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  3. HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

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  • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

    HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

    Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

    Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

    babblinggeek@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
    babblinggeek@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
    babblinggeek@infosec.exchange
    wrote last edited by
    #2

    @cstross it nails the “most people’s use cases” in a price point and feature set that’s really hard to argue with

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    • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

      HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

      Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

      Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

      hmwilker@social.tchncs.deH This user is from outside of this forum
      hmwilker@social.tchncs.deH This user is from outside of this forum
      hmwilker@social.tchncs.de
      wrote last edited by
      #3

      @cstross It’s probably the first instance of what will turn out to become _A Laptop_ (no further qualifications necessary, because it does everything everybody expects and needs. Edge cases and niche applications need not apply.)

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      • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

        HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

        Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

        Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

        davidgerard@circumstances.runD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidgerard@circumstances.runD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidgerard@circumstances.run
        wrote last edited by
        #4

        @cstross I believe it does have the AI coprocessor

        cstross@wandering.shopC 1 Reply Last reply
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        • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

          HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

          Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

          Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

          salty@mastodon.nzS This user is from outside of this forum
          salty@mastodon.nzS This user is from outside of this forum
          salty@mastodon.nz
          wrote last edited by
          #5

          @cstross 8GB RAM definitely still feels like it could be a limiting factor, though. Although to be fair iOS handles it pretty well.

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          • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

            HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

            Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

            Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

            kmck@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
            kmck@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
            kmck@mas.to
            wrote last edited by
            #6

            @cstross I did wonder what Apple was going to do with the “our base CPU is more powerful than most people need it to be” problem besides render the UI through a VFX pipeline.

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            • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

              @cstross I believe it does have the AI coprocessor

              cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
              cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
              cstross@wandering.shop
              wrote last edited by
              #7

              @davidgerard It does, and I've got Apple Intelligence firmly switched off.

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              • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

                Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

                Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

                ebooksyearn@thepit.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                ebooksyearn@thepit.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                ebooksyearn@thepit.social
                wrote last edited by
                #8

                @cstross I'm curious what's going to happen now that 90% or more of computer users can do everything they want with a $500 laptop. That same level of machine would have struggled with 10 browser tabs just a minute ago

                cstross@wandering.shopC 1 Reply Last reply
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                • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                  HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

                  Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

                  Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

                  sweetshark@social.tchncs.deS This user is from outside of this forum
                  sweetshark@social.tchncs.deS This user is from outside of this forum
                  sweetshark@social.tchncs.de
                  wrote last edited by
                  #9

                  @cstross
                  So, which business models are obsoleted now that compute is a commodity?

                  Is it maybe the folks that scream you need AI in everything, so that more datacenters need to be build? Cant allow people to be happy on decade old hardware because that is dampening demand.

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                  • ebooksyearn@thepit.socialE ebooksyearn@thepit.social

                    @cstross I'm curious what's going to happen now that 90% or more of computer users can do everything they want with a $500 laptop. That same level of machine would have struggled with 10 browser tabs just a minute ago

                    cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cstross@wandering.shop
                    wrote last edited by
                    #10

                    @ebooksyearn Yes. As it happens I have a ~$500 machine from 2 years ago. Intel N100 cpu, 12Gb RAM, same size SSD: runs Linux Mint nicely, but the flip side is the battery life is about 2h30m instead of 16h. A deal-breaker, that.

                    Apple *somehow* squared the circle.

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                    • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                      HYPOTHESIS: while Moore's Law dominated performance in laptops, the rule was "cheap, fast, low power—pick any two".

                      Moore's Law is coming to an end. The Macbook Neo says "why choose?"

                      Nobody needs a laptop with a 40 hour battery life. Nor does anybody needs 200 cpu threads and an AI coprocessor and 256Gb of RAM and 8Tb of SSD. So we're finally seeing the sweet spot in the phase diagram drift inexorably towards the corner labelled "cheap".

                      ringles@bookstodon.comR This user is from outside of this forum
                      ringles@bookstodon.comR This user is from outside of this forum
                      ringles@bookstodon.com
                      wrote last edited by
                      #11

                      @cstross

                      Got a cheap notebook from 'reward points' at work. I named it 'cromulence'; everything about it is (just) acceptable.

                      CPU is okay, screen is meh, battery life is good enough. RAM and storage were barely sufficient, but I was easily able to open it up and add RAM and a better NVME I had lying around. Of course I put Linux on it. (Those last three are not common, of course...)

                      That was before the Neo, which has much better specs - except I can't bump up the RAM or storage on it. 🤷

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