$599 MacBook Neo is Apple's cheapest Mac laptop yet
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Apple's low-cost MacBook Neo is compatible with the company's new Studio Displays, but its output will be scaled to 4K resolution at 60Hz. Apple confirmed the compatibility and output limitation with 9to5Mac.
Apple unveiled two Mac displays today: a new Studio Display and a Studio Display XDR. Here’s every difference between the two.
It’s been a big week for Apple. Alongside new Macs, we finally have an updated Studio Display and a new mini-LED XDR model.
Perhaps the most groundbreaking of Apple's new releases is the MacBook Neo, a "budget-friendly" laptop that starts at $599.
Apple today released a new firmware update for the Studio Display and Studio Display XDR, two products that aren't set to launch until March 11. The Studio Display Firmware 26.3 update is only for the new Studio Display options,
Apple's new Studio Display XDR delivers 120Hz ProMotion, but only the latest M5 iPad Pros and new MacBook Pros can actually run it at full speed. Older devices are capped at 60Hz.
Leakers were right, and two new Apple Studio Display monitors will release next week, including features never seen before in the company's displays.
Apple’s “big week” continues today with new monitors. We got the iPhone 17e and iPad Airs with M4 chips yesterday, and today Apple has announced updated versions of its Studio Display along with new M5 Pro/M5 Max MacBook Pros and the M5 MacBook Air. There are actually two new Studio Displays: the regular model and a new Studio Display XDR.
Apple also announced two new pricey Studio Display computer monitors. If you're waiting on that rumored entry-level MacBook, the company seems to be saving it for its March 4 media event.
The M3 Ultra Mac Studio still offers the most configurable RAM in a Mac with its 256GB memory option. That’s compared to the M2 Ultra Mac Pro which offers up to 192GB RAM, and M4 Max/M5 Max machines that support up to 128GB RAM.
The new 27-inch 5K BenQ MA270S is $600 cheaper than Apple’s latest entry-level Studio Display.
Macworld's Filipe Espósito today again reported that Apple appears to be developing two new Studio Display models with different specs. Based on lines of code in "internal Apple files," which likely refers to a macOS Tahoe Kernel Debug Kit that leaked online last year,