Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
10 years later, the 12-inch MacBook remains undefeated in design
#1
10 years later, the 12-inch MacBook remains undefeated in design

Apple Watch isn’t the only product turning 10 this month. A decade ago, Apple released the 12-inch Retina MacBook, the company’s most futuristic and misunderstood machine.

At $1299, the 12-inch MacBook carried a premium over the more capable MacBook Air.

In 2015, this MacBook was Apple’s first USB-C product. It featured a single port for data and charging on the left, and a headphone jack on the right. The cheaper MacBook Air had two USB 3 ports, Thunderbolt, MagSafe, an SD Card slot, and a headphone jack.

The I/O choice is still viewed as radical today, but it’s really no different than an iPad. Apple sold two adapters: one to convert USB-C to USB-A, and another to turn the single USB-C port into HDMI, USB-A for data, and USB-C for charging.




Compared to the MacBook Air, the 12-inch MacBook had Retina display resolution, twice the base storage from 128GB to 256GB and double the base RAM from 4GB to 8GB, and in a thinner and lighter design with no fan.

The MacBook Air outsold the 12-inch MacBook, but the two machines never competed with the same set of specs and price. Base model MacBook Air configurations probably outsell upgraded models too.

In terms of processing power and ports, the MacBook lost to the MacBook Air, but that wasn’t the point. It was a full-blown Mac that rivaled the iPad in portability. A decade later, the iPad with a keyboard and trackpad case is still bulkier and clunkier than the 12-inch MacBook.

Compute performance didn’t matter for light workloads, but battery life did. I recall averaging under five straight hours of continuous usage between charges. Apple silicon solves for both performance and battery life today.




But the real fatal flaw of the 12-inch MacBook came down to the keyboard. The typing experience was as radically different as the I/O choice, but it was still a physical keyboard that worked — until it didn’t work, of course.

The butterfly keyboard switch mechanism replaced Apple’s traditional scissor switch design. Years of revisions, repairs, and remarkably unreliable keyboards on every Apple laptop followed.

Today Apple manages to ship scissor switch keyboards in super thin Magic Keyboard iPad cases that continue to work even when exposed to tiny dust particles. Like battery life and performance with Apple silicon, the keyboard situation is a solved problem.


Yet there’s nothing remotely like the 12-inch MacBook today. Apple discontinued it after a few processor revisions in 2019. Maybe some of the magic of its ultra thin design would be lost if the wedge shape was replaced with a uniform slab of aluminum like the MacBook Air.

Despite its still-futuristic design, the 12-inch MacBook that shipped between 2015 and 2019 would be awfully painful to use today. So is most hardware from the previous decade. But, wow, was it an awesome design that remains unbeatable a decade later.


I have the 2015 1.2GHz MacBook, a woppin' 8G RAM and 256G storage (what was I thinking!).

It's a true gem, in Gold (not Rose Gold).

The processor was a little anemic, including in the subsequent MBs, but it was more than good enough for me.

Eventually, the 12" screen was just too small, so a 13" M1 MBA was next up.

It's screen was still to small, so now I'm at a 15" M1 MBA.

I wish Apple had keep the MB's form factor.

The MB gets fired up once in awhile, Just for kicks.

If it came back in M1-3 guise, I'd get one, even if it just had a 12" display.





https://9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/s...015-1.jpeg
Reply
#2
Got Mom a Rose Gold 2016 Core-m5 MacBook with 8GB and 500 GB SSD on closeout from Best Buy for a good price. The processor is fine for everyday tasks but bogs down a bit on some things. I agree with an Apple M4 CPU these would be great as I happen to like a very small, light device with desktop OS capabilities, a good screen, and a balanced design like a laptop with no stupid kickstand needed to compensate for all the weight standing up in the air, instead of lying stably flat on the ground. Sorry not sorry, this is a design fail.

But it'll never happen as the iPad "fills this niche". Of course it does not in any way as they're different form factors and OSes but the Mothership Has Spoken.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)