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Apple execs talk biggest flops, MacBook Neo, more in new interview

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Why This Matters

This interview highlights Apple's commitment to quality and innovation with products like the MacBook Neo, emphasizing its focus on delivering high-value devices that stand out in a competitive market. It also sheds light on Apple's future vision of spatial computing and the company's acknowledgment of past missteps, reinforcing its dedication to continuous improvement and technological advancement.

Key Takeaways

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We’re one month removed from the launch of MacBook Neo, and all indications are that it’s been a hit for Apple.

In a new interview with Tom’s Guide published today, Apple executives John Ternus and Greg Joswiak talked more about MacBook Neo, Apple’s biggest “flops,” and more.

Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering, explained what he thinks really sets MacBook Neo apart from other products in its price class:

“The products in this space that (the Neo) is competing against, they’re plastic. You can literally flex them. They’re so cheap. Because what have they done? They just tried to cut a nickel, cut a quarter, cut a dollar. Everything to try to make it cheaper. Which is very different from making it a lower price and a high value, which was the approach we’re taking.”

He continued:

“We never wanna ship junk, right? We wanna ship great products that have that Apple experience, have that Apple quality. And to do that with the Neo required something completely new from the ground up, right? Leveraging both the technologies we’ve been developing, like Apple Silicon, but also kind of the expertise that we’ve developed over many, many years of building Macs and building phones and building iPads and all of these things.”

Here’s Joz on the idea of Apple glasses and the “inevitability” of this product category:

“There’s some inevitability to combining the digital and physical world. That’s what spatial computing was all about. I can’t give you a timeline for when spatial becomes anything else, but you know it’s an inevitability. Of digital and physical worlds coming together.”

In line with Apple’s recent 50th anniversary, Joswiak and Ternus were asked about what they view as Apple’s biggest “flops” over the years.

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