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

Mini-LED MacBooks and iPads are coming in 2021, analyst says

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple is working on high-end iPad and MacBook models equipped with Mini-LED displays, which will be released sometime between late 2020 and the middle of 2021. That’s according to tech analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, whose reputation for accuracy is unsurpassed in the industry.

In a research note seen by MacRumors, Kuo explains how Apple will shift the displays in some of its devices away from the current panels to the much higher-quality Mini-LED. According to Kuo, the displays in both devices will contain around 10,000 LEDs — for comparison, the upcoming Pro Display XDR will have 576 LEDs. Apple will be able to do this by using LEDs that are below 200 microns in size, which is far smaller than those used in the XDR panel.

Recommended Videos

Packing in so many more LEDs will supposedly result in a far superior display, with strong HDR performance, high contrast, and a wide color gamut, plus the thin and light design that Apple so often lusts after. While OLED panels can offer comparable color gamut quality to Mini-LED screens and mass production yields are improving, Kuo believes Apple is also pushing for Mini-LED in order to avoid the burn-in issues that can affect OLED screens.

As well as that, it would allow Apple to reduce its reliance on arch-rival Samsung, which currently makes the displays in Apple’s iPad Pro. Kuo says he expects LG Display to make the Mini-LED screens, with contributions from Epistar, Zhen Ding, Radiant Opto-Electronics, Nichia, Avary Holding, and TSMT.

However, all this high-tech wizardry will come at a cost. Kuo says he believes the cost of the Mini-LED panels will mean they’ll only be available in Apple’s high-end iPads and MacBook Pro models. While he didn’t explicitly say so, this probably means they’ll be in the iPad Pro and MacBook Pro, skipping more entry-level devices like the new 10.2-inch iPad and MacBook Air.

We’ve previously discussed how we believe Apple’s rumored 16-inch MacBook Pro will be an opportunity for Apple to go all-in on making a flagship device that showcases the company’s tech prowess. Well, this laptop would presumably be decked out with the Mini-LED display, while the entry-level and midrange MacBook Pro models could stick with Apple’s current display tech. Given the 16-inch MacBook Pro will supposedly be announced this year, we’ll probably have to wait a while for it to come equipped with the Mini-LED screen.

Kuo states his belief that the Mini-LED iPad will launch between the fourth quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021. The Mini-LED MacBook will then follow somewhere between the first and second quarters of 2021. We’ll bring you all the latest news on these devices as soon as more details emerge.

Alex Blake
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
Asus Pad comes out as a brazen iPad wannabe, but looks like a solid OLED Android slate
Asus looked at the iPad and said “Yeah, we’ll have one too”
Asus Pad

ASUS has officially unveiled the new Asus Pad, and honestly, the inspiration is impossible to ignore. From the flat metal chassis and symmetrical bezels to the magnetic keyboard accessories and stylus support, the tablet looks heavily influenced by Apple’s iPad lineup. But underneath the familiar design language sits what could actually be one of the more compelling Android tablets launched this year.

The Asus Pad arrives at a time when Android tablet makers are aggressively trying to close the gap with Apple in premium productivity-focused hardware. While many Android tablets still struggle with app optimization and ecosystem polish, companies increasingly realize that buyers care just as much about display quality, battery life, and hardware design as they do about software exclusives.

Read more
Dumb ebook readers are about to get darn smart for you with useful AI and Android support
Your e-reader is finally getting the glow-up it deserved.
Supernote nomad in hand

E Ink and MediaTek have teamed up to bring something genuinely exciting to a product category that has seen a surge in popularity in recent years. Your next e-reader might just transcribe meetings, translate languages in real time, and finally show you colors that don't look washed out.

The two companies announced an expanded collaboration built around MediaTek's new generative AI e-reader chips, the MT8115 and MT8126. These support both Linux and Android, and pack a dedicated NPU that delivers up to 7.4 TOPS of AI computing performance. 

Read more
Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro review: I swapped my trusty iPad for this and didn’t miss it at all
A rare Android tablet that will make you stick around with it for the long game.
Person using the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro Android tablet.

For years, I've kept a default disclaimer ready whenever I am asked to recommend Android tablets. "It's good/meh, for an Android tablet." That little clarity did a lot of heavy lifting. It excused the issues with laggy apps stretched haphazardly across an oversized screen, the ho-hum firepower, and software that always felt like a phone wearing a costume two sizes too big. So when the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro landed on my desk, I had my disclaimer loaded and ready to unload indiscriminately.

I'll save you the suspense and tell you it never came out. This slate is a genuine powerhouse, the kind of tablet that goes after the iPad Air and the Galaxy Tab S-series without flinching, and then upturns the value debate with its attractive asking price. It runs Qualcomm's top-tier Snapdragon 8 Elite, which means it can chew through all kinds of mobile tasks with ease.

Read more