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posted by martyb on Wednesday July 25 2018, @02:19PM   Printer-friendly
from the renewed-interest-in-Compaq-Portable-computers dept.

Submitted via IRC for AndyTheAbsurd

The pursuit of thinner, lighter laptops, a trend driven by Apple, means we have screwed ourselves out of performance.

Over the last few days we’ve seen outcry about Apple’s new MacBook Pro, which offers an optional top-end i9 processor, and how its performance is throttled to the point of parody as the laptop heats up over time.

Sparked by a video from YouTuber Dave Lee, who demonstrates that the only way to get Apple’s quoted performance from the MacBook Pro is by keeping it in a refrigerator, the outcry has been brutal.

Thousands of comments on the video say things like “Wow if it cant even maintain stock speeds that's pretty sad” and “Apple should offer a fridge that goes with the Macbook i9,” but the sobering reality is that this practice is normal across laptops—we’re just starting to see it more often.

[...] If Pro users really were Apple’s target market, the company could redesign these laptops to use the older, thicker MacBook Pro form factor from 2015. With that available space, and improvements in processor design, it would be able to better cool the same hardware and squeeze out more performance—but it’ll never happen. Thicker laptops would mean admitting failure.

Thinner and lighter is great, and if we’re honest, we’re all sucked in by the allure. The unfortunate reality for those of us that need these machines for work is that it’s just not good enough, and we’d welcome thicker machines in exchange for hardware that isn’t constrained by heat. Apple insists these new MacBooks are for ‘pro users,’ and while it has some of the best-in-class hardware design out there today, it simply doesn’t hold up if you push them hard enough.

The MacBook Pro isn’t designed for pro users at all, it’s a slick marketing machine designed to sell to the wealthy ‘prosumer’ that wouldn’t notice anyway. That much has been clear since the introduction of the Touch Bar and death of the SD slot—and it’s making a ton of money anyway.

Source: https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/9kmkve/thinner-and-lighter-laptops-have-screwed-us-all


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 25 2018, @05:33PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 25 2018, @05:33PM (#712502)

    you mean I can install any operating system I want into iphones because it's not boot locked?

  • (Score: 2) by RS3 on Wednesday July 25 2018, @05:42PM

    by RS3 (6367) on Wednesday July 25 2018, @05:42PM (#712510)

    I want to see you get GEOS https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEOS_(8-bit_operating_system) [wikipedia.org] running on your iPhone. An x86 emulator / MS-DOS box should do it.

  • (Score: 2) by theluggage on Wednesday July 25 2018, @10:25PM

    by theluggage (1797) on Wednesday July 25 2018, @10:25PM (#712748)

    you mean I can install any operating system I want into iphones because it's not boot locked?

    Clue: we're talking about Macs not iPhones. They're different - and not nearly as locked-down. Apple even include a click-n-drool helper tool for installing Windows. Not sure if Linux has drivers for recent Macs but, frankly, though, the only reason for paying the Apple tax these days is if you want to run MacOS (which will happily run Linux/BSD in a VM and the majority of the major FOSS packages natively) and, come the day when you no longer want MacOS, flog the Mac to someone who does (they'll pay an inflated price for MacOS) and get some cheap generic hardware.