There are also rumors that the next-generation AirPods will have support for Apple Lossless audio and improved Find My integration that will let them play a sound if they are lost. Apple is testing a more rounded, compact shape.
AirPods Pro – Apple is finally going to refresh the AirPods Pro in 2022, and they may have a whole new design that will delete the short stem at the bottom.It will come in new colors, includes camera improvements and have a faster A16 chip, which actually will not come to the iPhone 14 and 14 Max. It will not have a notch, with Apple instead implementing a dual display cutout look with a pill-shaped cutout and a round cutout.
Mac Pro comes out, Apple will no longer be reliant on Intel chips, and the Mac studio has shown us that the Mac Pro’s Apple silicon chip will be impressive. Mac Pro – The Mac Pro is perhaps the most exciting product to come in 2022 because it will see Apple finish its transition to Apple Silicon.The M2 is rumored to have an 8-core CPU and a nine or 10-core GPU. According to the upgrades, the MacBook Air is expected to be one of the first to adopt the M2 chip, a follow-up to the M1. It will also get a new look, with Apple finally abandoning the tapered look for a more streamlined MacBook pro-style look. Apple is going with a fresh iMac-like design, which means that the MacBook Air is expected to get fun new colors and off-white bezels and white keyboard like the 24-inch iMac. MacBook Air – The MacBook Air is getting its biggest refresh since 2010, which puts it at the top of our list.In our last YouTube video, we rounded up the five products that we can not wait to get our hands on. The second half of the year will be exciting, because rumors suggest we can look forward to a lot of updated maxes, iPhones and accessories.
Take a look at the new Apple Thunderbolt Display update (and hide your credit card).We are five months into 2022 with the World Developers Conference on the horizon, to be followed not too long after by Apple’s September event. The new Thunderbolt connection standard means fewer cables and more data throughput, and the price hasn't changed - it's a wallet-thinning $1199 in the online Apple Store. Of course, this means it won't work with older Macs, but since every new Mac has Thunderbolt built in, it's a savvy move. Last but not least, Apple has updated its venerable 27in Cinema Display, making it fully Thunderbolt compliant.
Read our ultimate round-up of Apple's Mac OS X Lion news and reviews. Anyone who can't do this will have to wait for late August when the operating system becomes available in the Apple Store on a USB flash drive - although this carries an expensive extra cost, with the package costing $75. It's a 4GB file, and Apple is advising users without broadband to bring their computers into an Apple Store to download the software wirelessly. It's a cheap upgrade for anyone with a pre-existing copy of OS X Snow Leopard, coming in at only $31.99. OS X Lion is also out, and it comes as standard on all Macs from now on. Power users can spec it up with dual SSDs or 8GB of memory.Ĭheck out what MacWorld thinks of the new Mac Mini's performance boost.
A server edition of the Mac Mini can be bought, pre-loaded with a copy of the new OSX Lion Server operating system, as well as a quad-core Intel Corei7 processor and dual hard drives, for $1099. The higher-end Mac Mini comes with a faster Core i5 processor and double the RAM - further upgrades for the CPU, RAM and hard drive are optional - and will set you back $899. You can buy one from any Apple store or online, with the basic Core i5- and 500GB hard drive-equipped model costing $699 and memory and hard drive build-to-order options available. The diminutive Mac Mini line-up also gets a refresh with Intel Core i5 processors and more powerful graphics, although they no longer have an optical disc drive.