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What came true and what didn’t for Apple in 2018

Posted December 19, 2018 | Mac


Here we are, another 525,600 minutes gone by, and it’s time for an annual look into the crystal ball to try and catch a glimpse of the things I’d like to see from Apple in 2018. But before we unpack a nice, fresh crystal ball, it’s time to take this grimy old crystal ball and smash it into a million pieces.

Or to put it another way, this is my annual opportunity to review my hopes and dreams for the Mac and the iPhone and iPad in 2017 and see which ones came true in 2018—and which ones were crushed flat by the steamroller of fate.

The year in Mac

How soon we forget. 2016 was the Mac’s annus horribilis, with no desktop Macs released the entire year and a new line of MacBook Pros released to a tepid response. 2017 was better—so much better that I might have gotten a little too enthusiastic with my predictions for 2018.

Take the Mac Pro. In 2017 Apple promised that one was coming, and as I pointed out in this space last year, at no point did the company promise to release that Mac Pro in 2018. Still, ever the optimist, I put it at the top of my wish list. In the intervening 12 months we’ve learned that the Mac Pro will arrive in 2019 and that it will be modular. Can you believe Apple pre-announced the Mac Pro by a couple of years? Yeah, neither can I.

Apple

2017 MacBook

Also crushing my spirit in 2018: An utter lack of a generational update to the 12-inch MacBook. Apple upgraded the processors in the MacBook this year for a third time, but in the end it’s still the same one-port device it was when it was introduced. However, my desires on this front were satisfied by the release of the new MacBook Air, which checks off the items on my MacBook wish list, namely the addition of a second port and Thunderbolt 3 support.

I was also deeply satisfied by Apple’s embrace of the Mac mini in 2018. I got hung up on its size, wishing that it would shrink down with a new design that didn’t have to take optical drives or spinning hard drives into account. Turns out I wasn’t wrong about that, but Apple chose to keep the aluminum case the same and instead redesign the device’s cooling system so that it could handle much more powerful processors. As much as I like the idea of a Mac mini that could fit in my jacket pocket, the potential power of the high-end Mac mini models is a lot more practical.

2018 macbook pro 13Apple

2018 MacBook Pro

On the MacBook Pro side, I had hoped for a MacBook Pro update, to show that Apple’s committed to updating these systems on a roughly annual basis, and we got one. However, all the laptops Apple released this year rely on the same controversial “butterfly” keyboard design, slightly modified. And the Touch Bar still exists—without a whole lot of evidence that Apple is truly committed to the concept for the long term. It’s still not very customizable outside of a few apps, unless you install a utility like BetterTouchTool—and realize that maybe there’s a lot of potential here if Apple would push in that direction. Instead, the Touch Bar merely abides.

And finally, I struck out in my hopes that new Macs would add support for Face ID. The MacBook Air getting Touch ID is great, but for iMacs (and pro Macs connected to Apple’s forthcoming external displays), Face ID is the better approach for biometric authentication. I guess I’m kicking this particular can down the road into my hopes for 2019.



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