Most people are upgrading once every several years, so a few generations worth of relatively small iterations adds up.It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
I'm not one of them for sure. My M1 Pro still feels as snappy as the day I got it when I moved from a Core i5. I'm approaching 5 years, and I still feel like it'll last me 5 more. Apple Silicon is crazy good compared to what I had before. I can only imagine what an M4 Pro will be like when work sends me the 5-year replacement.Most people are upgrading once every several years, so a few generations worth of relatively small iterations adds up.
I check the secondhand market for these, it's absurd how well they retain value past some necessary depreciation.It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
There's probably a few different scenarios.It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
I'm betting most of these are upgrades. A new user would need to be dropping 1750CAD (75monthly) for a promax 256gb variant or close to 3000CAD for the 2tb version.. holy shit that's expensive. Not including apple care. For the more price concious, the 17 is only 1150CAD or 50CAD a month. These prices are right from Apple Canada.If you trade in whenever a new device comes out the price isn't that bad. It's also very easy to migrate to a new Apple device so if you like Apple and have the money to upgrade it's worth it.
It would be interesting to see how many devices are new users compared to trade-ups.
What does Apple do with devices people trade in?If you trade in whenever a new device comes out the price isn't that bad. It's also very easy to migrate to a new Apple device so if you like Apple and have the money to upgrade it's worth it.
It would be interesting to see how many devices are new users compared to trade-ups.
Apple supports those tablets for a long time. Some of the models get 6,7, even 8 years of support. And if you're using it casually for games and browsing you likely aren't noticing anything missing. Especially if you had one of the faster Pro models.It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
I mean it does speak to the supply chain issues of having it all in China.Is this guy Russian? If so, this is not the first time we see new products coming out first in Russia. Guess those sanctions are working wonders…….
Same - we have an original iPad Pro 9.7" that's still doing its thing just fine. Thus far, my entire iPad purchase history is: iPad 2 -> iPad Pro 9.7. I also have an iPad mini 6 that was given to me as a bonus, but if I didn't I would have >15 years of iPad use from 2 devices. Hard to beat that sort of value.I still have a first gen 2018 iPad Pro 11 and with iPadOS 26 it's fully usable. Most of the "pro" apps that Apple envisions are creative apps so my use cases are still relegated to Macs. But now that iPadOS 26 gives that iPad a full windowing system, I'll have to try it out again when hooked up to a monitor for productivity type stuff which I also preferred to do on a Mac.
I honestly can't think of anything I'd need an M5 iPad Pro for yet. I also have an M1 iPad Pro that I got for cheap from Woot and it's still more than enough.
Also iPads get dropped and break and replacing the screen is not cheap. Kids lose them etc. It's not like a laptop, even if the hardware is still good, there's all kinds of weird attrition in that market that doesn't happen with other devices reallyThere's probably a few different scenarios.
There's the folks that must have leading edge and they upgrade right away.
And there's folks like me that have a pretty old iPad and will probably upgrade to this.
And maybe... there's a few that with the new iPadOS 26 stuff are choosing this over a new laptop?
Refurb and resale. They sell a lot of them through Amazon.What does Apple do with devices people trade in?
For me it was the speakers and display.I still don't understand the use case for the iPad pro - it has the CPU of a laptop and priced like a laptop, but runs IOS and is less versatile than a laptop.
What would prompt someone to need an iPad pro instead of, say, an iPad Air which also has a slower, but still laptop class CPU but is half the price?
So, the iPad Pro sells in quite large numbers - generally as much or more than any base M series Mac. A lot of Apple's product cadence is tied to fab availability at TSMC as the iPhone and A series get priority there. The base M series processors go into a range of different products - the high volume iPad Pro, MBA, iMac, and Mac Mini. So Apple can build up some M5 inventory from an early high volume run and then fine tune that later (which is why the Air comes at the end of the cadence). The M5 is also binned for these products.Still seems weird that they debut the new chips in an iPad.
May we note that in single thread performance, the AMD 9950X3D has a Geekbench single core score of about 3400 and the M5 iPad Pro is about 4150. That's a better than 20% performance benefit of an iPad over the top of the line gaming CPU.So Apple of Apple, to give you the basics and boring refreshes.
There's no need to try and reinvent the wheel every 12-18 months, but you the device manufacturer also don't want people holding off purchasing because they know the SoC/SKU is stale. Obviously if you the customer need something now you buy what's available, but people who are in the "would be nice to have" camp and/or like to keep their devices for as long as possible, would prefer to purchase a relatively fresh device they know will be supported for a long time.So Apple of Apple, to give you the basics and boring refreshes.
My Macbook Pro is now going strong into it's 14th year! Last year's M4 Pro was the first time i even considered to upgrade (IMHO all those models in between were trash). But for now i'm waiting for more RAM per $.Most people are upgrading once every several years, so a few generations worth of relatively small iterations adds up.
Binning and teething issues affecting yields for new SoCs and/or a new manufacturing process I suspect. Starting with a relatively low volume product can help deal with yield issues. Starting with a product that has a greater share of the SKUs featuring a non fully-enabled SoC helps find places to put chips that would have gone in a Mac, but had defects, which of course typically is more common at start of manufacturing. Though based off the article, perhaps the percentage of non-fully enabled is lower this time around.Still seems weird that they debut the new chips in an iPad.
They become refurbished devices. And then depending on age, they are sold as refurbished, or if you bought a device and returned it because you changed your mind, and I need a warranty repair after nine months, Apple could give me your device instead of trying to repair mine. And then they keep my old device and it gets returned to the factory with thousand others, gets repaired and becomes refurbished again.What does Apple do with devices people trade in?
Out of curiosity are you using OpenCore Legacy Patcher, and if so what macOS version are you running? Or are you just living dangerously on macOS 10.13-10.15? The 17" 2011 MBP, was one of my favorite laptops ever, but the 16" M1 Max finally won me over.My Macbook Pro is now going strong into it's 14th year! Last year's M4 Pro was the first time i even considered to upgrade (IMHO all those models in between were trash). But for now i'm waiting for more RAM per $.
Some people buy a device and use it until it falls apart. Many are still on their first Mx device.It's always amazing to me how many of these Apple still moves each year considering market saturation and how unimpactful spec updates are these days.
That 120hz OLED is tempting. 60hz feels bad to me on anything interactive. I've been at 90hz+ on all devices since the Pixel 6, and I think 120hz is my slowest now. I'm just hoping they bring a similar screen to the Air this refresh, like they did with the iPhone 17 this year.I still don't understand the use case for the iPad pro - it has the CPU of a laptop and priced like a laptop, but runs IOS and is less versatile than a laptop.
What would prompt someone to need an iPad pro instead of, say, an iPad Air which also has a slower, but still laptop class CPU but is half the price?
Yup, I have the 2020, 4th gen, iPad Air. I'm planning to eventually upgrade to a pro (it was my first iPad, I wanted to try out having one relatively cheaply first), but I suspect I can get another couple years out of the air first.Apple supports those tablets for a long time. Some of the models get 6,7, even 8 years of support. And if you're using it casually for games and browsing you likely aren't noticing anything missing. Especially if you had one of the faster Pro models.
The iPad usually gets a binned version of the chip, and iPad Pros sell less compared to MacBooks. I assume it makes sense for them to introduce the chip on the iPad while yields are low.Still seems weird that they debut the new chips in an iPad.
Exactly. The latest iPhone every year cost me a couple hundred. Well worth it.If you trade in whenever a new device comes out the price isn't that bad. It's also very easy to migrate to a new Apple device so if you like Apple and have the money to upgrade it's worth it.
It would be interesting to see how many devices are new users compared to trade-ups.