Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

MacBook Neo is allegedly selling too fast, and Apple wants more units now

MacBook Neo may be a bigger hit than Apple expected

Add as a preferred source on Google
MacBook Neo
MacBook Neo Apple

Apple’s budget Mac dropped as a shock to many, but its sales could be doing much better than expected. The company has reportedly issued an urgent follow-up order for the MacBook Neo after the new budget laptop’s early sales surged past initial projections.

A new report from MoneyUDN claims that Apple has raised its shipment outlook for the device from “several million” units to more than 10 million, with major manufacturing partners Foxconn and Quanta moving to support the ramp.

How Apple’s $599 MacBook is ahead of the game

According to the report, the MacBook Neo’s appeal is pretty clear. At $599, it is described as Apple’s most affordable notebook yet, and that lower entry point appears to have triggered a global buying wave. Reports are claiming that the MacBook Neo has already sold out,, with Apple now facing shortages as demand keeps climbing.

Recommended Videos

Apple’s CEO Tim Cook has reportedly even stated that the MacBook Neo’s launch week saw the best first-week sales among new Mac users in the Mac lineup’s entire history. If this is true, then Apple isn;t just moving impressive units, it is even pulling in large number of first-time Mac buyers.

What Apple is doing to meet the big demand

This is where the rush orders claim come in, It seems like Foxconn is producing the MacBook Neo in both China and Vietnam, while Quanta is also involved as a supporitng manufacturing partner. The report further adds that Apple suppliers do not comment on specific customers or products, so the claim remains rooted in unnamed supply chain sources.

Apple has apparently underestimated just how strong demand would be for a lower-cost Mac notebook, and it is now trying to catch up. And nothing makes it more evident than the delivery times. The MacBook Neo first went on sale globally on March 11, and current orders through Apple’s online store are showing delivery windows between April 24 and May 1. This delayed delivery shows that the supply is already under pressure.

The report also claims that Apple’s inventory of the A18 chipset us also being depleted quickly, which could make Apple’s supply problem even trickier if demand stays hot.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
Satechis’s color-matched MacBook Neo accessories are just too pretty to ignore
If you wish Apple made peppy accessories for its budget laptop, Satechi heard your prayers without charging you a bomb for it.
Satechi MacBook Neo accessories

Satechi, which makes some fantastic charging and PC peripherals, has just launched a whole bunch of accessories targeted at the MacBook Neo. But instead of making them boring and drab, the company has actually color-matched them to the exact shade that you get on Apple's budget-centric laptop. The offerings on the table include a multi-port adapter, a USB-C snap hub, and a wireless mouse, and all of them are now available to buy starting at $29.99 from Satechi's website and Amazon. Color options that are up for grabs include Citrus, Blush, Indigo, and Silver

Satechi OntheGo 5-in-1 Multiport Adapter ($44.99)

Read more
ChatGPT’s hiking advice left two hikers stranded on a mountain in Poland
The chatbot directed the pair onto a climbing route neither had the skills to finish, and it's not the first time AI has sent travelers somewhere they shouldn't have gone.
Bag, Clothing, Coat

A shortcut recommended by ChatGPT left two hikers stuck on a mountain face in Poland this month, and they needed a helicopter to get back down. It's the latest case of an AI chatbot steering travelers toward routes it has no real way to evaluate.

ChatGPT's shortcut led straight to a dead end

Read more
Firefox is doubling its update pace, and that’s good news for your security
Mozilla Firefox

Mozilla is about to speed up one of the most important parts of using Firefox: security updates. If you're used to seeing a new Firefox update land about once a month, that's about to change. Beginning in September, Mozilla plans to switch to a two-week release schedule for Firefox on desktop and Android, meaning users should start getting updates twice as often. That might sound like more frequent downloads, but it's really about closing security gaps sooner.

Why waiting a month for security fixes no longer cuts it

Read more