Key moments
• M1 Chip starts at 7min 32secs
• macOS Big Sur starts at 16mins 12secs
• MacBook Air starts at 25mins 30secs
• Mac mini starts at 31mins 55secs
• MacBook Pro starts at 37mins 26secs
Local pricing
• MacBook Air starts from $1749
• 13-inch MacBook Pro: starts from $2299
• Mac mini: starts from $1199
The new Mac lineup unveiled this morning NZT will be in stores five months after Apple announced it would abandon its longtime partner Intel in favor of using its own processors for Mac computers.
Apple said its new Mac chips will offer faster processing speeds, sleeker designs and longer running times on a single battery charge.
For instance, some Macs have eliminated a cooling fan inside the machines, helping slim down their design, and battery life has been boosted up to 18 hours.
The transition to the new in-house chips could also create stumbling blocks for Apple and other software makers aiming to adapt existing Mac software so it will also run smoothly on the new models.
Initially, Apple will only be putting its chips in smaller computers — a new 13-inch MacBook Air (from $1749) and 13-inch MacBook Pro (from $2299), as well as the Mac Mini desktop (from $1199 - all prices $NZD and incl GST).
The company expects it will take another two years before all its Macs are running on the in-house chips.
All three new computers are supposed to be available in stores next week..
The new Macs are debuting amid high demand for laptop computers as consumers, companies, schools and government agencies adjust to a work-at-home shift triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic. Even if a vaccine eases the threat posed by the novel coronavirus, people still are expected to be working more frequently from home than they previously did..
Apple's Mac sales surged 17% during the first nine months of this year compared to 2019. The company's iPhone revenue fell 9% over the same span as people continued to hold on to their older models for longer periods or bought devices powered by Google's Android software instead.
Apple stills get four times more revenue from iPhones than it does from Macs Sales of Macs also lag far behind those of PCs made by Lenovo, HP and Dell that run Microsoft's Windows software and primarily use chips made by Intel and AMD.