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Windows desperately needs its own MacBook Neo, but it seems impossible to build

Why the PC industry can't simply copy the MacBook Neo

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Student using MacBook Neo in classroom.
MacBook Neo Apple

The MacBook Neo is one of those products that instantly makes the rest of the market look awkward. At $599, or $499 for students, Apple has managed to put out a laptop that feels far more polished than what you’d expect at this price. It has retained its durable and premium aluminum design, a high-res Liquid Retina display, solid battery life, and enough performance that can get you through most everyday workflows.

It’s not winning in specs sheet, but it delivers on the aspects that people actually notice. This is why Windows laptop makers should be worried.

The MacBook Neo gets the basics right

What makes the MacBook Neo stand out isn’t raw power; it’s restraint. Apple didn’t try to turn this into a budget “Pro” machine. It focuses on the stuff that matters, which is a premium metal build, QHD+ display, and reliable battery life. For $599, this is the most affordable Mac that integrates with the Apple ecosystem. That price point matters because the Windows market has spent years forcing buyers into a compromise. Either buy something cheap, or spend more for a sleek well-built laptop.

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But the MacBook Neo cuts right through that gap. Even ASUS co-CEO S.Y. Hsu acknowledged the disruption, saying Apple’s budget-friendly pricing was “a shock to the entire industry” and that there had been “a lot of discussions” across the PC ecosystem about how to compete with it.

Why PC brands are falling even further behind

It’s not that PC brands aren’t making a viable competitor, the MacBook Neo has no rival because they can’t. The PC industry is currently dealing with a memory supply crunch largely driven by the booming AI infrastructure. So memory chip makers are prioritizing high-margin memory for data centers and AI servers, which has tightened supply for traditional PC components.

Multiple analyst firms have warned that rising DRAM and NAND prices are pushing up laptop production costs. This leaves very little room to build a premium-feeling laptop at a genuinely affordable price point, since component costs have risen sharply.

MacBook Neo exists become Apple is… Apple

The MacBook Neo is the culmination of several structural advantages that Windows PC makers simply don’t have. Apple controls the silicon, the software, the industrial design, the retail strategy, and a lot of the supply chain leverage. While the company isn’t immune to the memory inflation, it is better positioned to absorb shocks or plan around them than most Windows laptop makers.

Other PC brands do not get that luxury. That is why the idea of a true Windows MacBook Neo rival sounds obvious, but in reality, it’s far harder than it sounds.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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