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Apple’s MacBook Neo is the best laptop you can get for $599 – New York Magazine

Apple's MacBook Neo starts at $599 ($499 for education customers)
Apple’s MacBook Neo starts at $599 ($499 for education customers)

Apple’s MacBook Neo is an all-new laptop that delivers the magic of the Mac at a breakthrough price, making it even more accessible to millions of people around the world. MacBook Neo starts with a beautiful Apple design, featuring a durable aluminum enclosure in an array of gorgeous colors — blush, indigo, silver, and a fresh new citrus. Its stunning 13-inch Liquid Retina display brings websites, photos, videos, and apps to life with high resolution and brightness, and support for 1 billion colors. Powered by A18 Pro, MacBook Neo can fly through everyday tasks, from browsing the web and streaming content, to editing photos, exploring creative hobbies, or using AI capabilities across apps. In fact, it’s up to 50 percent faster for everyday tasks like web browsing, and up to 3x faster when running on-device AI workloads like applying advanced effects to photos,2 compared to the bestselling PC with the latest shipping Intel Core Ultra 5.

Providing up to 16 hours of battery life, MacBook Neo allows users to go all day on a single charge. A 1080p FaceTime HD camera and dual mics make it easy to look and sound great, and the dual side-firing speakers with Spatial Audio deliver crisp, immersive sound. MacBook Neo also features Apple’s renowned Magic Keyboard for comfortable and precise typing, and a large Multi-Touch trackpad with support for intuitive gestures, enabling smooth and precise control. Completing the MacBook Neo experience is macOS Tahoe, with powerful built-in apps like Messages, Pages, Calendar, and Safari; seamless integration with iPhone; Apple Intelligence; as well as broad compatibility with third-party apps. And starting at just $599 and $499 for education, MacBook Neo is Apple’s most affordable laptop ever, providing an unprecedented combination of quality and value.

Jordan McMahon for New York Magazine:

For the last five years, Apple’s M-Series MacBook Air has been my default recommendation for anyone who needs a new laptop. No other computer has a better balance of portability and computing power at a digestible price (the entry-level Air starts at $1,099). It features a top-notch display, all-day battery life, and specs that effortlessly handle everything in a typical workflow, from browsers with dozens of tabs to batch photo editing.

That’s changed now that there’s the MacBook Neo, the cheapest laptop Apple has released to date. It starts at $599 for the 256 GB model and has enough power to handle day-to-day tasks with ease. It’s more expensive than many budget Windows laptops but feels and performs far better than its price tag suggests. Hitting that price point requires a few compromises, but for most people, they’re well worth it for the best budget-friendly laptop you can get…

More impressive than the Neo’s reasonable price is the fact that it runs on the same chip as the iPhone 16 Pro’s, the nearly two-year-old A18 Pro. Between that and its relatively low amount of RAM — 8 GB, which is the bare minimum I’d recommend anyone get — the specs don’t appear to facilitate a serious workload.

It didn’t take long for the Neo to prove me wrong. During a typical workday, I’m usually running Slack, my note-taking app, a dozen tabs in the Brave browser, an RSS reader, Qobuz for music, and maybe a YouTube video or two. Even at my busiest, the Neo didn’t slow down until I pushed it to some absurd limits by opening a large batch of photos in the app Darkroom while running Slack, playing a few YouTube videos in the background, and opening over 25 tabs in my browser. That’s more than most people will be doing at any given time, but it does mean that you’re more limited than you would be on an Air…

You won’t find a better laptop for this price

Despite its shortcomings, the MacBook Neo is the best laptop you can get for $600. It’s as well designed and crafted as its far more expensive siblings and more than capable of handling a typical workload of web browsing, Slack, media playback, and document editing. For many people, that will be more than enough to make up for a slightly less feature-packed and powerful laptop. After all, it still feels like a Mac in all the ways that matter.


MacDailyNews Take: Hopefully, Apple can figure out how to make enough Neos to satisfy demand!



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