

The first M1-powered notebooks and the new Mac mini launched to positive reviews. It's an exciting time for loyal Mac users. Looking beyond the first iteration of the next-generation MacBook Pro, Apple is reported to be working on cellular connectivity and Face ID for a future MacBook Pro model. Image credit: Apple, current MacBook Pro (16"). Sources are pointing toward all of this changing with an Apple silicon-based redesign in late 2021 or early 2022. However, the Intel-powered notebook includes the polarizing Touch Bar, doesn't have MagSafe and doesn't include an SD card slot. The current 16" MacBook Pro is an impressive machine. Gurman's sources also state that the new model will bring back the SD card slot. When you view the current 16" MacBook Pro model on Apple's website, there's no mention of the Touch Bar until quite far down the page, which may reflect how consumers perceive the feature. Ditching the Touch Bar is an aspect that reflects the Cupertino-based company's renewed concern for customer feedback.

Getting to the upcoming MacBook Pro, Apple intends to take user feedback into account in numerous ways. It will be interesting to see how Apple's in-house chip design process influences its product line throughout 2021 and beyond. This makes it even more interesting that Gurman's sources are currently suggesting a new Intel-powered Mac Pro refresh is on the way. In that article, Bloomberg stated that Apple intends to finish its transition from Intel to its in-house chips in 2022. Gurman and Ian King wrote about this topic in early December. This is not the first Bloomberg has written about Apple's next Apple silicon-powered computers. Image credit: Apple, current Mac Pro model. More interestingly, a smaller Apple silicon-based Mac Pro is also in the works. Sources suggest a new Mac Pro with Intel-based chips is coming at some point later this year or early next. The current Mac Pro is not large compared to the old Mac Pro chassis, but the current model is certainly larger than the cylindrical Mac Pro it replaced.
Can you put a 2018 mac pro in a 2009 mac pro body update#
To that point, Gurman writes that Apple plans its 'biggest update to the MacBook Pro since 2016, the first redesign of the iMac in nearly a decade, a new Intel-based Mac Pro, and a half-sized Mac Pro desktop with in-house chips.' Users should expect Apple silicon to be introduced to every Mac at some point. Gurman also reports that, unsurprisingly, the new MacBook Air will utilize Apple silicon. The MagSafe branding recently came back into the Apple fold with the iPhone 12 models' launch, which incorporates MagSafe for wireless charging. It's a great idea, and it's frankly surprising that Apple removed it from its notebook models. Instead of the laptop hitting the floor, the cable simply pops loose. Imagine someone trips over your power cord. MagSafe allows a charging cable to safely detach when yanked, rather than pull the entire notebook with it. Image credit: Apple, current M1-powered MacBook Air. Gurman's sources suggest the next MacBook Air will be even thinner and lighter, while also incorporating a smaller bezel around its display. The current MacBook Air is very thin, measuring just over half an inch at its thickest point. The next-gen Air will bring back Apple's MagSafe technology, which the company removed from the thin notebook during the 2018 redesign. On the MacBook Air front, sources state that a new, thinner and lighter version of the MacBook Air will be coming later this year or early next year. Further, Gurman reports that his sources say Apple is hard at work on numerous new MacBook models, all of which will include much-requested changes. According to Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, that may be what Apple does with its upcoming MacBook Pro redesign. I'm writing this article on the first MacBook Pro model to come standard with a Touch Bar, and I can honestly say I wouldn't miss it at all if it were gone.

When Apple introduced the Touch Bar into its popular MacBook Pro series, the response was mixed.
