Apple’s pricing strategy for the MacBook Neo is aggressive in a way that creates an unusual problem for a subset of Mac users. If you own a MacBook Air from
Apple’s pricing strategy for the MacBook Neo is aggressive in a way that creates an unusual problem for a subset of Mac users. If you own a MacBook Air from
Apple’s Studio Display is a genuinely excellent monitor. At $1,599, it is also a monitor that many Mac users want but cannot easily justify, particularly when the underlying panel technology
Apple’s pricing on its hardware almost never moves. The occasional education discount, an annual Black Friday promotion, a rare trade-in offer: these are the mechanisms through which Apple’s otherwise rigid
Apple’s affordable iPhone has always occupied a complicated space in the lineup. Too capable to ignore, not powerful enough for everyone, the SE series (now rebranded as the e line)
Apple has officially entered the budget laptop conversation. The MacBook Neo launched at $599 and arrives as the company’s most affordable laptop in years, bringing a new iPhone-derived chip to






