Analyst: Apple’s MacBook Pro likely to get 32GB of RAM capacity in 2017 update; current 16GB RAM limitation due to Intel

“Noted KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo sees slow demand for Apple’s recently released MacBook Pro with Touch Bar models, as the notebooks ship at higher than expected prices and present disappointing specifications to core Mac users,” Mikey Campbell reports for AppleInsider.

“Apple’s 2017 MacBook Pro update,” Campbell reports, “expected in the second half of the year, may gain support for up to 32GB of RAM, making the platform a more compelling option for power users.”

“The recently released MacBook Pro series is powered by Intel’s Skylake class of processors with LPDDR3 memory, a specification that supports up to 16GB RAM,” Campbell reports. “Next-generation Cannonlake CPUs that efficiently run LPDDR4 RAM at higher allotments are scheduled for release in time for next year’s MacBook update. If Intel fails to ship Cannonlake on time, however, Apple will likely turn to Coffee Lake, which features the same LPDDR3 specifications as Skylake.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: The first MacBook Pro refresh will be the one for the small percentage of power users who require 32GB RAM.

SEE ALSO:
Apple limits 2016 MacBook Pro models to 16GB of RAM to maximize battery life – October 29, 2016

42 Comments

  1. There’s massive pressure for the computer industry to get off the DDR3 RAM, all of which is susceptible to the Rowhammer Attack. (Even a few DDR4 RAM models have been found to be susceptible, but most are not). The Rowhammer Attack can be performed rapidly (in seconds) and can result in kernel level owning of devices. A few weeks back it was found that most ARM CPU based Android devices are susceptible. This attack was discovered nearly a year and a half ago…

    Cutting-edge hack gives super user status by exploiting DRAM weakness
    “Rowhammer” attack goes where few exploits have gone before, into silicon itself.

    1. I appreciate the “sourcasm” but obviously the Touch Bar is used for much more than that. But I agree with your sentiment. I’m going on at least 2 years waiting for the Mac Pro I want (and not likely to ever get being hampered by misguided and unwanted Ives miniaturization attention – the one Apple product that doesn’t need it). And much more RAM, etc.. I wouldn’t buy a new MBP without at least 32Gb now.

        1. So your working along on your new computer, has a touch screen, then you reach a spit where you want to do something, you’ve got a choice, move to the track pad and do the task or raise your hand completely off the keyboard, touch the screen, (possibly leaving really annoying marks that you don’t see that much on iPad screens because of how they are used) then back to the keyboard, back to the screen, that would get really old after a while..

          Now you can use a touch bar, on the same working plane as the keyboard and track pad, makes much more sense then constantly lifting your hand to he screen, course usage and logic isn’t the point is it.?

        2. No. it’s because a Touch screen on a laptop forces the user’s arm and hand into an awkward ergonomic position. Tell us how well Microsoft’s Surface is working in three- to five years when owners start experiencing carpal tunnel syndrome.

        3. Apple has peaked and you still have yet to figure it out. The iPad Pro is an attempt to address the market but is not got the horsepower or the ability to address the file system like a proper device.

          Seems to me Apple is clueless as to how to bridge the gap or so stubborn as to how to do it. Maybe an executive housecleaning is in order.

  2. The use of the term “core” is misleading, in my opinion. To me, it implies that a significant percentage of pro users find the specs of the recently released MacBook Pros to be disappointing. While some are disappointed (and a few can never be satisfied), I do not believe that that opinion is broadly held.

    Also, isn’t is a bit too early to declare that there is slow demand for the new MacBook Pros?!

  3. I was thinking about getting the last model but waited for this one. I think this will be a fine update for me. (I’ve been waiting a while). My only disappointment is the price. The Touch Bar looks useful to me and the specs are fine. 32GB would have been nice but not a make or break.

  4. I am glad the 16 GB limit is not an Apple design decision but it adds to the general negative value perception of new MBPs.

    The touch bar will have to prove its value. I think It is a nice to have feature, but not so nice if it is imposed at a higher cost.

    And for a desktop version the TB may better be a keyboard upgrade option at a reasonable price.

    1. There probably would not be nearly as much negativity if this MBP was delivered without the price increase, and/or was at least shipping with some extras such as USB-C lightning cable / USB-A dongle / power cord extension that people now have to pay extra for.

    2. It *is* an Apple design decision though. Intel architectures supports 32 GB RAM. My coworker’s new Windows laptop has that much, right now.

      Apple *chose* not to use architectures that supported 32 GB RAM because it was above their energy usage targets. They *chose* not to give pros the choice of lower battery life in favour of better capability, when the majority of the time pros that need that capability are connected to external power anyway.

  5. I am kind of disappointed that the new MacBook Pro has a headphone socket. It kind of makes a nonsense of Apple’s proclamations that removing it for the iPhone was about better sound and not just space saving. This is by no means a new trend but I’d like to see some more consistency about Apple’s approach across their devices. A connection is either antiquated or it’s not.

    1. Had to laugh a bit. Maybe they should have added a lightning port to the MBP or maybe start making USB C head phones?

      I somewhat agree with you about the true reasons behind removing the 3.5mm jack. But I have also come to the conclusion, it’s for something else down the road that they can’t reveal just yet. Sometimes senseless iterative changes have to happen before the final vision is in place.

      It’s not a justification, on my part, but I am willing to see how this plays out. As more time passes and nothing exciting happens to make this choice have sense or benefit, then I will feel cynicism is justified.

      1. The thing is though, no matter their reasons why would they apply to one device and not others? I think it also raises one of the slight problems with a custom connector in that the lightning port currently connects the iPhone either to power or to a computer for data transfer wherein the iPhone is temporarily a peripheral of the computer. If they both have lightning connectors do you connect them together using a new cable with lightning connectors at both ends, or does the iPhone still connect to the Mac via usb with the Mac’s lightning being just for sound? If you connect them via their mutual lightning connectors then to avoid having loads of cables you have to change the power adapter so it has a a lightning socket rather than usb which as a change offers no benefit.
        The whole thing seems like a solution for a problem we didn’t know existed but that somehow only occurs in certain instances.

  6. The Touch Bar is useless for a majority of what I do with my laptops and all of my co workers. We have Apple Thunderbolt screens one or two in some cases, close the laptop and use the a apple keyboard and mouse. Essentially we use them like desktop computers.

  7. Mac Daily News

    “The first MacBook Pro refresh will be the one for the small percentage of power users who require 32GB RAM”

    If if shell out over 4K for the most powerful Apple Laptop with 2 TB, I better get 32 megs of RAM…

  8. Will all the MBPro whiners take your bellyaching to a Windows forum please? All your bitching is really really getting old.

    If you hate everything Apple offers, buy another brand and leave Apple related forums to the rest of us.

    1. pbiphoto you are wrong

      These new MBP are “Pro”, for professionals not for general consumers, and are also traditionally designed for demanding professionals who use Macs for content creation, engineering, programing, etc. And are these demanding professionals, who had been using Macs for years and now what they need, the users who have the most serious critics for the direction and lack of attention the Mac Pro line receives from Apple.

  9. Gawd… I hate to see what, if any, update they have planned for the Mac Pro!

    A gimmick bar keyboard?

    Smaller, lower power trashcan design, with RAM on board?

    Mobile processor with 16 GB of DDR3 SDRAM?

    People, they can sink lower…

  10. OK. So it looks like I have to wait for the 2017 refresh then….another year goes by! Here I was thinking the Macbook Pro was in fact a pro computer, you know, one that pros use for large image processing and the like. The current Macbook Pro is just another mid-level prosumer laptop!

Reader Feedback

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.