’s time for almost all consumers to step back and wait. Each member of the current line up of Macs is fatally compromised in one way or another for us ordinary users.

What’s the big transition? It’s not just one. After a decade of tablet computers going no where, the iPad has created an insanely fast growing new niche that is clearly taking usage time — and sales — away from traditional laptops. Even smart phones are getting so powerful and capable that they are displacing traditional computers to some degree. Both call into question long-established conventional wisdom about the need for portable computers. Displays are shifting to high detail more quickly than apps. The nearly three decade run of the PC’s spinning hard disk is also coming to a close, though the new generation flash memory is still very expensive (try pricing one of the new Macbook Pros with 512 GB of storage). Optical spinning drives, too, seem to have quickly passed into a state of decline with Apple at the lead pushing DVDs into early obsolesce. The standards for moving your data around seem a mess as well — a new, much faster flavor of Wifi called “Gigabit Wifi” or 802.11ac is just around the corner but not available yet while Apple’s once favored wired port, Thunderbolt, seems dead in the water and retread USB 3.0 is suddenly making a comeback.

At the same time, progress on a number of other critically important fronts has stalled, at least as far as users are concerned. Yes, yes, Intel’s new generation of CPUs dubbed the “Ivy Bridge” line is sooo much better than what came before. Well, sort of, kind of. Science fiction author and longtime tech reviewer for Byte magazine Jerry Pournelle used to say it’s not time to upgrade your computer until you’ll get twice the performance. Anything less than 100% improvement would barely be noticed after a few days by ordinary users in the real world. Maximum speeds topped out years ago below 4 GHz and chip designers seem more focused on adding little tricks and treats to squeeze out a little bit more performance or lower battery consumption than dramatically improving all-around speed. Meanwhile, graphics performance is actually slipping backwards as fewer Mac laptops include discrete, high performance video cards instead relying on so-called integrated chips built into CPUs and lacking their own high speed memory. Battery life is remaining steady only because Apple is putting more battery into its newest model at the expense of weight. That’s hardly progress.

So with all that in mind, consider the new and much hyped 15″ MacBook Pro with retina display I just checked out at the Apple store. As I first played around with the Safari browser, I was duly impressed by the super sharp display. But then I opened a common app used by almost everyone, Microsoft Word, and typed a few sentences. The text looked horrible, with jagged edges and visible color alterations around the anti-aliasing. I tried several fonts and ran through all five available resolution settings for the MBP to no avail. Maybe Word required some kind of update but surely Apple’s Pages app would look good. Nope — equally horrible. Here’s a top of the line, super professional machine and text looks like crap.

(UPDATE: A few months after this post was written, Microsoft updated its Office apps for the retina display. Then in December, Adobe updated Photoshop.)

Not to mention the lack of innovation in battery technology means the new unit weighs only a pound less, or about 20%, than the DVD-toting prior version. A heavier pack was needed to avoid shortening battery life (UPDATE: actually, battery life is considerably shorter than the previous Macbook Pro 15″, according to Macworld). For comparison, the 13″ MacBook Air weighs 34% less than its 13″ Pro counterpart (and it also gets less battery life).

What about the rest of the new line? New MacBook Airs and Pros have USB 3 and the latest Intel CPUs but no retina displays and the same old battery life and wifi chips. And who thinks the MBPs with their dual, dead weight spinning drives will remain in the line up for much longer?

New Mac Pros have, well, nothing (technically they have slightly faster CPUs but barely noticeable). Even Apple seems to be a little ashamed and removed the “new” badge that had initially adorned the Mac Pro icon in the Apple online store. New iMacs and Mac minis? There weren’t any, so they have no USB 3, no retina display and not even the “Ivy Bridge” processor upgrade.

All of this confusion and transition has also undone some of the conventional wisdom for buying computers in recent years. Laptops had become capable enough that many Mac consumers were forgoing buying a desktop at all. Apple’s combo docking station/monitors made that a great choice. But now there’s no retina display monitor so docking means giving up the fancy new graphics if you buy the top of the line model.

So what you really should do is wait for the next iteration of Mac updates — MacBook Airs with retina displays and broad third-party retina app support. Better batteries and wifi would help justify upgrading, too. Desktop Macs should be arriving with USB 3.0 and multiple Thunderbolt ports soon, too. Hey, at least our budgets will be happier.

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Comments

14 responses to “It was the worst of times, it was the worst of times: Tough to buy a new Mac”

  1. Seamaster73 Avatar

    You just perfectly summarised where I find myself.

    With a 2006 iMac that’s on its last legs (and no longer supported by post-Sow Leopard OS updates), what do I buy? There’s no new iMac on sale, the MacBook Air is too small to be a genuine desktop replacement, and the new retina MacBook Pros are twice what I want to spend (while I’m not a “pro user, like you I need a machine with at least 512GB of local storage).What is obvious, I think, is that Steve Jobs prediction a few years ago that notebooks would become 90% of the Mac business has come to pass. Apple sees itself as a mobile device manufacturer. The desktop has had its day. Perhaps its time to accept that, get out our wallets, and move on. The problem with that is that if you want to futureproof yourself (and I do, expecting to get five years out of any Mac purchase), you’re looking at the retina MBP which is both ruinously expensive and a worse experience on the vast majority of apps and websites. I ordered, and then cancelled, a retina MBP when both these issues hit home.For now, I’m sticking with my iMac. There’s no new Mac that I see and think, “now THAT’S what I need”.

  2. Yacko Avatar
    Yacko

    What does last legs mean? I’m using a 2006 iMac Cpre 2, bought refurbed in 2007, now with Leopard and I love it. 10.5 will be my stop point for a number of years while the “mobile” paradigm (and its desktop effect) sorts out.

    If your iMac is truly failing like backlight or drives, then I guess you have to move on. Likely an iMac refresh before the year is out. Failing that, you might go mobile. A Macbook Air, maxed out memory at purchase, can be used as a desktop, small screen and all, if you also use an external monitor.

    Do like I do with the iMac. I use an external monitor in portrait. Find a 24″ from HP or Dell or somebody. Make sure it can do 1920×1200 at 16:10, don’t just settle for a model that is 1920×1080 at 16:9. Either it has a stand that flips or take it off the stand, buy a separate mount and bolt it portrait.

    Don’t flip it horizontal as that’s a pain in the ass. 1200 wide is fine for web pages and now you can see 1920 high. Email, you can see whole messages.

    Underpowered? Even the lowest Air now has 2.5x the geekbench score of your iMac.

  3. Seamaster73 Avatar

    Useful info — yes, the iMac has a failed superdrive and the screen is past its best. 

    I haven’t considered an external monitor, but I have considered the Air, and was impressed by how good the display of the 13″ variant is. It doesn’t feel small, but could I live with it for four or five years as a desktop replacement? I don’t need portability — my iPad gives me that.

    It would be a big shift for me to go back to a laptop. I had a PowerBook 1400C in 1997, but have been an iMac guy since the original bondi blue one.

  4. bregalad Avatar
    bregalad

    The tsunami of new products predicted for WWDC was never realistic. Apple always keeps their presentations down to a small number of new things. New products are always given the spotlight for about a month before they release anything else, even if the two are in different categories and not in competition with one another for anything except attention.

    In July Mountain Lion will ship most likely along side modestly updated iMacs and Mac minis sporting this year’s Intel processor and USB 3.0.

    Next year will see more retina displays and the re-thinking of the Mac Pro form factor.

  5. immovableobject Avatar
    immovableobject

    The new 13 ” Macbook Air offers some nice improvements (aside from the speed bump), notably, a higher resolution “Facetime” camera, USB 3.0, and an 8GB RAM option.  First or second generation Macbook Air owners will be tempted to upgrade.

  6. RedMercury Avatar
    RedMercury

    The problem with that is that if you want to futureproof yourself […], you’re looking at the retina MBP which is both ruinously expensive and a worse experience on the vast majority of apps and websites.

    Add to that the fact that the MacBook Pro is completely un-upgradeable which leads to further issues with “futureproofing.”

    8GB of RAM not enough?  Buy a new computer.  512GB not enough?  Buy a new computer.

    The only thing “Pro” about the new MacBook Pro is the price.

  7. Yacko Avatar
    Yacko

     Pro means pro as in business. Business amortization is what, 3 years? I think that’s what it is meant for.

  8. Yacko Avatar
    Yacko

    Just to clarify, I use both the iMac and external monitor simultaneously. The 20″ iMac is 1680×1050 and the portrait is 1200×1920. If you don’t need the portability, well then…

    But I was suggesting use the Air as a portable and when brought to the desktop, free yourself from the screen size by using two monitors.

    My point was that an Air, thought of as somewhat underpowered, is still 2.5x+ the performance of the machine you have now, something which further spurs the mobile phenomenon in addition to the tablet arena.

    A tangential point, but also illustrative of mobile power, a Macbook Pro is now as fast as the first MacPros from 2006.

  9. Joseph Saponaro, MD Avatar
    Joseph Saponaro, MD

    Nice article.  I agree that the Gigabit 802.11AC WiFi is desparately needed in all Apple products.  I’d say especially in March 2013 with the iPad 4 arrival. A Gigabit Wi-Fi will be key then since the iPad 3 was critisized for its worse Wi-Fi.

    It’s frustrating to see Gigabit Routes and laptops come out while the iPhone 5 is not going to support Gigabit Wi-Fi.

    Dr. Saponaro  

  10. […] I wrote about recently in my “It was the worst of times, it was the worst of times” post, Apple’s current line up is annoyingly out of step with customer needs right now. […]

  11. Scruff Avatar
    Scruff

    Hmmmm…. How do you know that the new gen iPhone won’t have Gigabit WiFi? No specs have been released, everything you’ve read or heard is pure speculation at this point.

    I’m not saying that it _will_ have it. What I’m saying is it is disingenuous to make solid statements on a product that we know nothing about.

  12. Scruff Avatar
    Scruff

    The problem with hardware speculation at WWDC is that it is a developers conference, not a marketing or public sales pitch. People getting excited about theoretical new hardware at WWDC are generally sure to be disappointed.

  13. Pete_Pete Avatar
    Pete_Pete

    To be fair, it’s a lousy time to buy a new Mac about half the time. It transitioned to OS X, and then there was a couple years when everybody released OS X versions of their apps (or in Adobe and Microsoft’s case, several years). It transitioned to x86, and then there were a couple years when everybody released Universal versions of their apps (or in Adobe and Microsoft’s case, several years).

    The one lesson that all my Mac-using friends have seemed to learn from this is to avoid Adobe and Microsoft products unless absolutely necessary. I don’t actually know a single Mac user who still uses Microsoft Office, and about half the Photoshop/Illustrator users have switched already, too.

    The bigger the company, the bigger the app, and the longer the wait for
    new releases of any kind. Given the transitions that Apple is happy to
    execute, I’m a bit surprised people still buy big-name third-party apps.

    Yeah, Apple’s lineup is pretty wonky right now. But not really any wonkier than when it had a mix of x86 and PPC machines. Or when it was shipping OS 9 and OS X both installed on the same machine, booting into the older one by default (because the new one didn’t even support all of the hardware yet). In a year, it’ll be Retina displays across the line, and almost everybody will have released new Retina apps, and we’ll barely remember this.

    Then we can go back to status quo for Mac users: complaining about Adobe and Microsoft being sticks in the mud!

  14. […] Personally, I was intrigued by the retina screen after reading so many glowing reviews and then I was surprised and disappointed when I saw it later at the Apple Store. Too many reviews missed the boat. It’s not yet time to make the […]

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