Apple has officially launched the eagerly awaited MacBook Neo, featuring a striking 13-inch Liquid Retina display boasting a resolution of 2, 408 x 1, 506 pixels and an impressive brightness of 500 nits. It comes with uniform bezels, Touch ID, dual-firing speakers enhanced with Spatial Audio, a 1080p front-facing camera, and a vibrant aluminum chassis complemented by a matching keyboard.
Despite its appealing MSRP of $599, Apple has made several compromises to keep costs low, some of which were unavoidable.
Compromises Behind the $599 Price Tag of the MacBook Neo
MacBook Neo is new, exciting, original, and HERE! With a beautiful aluminum design, 13-inch Liquid Retina display, 16 hours of battery life, and the power of Apple silicon, you’ll fly through everyday tasks. It’ll be love at first Mac.pic.twitter.com/7xpClbGKxE
— Greg Joswiak (@gregjoz) March 4, 2026
The A18 Pro Chipset
They are still constrained on A19 Pro for iPhone 17 Pro per Tim Cook on the last earnings call. A18 Pro will be fine, especially in the current memory and silicon capacity environment limiting what’s possible for everyone https://t.co/EofDafSVPn
— Max Weinbach (@mweinbach) March 4, 2026
While Apple likely intended to incorporate its latest chip, the A19 Pro, ongoing supply challenges made this impractical. The risk of allowing a low-margin model like the MacBook Neo to interfere with the production schedule of the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max was simply too great.
RAM Limitations: 8 GB Default
The new @Apple MacBook Neo is powered by the A18 Pro, a mobile chip that is packaged using TSMC InFO-PoP. The DRAM sits on top of the SoC, it’s a single, closed packaged. That’s why the MBN comes with the same amount of 8GB DRAM as the iPhone 16 Pro. Same chip, same package.pic.twitter.com/AgytUN9vqZ
— High Yield (@highyieldYT) March 4, 2026
The A18 Pro’s architecture employs TSMC’s InFO-PoP packaging, coupled with a fixed 8 GB RAM. Upgrading the RAM could jeopardize Apple’s razor-thin profit margins on this model.
On the 8GB MacBook Neo, Apple has some of the best swap on any machine. It’s where it offloads the data from memory into flash storage and back so you don’t fill your ram. Apple’s swap on macOS and Apple silicon is best in industry because of their storage speed + software
— Max Weinbach (@mweinbach) March 4, 2026
Fortunately, the MacBook Neo’s effective daily performance is alleviated by its capability to utilize part of the SSD as virtual RAM when necessary.
Trackpad Limitations
Another small way the MacBook Neo was decontented besides slow ports: it doesn’t have a Force Touch trackpad.pic.twitter.com/r4PmA8q627
— Steve Moser (@SteveMoser) March 4, 2026
One notable exclusion is the absence of a Force Touch trackpad, limiting pressure sensitivity features and haptic feedback, which could enhance user interaction.
Battery Capacity
MacBook Neo has a 36.5Wh battery delivering 11 hours of web browsing. M5 MacBook Air 13″has a 53.8Wh battery delivering 15 hours of web browsing.pic.twitter.com/46SnXIWA2P
— AppleLeaker (@LeakerApple) March 4, 2026
With a 36.5Wh battery capacity, the MacBook Neo offers an average of 11 hours of web browsing, a noticeable reduction compared to the 15 hours provided by the latest M5 MacBook Air.
Connectivity Restrictions
Another drawback involves connectivity, as the MacBook Neo includes only two USB-C ports. One is limited to USB 3.0 speeds (10Gb/s or 1, 250MB/s), while the other is restricted to USB-2.0 speeds (480Mb/s or 60MB/s), and it does not support Thunderbolt technologies.
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