70 comments

  • Someone1234 3 hours ago

    I just want to link this teardown; it is a suitable companion to this article:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5k7Lv7f-5CQ

    On a rational level it isn't surprising that the "compute" part is so small, given its origins, but for some reason it still caught me by surprised seeing something barely larger than a Raspberry Pi.

    But, yeah, this thing is crazy modular. I particularly want to call out how trivial it is to replace the ports, given how common of a failure point they are. With the keyboard/monitor being more involved, but absolutely still approachable.

    I believe he finds just a single piece of light adhesive keeping a cable in place, everything else (inc. the battery) is screws only.

    • ggreer 3 hours ago

      It looks like it's still bigger than the logic board on the 12" MacBook from 2015.[1]

      I really wish Apple would resurrect that form factor, as every other MacBook since has seemed bulky in comparison. Thanks to OpenCore Legacy Patcher[2], I still haven't gotten a newer mac. With a modern M series chip, it wouldn't have such rough tradeoffs in battery life and performance. I'd definitely buy it.

      1. See step 11 on https://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Retina+MacBook+2015+Teardown...

      2. https://github.com/dortania/OpenCore-Legacy-Patcher

      • simonh 2 hours ago

        The Neo actually has similar dimensions to the 12” overall, though not as tapered. That’s possible because it has a much slimmer bezel. The Neo is about a third heavier though.

        • retired 17 minutes ago

          If you account for the taper, the Neo has about 50% more volume than the 12”

          I sometimes travel with backpack only (cheap European airlines) and that is a big difference.

      • 46493168 2 hours ago

        What version of MacOS are you running on yours? I have a 2017, 16GB, 1.7ghz and it's DOG slow on Ventura, even with reduce motion and reduce transparency. I have considered downgrading just to see if there's improvement.

        • ggreer 2 hours ago

          I'm on Sequoia (v15.7.4). I have the original 2015 model (1.1Ghz Core M-5Y31, 8GB of RAM). It's a little slow, but fine for what I use it for (web browser, syncing music/photos to/from my phone, simple coding tasks). My main gripe is the battery only has 60% of its original capacity. Apple won't replace the battery, and doing it yourself is pretty tricky. At some point it'll break or no longer get security updates, and then I'll probably get a MacBook Air.

          If you're using OpenCore Patcher, it's important to install the root patches to enable graphics acceleration. Otherwise it'll be ridiculously slow.

      • Eric_WVGG an hour ago

        I just helped a friend replace her eleven year old 11" Macbook Air with a new M4 Air.

        her review: “this thing is HUGE :( :P ”

        • Jtsummers 27 minutes ago

          By dimensions, assuming the 2015 ("eleven year old") version, the 13" M4 MBA is 0.17" wider, 0.9" deeper, and 0.32 lbs heavier. Where it's harder to compare is thickness. The M4 is 0.44" thick where the Intel one was tapered (0.11"-0.68").

          Kind of hard to see that as "HUGE" in comparison. Bigger? Yes, but not really huge.

    • jeffbee 2 hours ago

      It seems like a normal-sized motherboard? For comparison here is the ifixit teardown of a PixelBook Go (happens to be the laptop I am using right now). https://guide-images.cdn.ifixit.com/igi/LT6YEIeE1Svh4WCk.hug...

  • prmoustache 36 minutes ago

    Apple care has always seemed like an extortion scheme to me yet Apple owners seemed to feel it was a good deal, not realizing that you shouldn't even have to replace stuff before the 7 to 10 years mark appart maybe for the battery.

    Judging by the sorry state of most second hand Macbook it really feel that they have made their hardware disposable (despite using relatively premium hardware like aluminum compared to plastic stuff on some brands) to force people to subscribe to it. Not that they are the only one to make shitty unreliable stuff (looking at you Asus, Acer and most brand's "family" lines).

    • hbn 6 minutes ago

      Apple stuff lasts me longer than any other computers I've purchased in my life. The Mac had a bit of a dark age in the late 2010s but barring that, I think it's incorrect to say Apple products are unreliable.

      I bought a late-2013 13" MacBook Pro when I started university and I used that thing up until the end of 2021 when I got a 14" M1 Pro MBP. And it wasn't even because it was performing that terribly, I just wanted the new Apple silicon machine. Now it's ~4.5 years later and that machine runs like it did on day 1 and I have no desire to upgrade anytime soon.

    • juancn 11 minutes ago

      Apple care is about user fuckups, not Apple's.

      Some people use computers with utter disregard for their integrity.

      Macs, specially Apple silicon ones are extremely reliable.

    • reaperducer 12 minutes ago

      Apple care has always seemed like an extortion scheme to me yet Apple owners seemed to feel it was a good deal, not realizing that you shouldn't even have to replace stuff before the 7 to 10 years mark appart maybe for the battery.

      It's not about "having to" replace parts. It's for just-in-case. It's essentially insurance.

      The battery in my M1 MacBook Pro went bad recently. But I have AppleCare, so I was able to walk into an Apple Store and hand it to someone, and the next day I picked it up all repaired. (New keyboard, too, since the keyboard and battery are considered one part.)

        Total cost without AppleCare: $250 + tax.
        Total cost with AppleCare: $0.
        Total I've spent on AppleCare: $150.
      
      If I had some machine from Dell or Acer or even Microsoft, what would I do? Ship it back to China for six months? There's no store I can walk into to get it fixed the next day.

      The value in AppleCare is the same value you have in fire insurance. Maybe you want to save a few bucks and take your chances that everything you own won't burn to ashes and you have to start over with nothing. I'm not in college anymore.

    • wilg 29 minutes ago

      pretty sure apple tops reliability metrics reliably, so this is probably more about your feelings than reality

      • MBCook 10 minutes ago

        Just like when they did this on the iPhones I suspect this is all self-serving.

        It’s about making it easier and faster for Apple to fix the machines.

        It benefits us all. But I suspect the cost of their super tight integration into large non-replaceable components with lots of glue started to show up in repair work costs.

  • drooopy 3 hours ago

    This is probably going to be my new laptop next year if it gets the A19 Pro with 12 GB of RAM.

    • qingcharles an hour ago

      Literally the only thing wrong with these is the RAM is so borderline in 2026. 12GB would have been right on the money for an upgrade options.

    • etchalon 3 hours ago

      I'd bet these things are going to be on a two-year upgrade cycle, instead of yearly. Will be super happy to be proven wrong.

      • ErneX 2 hours ago

        They released the 17e a year after 16e so there’s hope.

        • cocoto an hour ago

          The new naming of iPhones makes sense for a yearly update, not so much for the Neo.

    • intrasight 2 hours ago

      This one will be my new laptop this year, and I'll then see what happens next year.

  • cwoolfe 2 hours ago

    Repairability and cost are key for the education market. Apple sold iPads into this space for awhile but there's been pushback and talk of going to chromebooks. Seems like they are positioning Neo for this segment as well.

    • intrasight 2 hours ago

      I am WAY out of school and I still care about repairability and cost ;)

    • reaperducer 7 minutes ago

      there's been pushback and talk of going to chromebooks

      There's been talk of the education market going to Chromebooks?

      Did we just fall into a wormhole to 2014?

  • needSomeCoffee 3 hours ago

    Wow. Beautiful engineering. Please, please Apple use this ethos for all future major laptop re-designs e.g. MBA & MBP.

    • MBCook 9 minutes ago

      When they did this to the low end iPhones, it “trickled up” to better models later.

      I suspect they’ll do that on laptops too. I hope they do.

  • 0xDEFACED 4 hours ago

    i sure hope so if apple intends to sell these things to school divisions. the levels of abuse i witnessed students dishing out to their chromebooks when i was a teacher was shocking to say the least

  • vablings an hour ago

    Would I be a little crazy to buy one of these and make an SBC adaptor board. Also getting IOS to run on these devices might not be astronomically difficult considering we have seen quite a few M series iPad running MacOS

    • alex7o an hour ago

      This is the same chip as the iphone, the only thing that need to be done is make something like m1n1 work with iOS and circumvent all the security measures

  • ajay-b 2 hours ago

    This is really good to read. I hung on to my 2012 MBP for the replaceable battery, hard drive, and memory far longer than I wanted to. It's great having a thinner machine, but repairability - really extending its longevity - will always be a huge selling point for me. I have bitterly disliked the idea of "disposable technology."

  • wvenable an hour ago

    The teardown is impressive. The next question is whether anyone other than Apple will be able to get parts.

  • euroderf 2 hours ago

    Is the Neo in a price range where it could be attached to a robot chassis as its processsor and UI ? Connectivity, video, audio, status display, even a Max Headroom. USB-C plug-n-go.

  • edhelas 2 hours ago

    So basically they are trying to reach what Lenovo and others are doing for years.

    Nice Apple. That's good :)

  • tsunamifury 19 minutes ago

    this is a re-arranged iPhone inside a larger case with a bigger battery no?

  • anhner 38 minutes ago

    Thanks, EU! A lot more gadgets will come out this year with improved repairability because of an EU requirement starting next year: https://repair.eu/news/making-batteries-removable-and-replac...

  • oybng 3 hours ago

    Just 20 steps and 18 screws to replace a battery, easy!

    • tpmoney 2 hours ago

      The guy in the linked video up thread tore the whole computer down in 6 minutes. I'm pretty sure most people can manage to find 12 minutes out of their life every 5 years to replace the battery if they want. But if that is too arduous, you can pay Apple to do it for you for a mere $149, with the battery included in that price. Given that a comparable battery from iFixit will cost you $80-$100, that's just ~$50 to have someone save you the hassle of having to remove 18 screws from your laptop every 5 years.

      • cromka an hour ago

        Bingo. People will go lengths to find a reason to complain about things they would otherwise never be actually bothered by in their lives.

    • SoKamil 2 hours ago

      But no adhesive under the battery. That’s huge.

    • wvenable an hour ago

      Probably could get the battery directly without all the other disassembly steps...

      • kotaKat 10 minutes ago

        Apple’s official illustrated guide shows you only need to pop the 8 case screws, 2 screws holding down the battery connector, then route the cables away and remove the 18 battery screws.

        Not bad, not terrible?

        https://support.apple.com/en-us/126157

    • charcircuit 2 hours ago

      The MacBook Neo has a rechargeable battery. By the time the battery goes bad from too many charge cycles people will want to upgrade to a newer one.

      • alwillis an hour ago

        The Neo’s battery is rated for 1,000 charge cycles, same as the MBP.

        • SirMaster 14 minutes ago

          Right, but his point is the battery last like 2-3x longer than most other similar laptops, so the charge cycles wear out 2-3x slower.

    • Clamchop 2 hours ago

      I mean, yes, it is easy. No adhesive and just a couple of clips on the case. You could replace the battery in 20 minutes with little anxiety that you're going to cause damage getting to it.

    • crooked-v 2 hours ago

      As it turns out, once battery life hits a certain baseline, people prefer devices where the battery is harder to replace but larger over devices where the battery is hot-swappable but smaller.

    • throw737458t8t8 2 hours ago

      And xray, microscope and soldering station to replace ssd.

  • newsclues 3 hours ago

    I'm not sure if it's possible, but an aftermarket battery with closer to the MB Airs KW/h specs would be a very interesting modification.

    The repairability seems to be interesting especially if it leads to framework style upgradability (logic boards, not the ports).

    • pfortuny 2 hours ago

      FYI: KWh (it is a product).

      • hyperhello an hour ago

        Yeah, that would be an interesting modification, wouldn’t it?

    • jajuuka 2 hours ago

      I'd bet dollars to donuts that it either treats any battery connection like the stock battery or it fails over to a run like crap mode like third party batteries in their phones.

  • entropicdrifter 4 hours ago

    I feel like "most repairable macbook" is a bit like saying "most edible dirt". While it's good that there's progress, it's pretty telling that they need to only compare it within the same company's products.

    • Someone1234 3 hours ago

      I'd suggest you watch a teardown video. The Neo is absurdly repairable compared to just about anything in its category. It is extremely modular, and uses screws.

      • ProllyInfamous 2 hours ago

        Repairability examples:

        modular USB ports; battery sans glue; trackpad

        Twenty years ago, I worked part-time in a laptop repair facility for a large educational institution; this computer would have been a godsend (e.g. the first MacBooks had hundreds of screws, plastic everywhere).

        • MBCook 4 minutes ago

          Keyboard that doesn’t require half the computer to be thrown away to replace it!

          That probably bit them HARD during the butterfly days.

      • edhelas 2 hours ago

        Wow screws. Crazy. So the industry standard for many years. But I guess it's Different™ this time.

    • lallysingh 2 hours ago

      Yeah, I mean I'm looking at frameworks/thinkpads on one side and chromebooks on the other. Not charging up to $440 (!) for a keyboard isn't a great act of engineering or generosity. This has been ridiculous for a very, very long time. Being less ridiculous isn't worth celebrating. The goal markers have moved so damned much.

      Compare to a thinkpad keyboard FRU. They have fluid drains and still cost $99 for a top-end laptop. My daughter's chromebook keyboard replacement at school was $16.

      • tpmoney an hour ago

        > This has been ridiculous for a very, very long time. Being less ridiculous isn't worth celebrating.

        So what I'm hearing is you don't want Apple to make their computers more repairable? Think of this like training a dog. My dog can open the cabinet in the kitchen on their own, pull out a specific requested item, close the door again and bring the item to me from anywhere in my house. Opening a door is just tugging on something, bringing something to me is just fetch, closing a door is just pushing with its nose. If I went into the training of this with the attitude of "oh wow, you pulled the door open" or "oh wow, you fetched the thing" and didn't reward my dog for doing those simple pieces because "any good dog can tug on a rope or fetch a ball", then my dog would never have gotten to the point of doing all of those things in a repeatable complex sequence that serves a useful purpose. Instead every part of it that my dog got right, they got all sorts of praise and rewards. And so once I started asking more, my dog eagerly tried to do those things because they knew if they did what I wanted, they could get the things they wanted.

        Train your companies the same way. Give them the positive PR and praise they're looking for when they do the things you want them to do. You'll get them to do what you want a lot faster if they have an actual incentive to do it.

    • 0_____0 3 hours ago

      I've replaced a battery, screen, hinges on a macbook (2015). Did they get considerably worse at repairability after that? Because while there were a fair number of steps, it's not like they required exotic techniques to pull off.

  • butILoveLife 25 minutes ago

    Anyone notice how criticism of Apple is 'flagged'?

    HN is totally bought. You are lucky if you see this.