7 comments

  • bottlepalm 1 hour ago
    The Neo as well, I just need a Mac to test with and finding one is ridiculous. Hackintoshes are hell to setup and run like crap. I tried https://www.macincloud.com/ and that was a waste of time. Someone take my money.
    • montebicyclelo 1 hour ago
      Ever considered second hand slightly older gens? Even M1 is still great for many use cases. E.g. often corps are selling them on Ebay, in pretty good condition.
      • morphle 1 hour ago
        Indeed, ton's of refurbished for $250-$300
        • bottlepalm 1 hour ago
          Yea it does look like 5 year old M1's are going for $300 on eBay, but man that's painful a 5 year old machine for that much when you could get a new Neo or Mini for $600, if only you could buy them. I probably should just get the M1, test and sell it back on eBay. Thanks.
          • deaux 29 minutes ago
            If you're going to do any kind of work on it I'd choose a 5-year old 16 GB memory M1 over a Neo every single time. 8 GB is what's painful. The CPU difference is very small anyway.
          • MikeNotThePope 12 minutes ago
            If a $300 Mac can do the job, a $600 Mac is overkill.
          • brailsafe 50 minutes ago
            If you literally just need to borrow one, I'd just buy an Air from Apple directly and then return it within the 14 day window. I'll sometimes do this if I need an extended repair on my personal one, or there's a new mac I want to try.
            • valleyer 35 minutes ago
              This is unethical.
              • nirava 15 minutes ago
                If the return policy explicitly allows "change of mind", I'd say it's in the gray area. Though ofc it isn't sustainable if everyone starts doing this. I assume there's a ((returns:buys)/payment identity) metric to ban the largest offenders.

                Also, there should be some universally accepted way to have access to your data and a secure personal computer in the duration your device is getting repaired.

          • yreg 1 hour ago
            Neo isn't much better than M1.
    • scboffspring 1 hour ago
      Not sure what happened to you with macincloud, but I used scaleway hosted Mac mini M1 a couple years ago for a self hosted CI server, and it was working very nicely.
      • bottlepalm 1 hour ago
        They don't really advertise that you can install nothing on the machine. It's super restricted.
        • ZiiS 1 hour ago
          I think you can at $50/month
    • hurricanepootis 1 hour ago
      I remember 4 years ago I was able to setup MacOS in a virtual machine. Maybe you can setup an Intel copy of MacOS on a qemu/kvm virtual machine?
      • bottlepalm 1 hour ago
        I tried this, https://oneclick-macos-simple-kvm.notaperson535.is-a.dev/, it wasn't bad for 'one click install' and got the VM running, it was just unusably slow and burning up my machine. Seems like I need graphics acceleration in the VM which doesn't work on my Ryzen GPU - QEMU running on Windows, and I don't want to deal with dual booting. Literally would rather buy a Mac (if I could).
    • morphle 1 hour ago
      If you send me an email I might have a machine or MacOS VM on that machine you can use.
      • bottlepalm 1 hour ago
        Thanks for the offer, think I'm gonna go the eBay route.
    • dyauspitr 38 minutes ago
      I don’t even think you can do hackintoshes anymore post Apple silicon right? I remember having one about 10 years ago and it was absolutely fantastic and ran really well. Wish we could do that now so I wouldn’t have to develop apps on my M3 MacBook Air, which constantly runs out of memory and is a huge pain.
  • wiradikusuma 1 hour ago
    I guess the sudden demand is due to OpenClaw? But most people will still use cloud LLMs, right? Anything particular with the Mac Mini that non-Mac lack?
    • zarzavat 30 minutes ago
      Not just OpenClaw. The Mac mini is just stupidly good value for a desktop computer, and the RAM prices have only enhanced its appeal.

      Apple doesn't make much of a fuss about it but their chip performance is laughably ahead of the other chipmakers.

      The Mac Mini M4 gets a score of 3788 in Geekbench[0]. The top of the PC processor chart is 3395[1]. It's not even Apple's latest chip!

      PC processors can only keep up by adding more cores, but real world performance in many workloads is enhanced by having a smaller number of higher performance cores.

      [0]: https://browser.geekbench.com/mac-benchmarks

      [1]: https://browser.geekbench.com/processor-benchmarks

      • ffsm8 1 minute ago
        If you remove the Mac filter, its performance is not even in the top ten

        Which is obvious if you spent more then half a microsecond thinking about it, because apple silicone barely draws any power - it's performance is fantastic in it's niche, which is squarely within what a home user cares about - but it's not leading on benchmark performance, because that's not what apple designed it for

    • ashdksnndck 1 hour ago
      Mac mini has first-class access to iCloud, photos, iMessage etc. So if you are deep in the Apple ecosystem you might prefer it for that reason. I have a windows gaming desktop that I could use as a server for openclaw/cowork but I realized I simply don’t trust that system enough to give it access to all the personal stuff I’m giving to the AI. I trust Anthropic and Apple. I don’t trust whatever junk is running on my gaming desktop.

      If you want to run local models, another advantage is Apple’s unified memory architecture. The biggest Mac mini has 64gb ram and Mac Studio has up to 512gb. Compare this little box to what monster Nvidia gpu system you would have to buy to get the same memory there. That doesn’t account for the shortage of basic $600 Mac minis though.

    • operatingthetan 1 hour ago
      An M4 mini is overkill just to run OpenClaw. I'm running it on a Pentium J5005 and it's running 20 other services in Docker. I think the main thing was many wanted it to be able to access iMessage. I think people dream of also using the mac to run the LLM but the 16gb ones don't have enough ram.
      • hparadiz 1 hour ago
        The shortage is for the 512, 256, and 128 models.
        • reverius42 1 hour ago
          Those are the ones that can run the LLMs. Not a coincidence.
      • amelius 1 hour ago
        People are running openclown on microcontrollers.
    • hparadiz 1 hour ago
      You can look up benchmarks. It's different depending on the model of Mac Mini and Model of LLM.

      The take away is that some of the Apple hardware hits a sweet spot for performance and price which may change in the future but for now it's causing a lot of demand so people can run inference without GPUs.

      Also Macs keep a lot of their resale value so you can use them for a while and then sell them for sometimes 80% of their original value.

    • chillfox 47 minutes ago
      Affordable ram!

      I recently bought one for my k3s cluster, and it was the cheapest 16g ram I could get by a decent margin.

    • znpy 1 hour ago
      My understanding is that openclaw is only a factor, and a relatively minor one.

      Most likely the limiting factor is the crunch that chip companies are going through.

  • ksec 1 hour ago
    It is the SoC, not the memory as reported in the earning call. And lead time for SOC is 3-4 months. i.e even if they decided to increase order in March, if would be at least until July those volumes reaches warehouse ready to be shipped. And that is assuming there are spare capacity from TSMC for Apple to order, right now there is very little to none.

    What annoys me most isn't the Mac Studio and Mini. It is the Neo. Someone must have done a poor job in demand planing. ( As well as pricing ). Only 5M unit till the end of the year when they are now increasing it to 10M. And it will likely miss this education's year cycle in the summer.

    Hopefully they do better with A19 Pro Neo. Mac could reach up to 400M to 500M usage share. Roughly 25% of PC market.

    • akmarinov 51 minutes ago
      Historically whenever they’ve done lower price products - iPhone SE, the current E editions, etc - they’ve sold poorly, that’s what probably got them.

      The thing is that the Neo is actually useful.

    • touristtam 57 minutes ago
      Rightly deserved
  • BerkeyMcBerkey 1 hour ago
    Opps, our lack of foresight into AI tripped us up, again.
    • amelius 33 minutes ago
      This is just a preview.

      At some point even the most economically liberal people will say that enough is enough. Making money and building capital is perfectly okay if you're working hard, but if you use said money or capital against the rest of us (who chose a different life) then we have a problem.

  • bajor 1 hour ago
    More fomo
  • _the_inflator 1 hour ago
    Apple got so bad with its products, so bad indeed that they took a bet on the low price sector with the Neo and abandoned the powerhouses. It is so funny, because due to the high profit margin as a relative share of the price Apple earns more by selling a few top models than with dozens of Neos.

    Tim Cook, the supply chain master leaves house the moment the very reason why he got hired in the first place is in dire straits.

    I don’t think that the successor will likely change that, since Cook made sure, no one is remembering Jobs anymore and as top manager won’t pass a reversal of many of his decisions.

    So he will lead through a CEO he controls. Only if the new guy takes on the battle in the name of product there might be a chance but this would mean, Cook and the new CEO have to be dismissed. So popcorn times, I think Apple is going to stay as boring as it got, while the quality constantly declines.

    • dwedge 1 hour ago
      The Neo won't sell dozens of models they will take the low end laptop market by storm. I think your comment will age very poorly
      • robertjpayne 37 minutes ago
        This exactly. No other laptop comes close on price for the hardware you get. Yeah you may get more ram in a PC but promise you it won’t feel as fast when you’re using it day to day or have as good of a display or battery life.
      • stingraycharles 59 minutes ago
        The Neo is already considered a huge success and is the reason for the scarcity.
    • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
      > so bad indeed that they took a bet on the low price sector with the Neo and abandoned the powerhouses

      The Neo isn't just a bet on low prices - it's a machine that convinces people they can get away with less RAM. In the middle of a pricing crunch, why wouldn't you ship an 8GB machine like the Neo?

      Its a win-win, Apple gets to ship a brand new SKU in volume despite the RAM crunch, and they get to punch into a previously untouched market.

      • lloeki 55 minutes ago
        I'm hoping that the success of the Neo and the RAM shortage makes people realise that 8GB should be enough for most tasks without constantly swapping.

        That 32GB or even 64GB is considered a minimum to be able to run some word processing, chat app, fetch remote content, and display funny cat photos is preposterous. In terms of information storage, these are absolutely immense numbers.

        The infinite treadmill of chasing for more RAM and then immediately proceeding to carelessly fill all of it at the first line of code is part of a deeper, wasteful, and self-imposed obsolescence process.

        We don't need more RAM, we need more frugal software.

  • Auzy 27 minutes ago
    The Mac Studio definitely shouldn't be.

    My M2 studio was the only computer I ever owned that had issues with the USBC ports not working with certain cables (and for the price, it should have had better performance).

    I've owned a M2 Mac Studio, PowerMac G5, Mac Pro. Every single one had flaws that you would consider inexcusable on PC Hardware priced half that amount.

    The PowerMac G5 had terrible video cards (the liquid cooled ones also had issues with leaks, but ignoring that). The Mac Pro also had terrible Video cards (they were PCI-X), but also Fully Buffered ECC ram (which cost substantially more than any other ram)..

    Apple still can't even manufacture a proper mouse (who the hell puts a USB C port at the bottom).

    It's ridiculous..

    If Linux distro's had a way to integrate Android as a first class citizen (like IOS is in MacOS), it would greatly boost the number of apps available in ecosystem, and have a huge impact on MacOS I feel. Waydroid is good, but, it still is too clunky (I'd like to see something more like Wine for Android, where its native)

    • t-writescode 12 minutes ago
      Why ... did you put so much energy into typing this out? That's a lot of energy to put into .... something you don't like and probably shouldn't care so much about.

      Do you wish you could go back to macs?

    • jmalicki 13 minutes ago
      But the Mac Studio can run LLMs reasonably faster better than non-enterprise-server setup. That is the only thing that matters at this point - it's an LLM accelerator, not a personal computer, at this point.
    • ajvs 18 minutes ago
      Valve's Lepton (Waydroid fork) might solve this when it gets released.
    • iLoveOncall 4 minutes ago
      Low supply doesn't mean high demand. I don't think many people are buying Mac Studios, so they just lowered production.