Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Apple
  4. News

New Mac desktops are coming and they’re ‘great,’ says Apple CEO Tim Cook

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple finally refreshed its MacBook Pro line in October after two years without an update, and it has so far benefited from brisk sales of the thinner, lighter, and Touch Bar-equipped machines. The healthy sales clip was likely due, at least in part, to some serious pent-up demand among Apple fans looking to upgrade older machines.

If it’s true that there’s been pent-up demand for refreshed MacBook Pros, then the pent-up demand for Apple desktop machines must be huge as well. It’s been some time since Apple did anything meaningful in desktops, and Apple CEO Tim Cook has let Apple employees know that change is coming, as TechCrunch reports.

Recommended Videos

Cook made the statement on an Apple employee message board, and of course, such a thing is hardly likely to remain inside the company’s own walls. Apple employees are clearly concerned at some level about the future of Mac desktops, and the CEO wanted to make sure they know that the company hasn’t given up on the form factor.

What seemed most important from Cook’s message is that Apple employees shouldn’t fret about Apple’s commitment to desktops, as he said, “The desktop is very strategic for us. It’s unique compared to the notebook because you can pack a lot more performance in a desktop — the largest screens, the most memory and storage, a greater variety of I/O, and fastest performance. So there are many different reasons why desktops are really important, and in some cases critical, to people.”

Cook also clearly recognizes that Apple employees have a passion for going in new directions and doing truly innovative things. In response to the idea that Apple might be losing its willingness to innovate without the promise of profitability, Cook said, “You can rarely see precisely where you want to go from the beginning. In retrospect, it’s always written like that. But it’s rarely like that. The fantastic thing about Apple employees is they get excited about something, and they want to know how it works. What it will do. What its capabilities are. If they want to know about something in an entirely different industry, they start pulling the string and see where it takes them. They’re focused more on the journey, which enables so many great things to happen. ”

It’s been well over a year since Apple’s iMac all-in-one PC was updated, almost two years since the Mac Mini was refreshed, and the Mac Pro hasn’t been touched in just over three years. That’s forever in PC time, and so Apple needs to get moving if it’s going to remain relevant in the desktop market. Microsoft’s Surface Studio AIO set the bar for innovation in desktops, and so it’s likely that Apple is looking to pull some serious strings in response.

Mark Coppock
Former Computing Writer
Mark Coppock is a Freelance Writer at Digital Trends covering primarily laptop and other computing technologies. He has…
ChatGPT is recommending scam websites that will steal your credit card info
The chatbot is surfacing fraudulent clones of defunct retail brands, and scammers are deliberately engineering sites to game its recommendations.
ChatGPT running on a laptop.

Scammers have found a new way to reach shoppers: getting ChatGPT to do their marketing for them. According to The Guardian, scam-checking service Ask Silver found that OpenAI's chatbot is recommending fraudulent retail websites built to harvest payment details from unsuspecting buyers. The sites mimic real storefronts and use official-looking URLs, making them difficult to spot without scrutiny.

Defunct brands are a prime target

Read more
McDonald’s new AI drive-thru has to prove it can handle hungry people
After its earlier ordering bot became a punchline, McDonald’s is testing a new system that promises fewer human handoffs.
Architecture, Building, Hotel

McDonald’s is bringing AI back to the drive-thru with a new Google-backed system called ArchIQ, also known as Archy. It’s starting in five locations under the company’s broader “> NEXT” technology push, with a franchisee claiming the system has already handled more than 1 million orders.

The bigger number is the one McDonald’s needs people to trust. About 90% of those orders reportedly needed no human intervention. That sounds promising, but this is not a clean reset. Its earlier IBM-backed AI drive-thru experiment ended after viral mistakes turned automated ordering into a public punchline.

Read more
Logitech’s Mobi Fold is a pocketable folding mouse for folks who despise trackpads
Logitech’s Mobi Fold looks like a tiny productivity taco
Logitech Mobi Fold

Laptop trackpads are fine until you get really busy. Editing a spreadsheet in an airport lounge, juggling tabs in a café, or trying to do proper work on a tiny hotel desk can make you miss the convenience of a mouse. Logitech has the answer to this with the new Mobi Fold, its first ultra-portable foldable mouse.

While a small portable mouse is something people carry, many choose to skip the added bulk, simply choosing to bite the bullet with the trackpad. But the Logitech Mobi Fold can simply fold flat, and can later be unfolded when you need to work. This makes it pretty convenient to carry. Logitech even made the mouse to automatically power on when opened and turn off when folded.

Read more