A cheap MacBook is the perfect way for Apple to win over Windows users

The MacBook is coming back — or at least, that's what the rumors claim. Next week, Apple is expected to announce a colorful, low-cost, non-Air, non-Pro MacBook powered by one of its mobile processors. By avoiding its pricier M-series chips, Apple may reportedly be able to reach a low $699 or $799 price for the MacBook. The $999 MacBook Air is the cheapest laptop on the company's website right now, but Apple also sold the older M1 MacBook Air at Walmart for $700 in 2024, which later went down to $650 last year.

That Walmart deal was a smart way for Apple to test out the viability of cheaper MacBooks without building an entirely new product. But now the M1 Air’s design looks seriously dated, and the company also needs to move beyond the six-year-old M1 chip. It's time to get serious about delivering a true low-cost Apple laptop.

There's another compelling reason to bring back a cheaper MacBook: It's the perfect way  to court disgruntled Windows users, something Apple hasn't really done since its "Get A Mac" ads from the mid-2000s. I figure the unbridled success of the iPhone and iPad made Apple focus less on directly competing with Windows. The sleek designs of the 2011-2015 era MacBook Air and Pros were their main selling points, but Apple's push towards USB-C-only machines and unreliable butterfly keyboards later made it clear it wasn't totally focused on Macs.

But now Microsoft is distracted by AI — it's been pushing Copilot and AI features for years, instead of improving the Windows experience with more useful upgrades. Recent talk of agentic AI capabilities, which would let Copilot handle tasks for you automatically, also sparked plenty of criticism from Windows users. And with all of the focus on AI, Microsoft has also released some disastrous Windows updates over the last year, which have bricked OS installations. So, Apple, why not make a direct play for Windows users? 

Last year, I covered why it's a great time to jump ship from Windows to Mac, and I haven't been able to let go of that idea since. Apple's M-series chips are shockingly fast and efficient, and its hardware tends to be more durable than typical PC fare. Rumors point to Apple developing a new aluminum case for the low-cost MacBook, so it will likely feel more polished than a typical sub-$1,000 Windows laptop. macOS has also avoided the bloat that's plagued Windows for years — you can turn off Apple Intelligence with two clicks if you want to, and there aren't any annoying ads to deal with. 

A laptop on a table.
A MacBook Air M5 on a table.
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

And while it used to be a pain to transition from Windows to Mac, it’s far easier these days, especially if you mainly rely on web apps. It also wouldn't be tough for Apple to make short tutorials to help Windows users get their bearings with the macOS basics, like installing apps and juggling app windows. Apple could also make a play for iPhone owners using Windows, who may not be aware of the many ways iOS and macOS are integrated. iPhone mirroring may be a huge draw on its own.

Rumors also suggest the upcoming MacBook might use the A18 Pro from the iPhone 16 Pro, a chip that benchmarks faster than the M1. Even if it only has six cores, making it slower for heavy workloads than the M2, an A18 Pro-powered MacBook would still be more than enough power for basic productivity work. Not everyone needs the surprising amount of GPU power in the MacBook Air — especially if downgrading means they can save $200 to $300.

I'm not saying any of this through any sort of Apple-loving bias. I typically use a MacBook Pro for work, but I'm a Windows user at heart. Windows was my gateway to computing in the '90s, back when Macs were far more expensive than PCs. These days, I spend more time on my Windows desktop making podcasts, playing PC games and bumming around the internet than I do working on Macs. 

And yet, it’s hard to deny everything Apple is doing right today — the only thing it’s missing is an inexpensive laptop entry. A $699 or $799 MacBook simply makes sense. And for many Windows users, it’ll be just the escape from Microsoft they need.



This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/a-cheap-macbook-is-the-perfect-way-for-apple-to-win-over-windows-users-130000045.html?src=rss

Valve Steam Frame Hands-On : Plays Half-Life Alyx Standalone at 40–50 FPS

Valve Steam Frame Hands-On : Plays Half-Life Alyx Standalone at 40–50 FPS Half-Life Alyx gameplay on Valve Steam Frame, with performance notes showing low settings and 40–50 FPS range.

Valve’s Steam Frame offers a standalone VR experience that bridges the gap between wireless PCVR and independent gaming. In a hands-on session covered by Gamertag VR, the headset demonstrated its ability to run demanding titles like Half-Life Alyx natively, achieving frame rates of 40-50 FPS on low settings. This performance is supported by features such […]

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5 Best Foldable Phone Concepts We’re Still Waiting To See At MWC 2026

MWC 2026 is arriving in Barcelona next week under the theme “The IQ Era,” and the foldable conversation has never had more momentum behind it. The worldwide foldable smartphone market is forecast to grow 30% year-over-year in 2026, and with names like Samsung, Apple, and HONOR all moving pieces on the same board, the show floor feels electric. The race isn’t just about who ships first; it’s about who ships something worth keeping.

But the most interesting foldable ideas rarely make it to the keynote stage. Some live in patents. Some debut at design expos and disappear into concept archives. Others surface on design blogs and quietly accumulate a following of people who can’t stop thinking about them. These five concepts represent everything the foldable category could become if ambition and engineering ever fully agreed with each other. Barcelona feels like the right backdrop for that conversation.

1. Nothing Fold (1) — The Foldable With a Spine That Speaks

Nothing has always understood that a phone is a surface before it is a device. The brand built its entire identity on making the invisible visible — circuit boards through glass, notification patterns through LEDs, and the Fold (1) concept carries that thinking directly into foldable territory. The Glyph Interface, Nothing’s signature grid of programmable lights, doesn’t just live on the back panel here. It wraps around the spine, and at boot, it traces the number “1” across the edge like a signature being written in real time.

Once the phone is running, the spine transforms into something genuinely new: a monochrome ticker-tape display that scrolls live notifications along the fold without requiring the user to open anything or wake a screen. Inside, an 8.37-inch display gives the Fold (1) the kind of canvas that makes a book-style foldable feel worth carrying. A MediaTek Dimensity 9400 chip handles the processing alongside a dedicated neural unit for on-device AI, while a 5,500mAh battery keeps the whole system running well past a single day. Five cameras — split across the rear, the spine-side flap, and dual hole-punches on both displays — mean no shooting scenario goes uncovered. This is a concept that treats the fold itself as a feature rather than a compromise.

What We Like

  • The spine-mounted ticker display turns passive notification delivery into an active design statement that no shipping foldable currently replicates.
  • Pairing a 5,500mAh battery with a power-efficient flagship chip gives this concept the endurance its ambitions genuinely require.

What We Dislike

  • Five cameras on a foldable form factor raise legitimate questions about thickness — the hardware demands and the slim silhouette are in direct tension.
  • Nothing OS remains a compelling but narrow platform, and its app ecosystem still asks more patience from users than mainstream Android does.

2. 0/1 Phone — The Foldable That Knows When to Go Quiet

Most digital wellness tools are built on a contradiction. They ask sthe oftware to solve a problem that the software created. The 0/1 phone cuts through that logic by putting the solution in the hardware itself. Closed, the phone presents an e-ink display — customizable with analog clock faces, a calendar, a music player, or whatever belongs in a calmer version of a day. There are no feeds to scroll, no notifications engineered to demand attention, no app icons arranged to maximize tap frequency. Just the time, and whatever you decided mattered before distraction had a vote.

Open it, and the phone becomes something else entirely. A flexible display running at 1080×2640 resolution gives full access to every app, every platform, every habit the closed state was holding at arm’s length. The transition between modes isn’t managed by a screen time setting buried in a menu; it’s a physical gesture. Closing the phone is the act of choosing focus, and opening it is a deliberate decision rather than a reflexive one. That distinction sounds small until you’ve spent a week with a phone that makes you conscious of every time you reach for it. The 0/1 concept understands that people don’t want less technology. They want better control over when it starts.

What We Like

  • Mapping distraction-free mode to a physical action rather than a software toggle is a smarter and more honest approach to attention management.
  • Customizable e-ink clock faces give the closed state genuine personality, making minimalism feel like a choice rather than a penalty.

What We Dislike

  • E-ink displays still lag on refresh rate and struggle with colour depth, which could make the closed-state experience feel dated compared to what users are used to.
  • Building a dual-display device that stays genuinely slim is a serious engineering challenge, and added bulk would directly undermine the concept’s entire premise.

3. Samsung L-Fold Patent — The Tetris Block the Industry Wasn’t Ready For

Samsung’s patent library is enormous, and most of what lives inside it will never become a product. But occasionally something surfaces that reframes what a foldable phone could look like at a structural level. The L-shaped concept — which, unfolded, mirrors the elongated corner-piece of a Tetris grid — is one of those designs. The top section of the display extends to one side and then folds back on itself like a flap, bringing the phone from an asymmetric L-shape into a more conventional rectangle. It’s a transformation that takes about a second to understand and considerably longer to stop thinking about.

What makes the concept genuinely interesting isn’t the shape — it’s what the folded flap can do once it’s in position. Facing outward alongside the main cameras, it becomes a live viewfinder, letting users frame selfies through the primary camera array rather than a secondary front-facing sensor that typically offers a fraction of the optical quality. The curved strip of display wrapping the spine edge serves as an ambient information surface — battery level, the time, notification tickers — visible without waking the main screen. It draws an obvious comparison to the LG Wing’s T-shaped swivel design, but the folding mechanism introduces a layer of versatility that the Wing could never access. The L-fold isn’t trying to be novel. It’s trying to be useful in ways the rectangle hasn’t figured out yet.

What We Like

  • A folded flap that doubles as a selfie viewfinder for the main cameras is one of the most practically useful ideas to emerge from any foldable concept in recent memory.
  • The spine-edge ambient display strips away the need to fully wake the phone for low-stakes information — a subtle but genuinely valuable interaction shift.

What We Dislike

  • Asymmetric form factors demand new muscle memory from users, and history suggests the mass market is slow to warm to anything that doesn’t fit an established shape.
  • Samsung patents ideas prolifically, and the distance between a filed concept and a retail device is wide enough that this design may never leave the archive.

4. OPPO x nendo Slide-Phone — The Triple-Fold That Earns Every Stage

When OPPO partnered with Japanese design studio nendo for the slide-phone concept, the goal wasn’t to make a foldable that could compete on spec sheets. The goal was to design a phone that understood how humans actually move through a day — glancing, then engaging, then working — and matched each state with exactly the right amount of screen. The mechanism unfolds in three progressive steps, each one surfacing a different display area calibrated to a specific type of task. Nendo described the motion as caterpillar-like, and the metaphor holds. This phone doesn’t hinge open. It extends with intention.

The first stage reveals 1.5 inches of display, enough for a notification glance, music control, and an incoming call. The second opens to 3.15 inches, suited to photography, video calls, and light gaming. The third and final stage unlocks the full 7-inch widescreen panel, wide enough to run on-screen game controllers across both flanks simultaneously or to frame a proper panoramic shot. A stylus is included, pushing the concept firmly into professional productivity territory. What distinguishes this design from every other multi-fold proposal isn’t the screen count; it’s that each screen size exists for a reason. That level of purposefulness in a concept is rarer than it sounds, and it’s exactly the kind of thinking MWC 2026 needs more of.

What We Like

  • Three screen sizes, each assigned to a specific use context, is the most functionally coherent multi-fold proposal the category has produced.
  • The OPPO x nendo collaboration brings genuine design philosophy to a product type that has historically been defined by engineering decisions alone.

What We Dislike

  • Three-fold points mean three mechanical vulnerabilities, and the durability science around multi-fold hardware still hasn’t caught up to the ambition.
  • The credit card form factor, when fully closed, is irresistible in theory, but the real-world pocketability of a 7-inch unfolded device still requires a convincing answer.

5. TCL Fold ‘n’ Roll — The Concept That Refused to Choose a Size

Every other foldable phone on this list commits to a fixed set of screen configurations. The TCL Fold ‘n’ Roll doesn’t. Using a combination of the brand’s proprietary dragonhinge folding mechanism and a rollable panel that extends from the chassis, the device starts as a 6.87-inch smartphone, unfolds into an 8.85-inch phablet, and then rolls out fully to become a 10-inch tablet. Three screen sizes. One device. No trade-off required. As a concept, it reads less like a product proposal and more like a direct challenge issued to every manufacturer in the room.

TCL was candid about the technical specifications still being in development when the concept was first revealed — an admission that actually made the idea more credible, not less. It signalled a team working through real problems rather than rendering a fantasy. The rollable display space has since moved meaningfully closer to commercial viability, and with the broader foldable market accelerating sharply heading into 2026, the engineering distance between this concept and a shippable product is closing. The dragonhinge gives the Fold ‘n’ Roll a mechanical foundation most conceptual devices lack. What it still needs is a manufacturer willing to see the build all the way through, and a Barcelona stage to announce it from.

What We Like

  • Phone, phablet, and tablet in a single chassis is the most versatile screen configuration concept the foldable category has put forward to date.
  • The dragonhinge technology gives this proposal a legitimate engineering backbone, separating it from pure speculation.

What We Dislike

  • Combining folding and rolling mechanisms in one device layers mechanical complexity that no manufacturer has yet solved at the consumer scale.
  • TCL has introduced multiple foldable concepts across several years, and relatively few have made the jump from concept to shelf, which tempers excitement with reasonable caution.

The Floor Is Set — Now Someone Has to Build It.

MWC 2026’s “The IQ Era” framing is ultimately about intelligence meeting design, and these five concepts each demonstrate what that looks like when executed with real conviction. One bets on identity and spectacle. One bets on restraint. Another bets on geometric reinvention, one on human-centric layering, and the last on sheer configurability. The foldable market expanding 30% year-over-year isn’t a coincidence; it reflects a growing recognition that the rectangle-shaped smartphone has stopped being interesting.

Not all of these concepts will ship. Some may arrive in forms barely recognizable compared to the original vision. But the questions they ask…about how a phone should behave when closed, how many screens a device actually needs, whether a hinge can carry a brand identity, are already changing how the industry thinks.

The post 5 Best Foldable Phone Concepts We’re Still Waiting To See At MWC 2026 first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung Just Solved the Biggest Problem With Privacy Screens on the S26 Ultra

Samsung Just Solved the Biggest Problem With Privacy Screens on the S26 Ultra Samsung Galaxy s26 Ultra

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra introduces a comprehensive array of advanced features, establishing itself as a benchmark in modern smartphone technology. With its innovative privacy display, enhanced artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities, sophisticated camera system, and refined hardware design, this flagship device is engineered to meet the diverse needs of users. Whether your focus is on […]

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Pixel Agents Creates a Pixel Office View for Your AI Coding Agents

Pixel Agents Creates a Pixel Office View for Your AI Coding Agents Close-up of the Pixel Agents panel displaying live status changes for multiple AI coding agents in one workspace.

Pixel Agents integrates animated pixel art characters into Visual Studio Code (VS Code) to create a virtual workspace for managing AI-driven workflows. Demonstrated by Nate Herk , this extension allows users to observe AI agents performing tasks like coding or file analysis in real time, represented as animated figures within a customizable desktop environment. By […]

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Why Apple Is Launching Two Studio Displays in 2026: The J427 and J527 Mystery

Why Apple Is Launching Two Studio Displays in 2026: The J427 and J527 Mystery Apple Studio Display with Mini-LED technology and 5K resolution

Apple is reportedly preparing to launch two new Studio Display models, as indicated by recent findings in macOS code and regulatory filings. These displays are expected to address the limitations of the current Studio Display while introducing advanced features designed for professionals and creatives. If you rely on high-performance monitors for tasks like video editing, […]

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Ultrahuman’s new Pro ring comes with 15 days battery life

If there’s one thing that stops people using their smart rings over the long term, it’s the battery life. After all, they’re so unobtrusive, it’s easy to forget to drop it on the charging plate every few days. It doesn’t take long for your pricey gadget to become little more than a very expensive piece of jewelry. It’s one of many maladies Ultrahuman is looking to address with the advent of its new Pro, a smart ring boasting up to 15 days of battery life. It even ships with a fancy battery case, which itself includes enough power to last it 45 days, making it easier to keep re-charged on the go.

Ultrahuman Ring Pro hasn’t just got a far bigger battery, it’s been re-engineered from the ground up. The company’s Bhuvan Srinivasan explained the older hardware had been pushed to its limit, especially in terms of the data it could process. Consequently, the Pro is equipped with a dual core processor with on-device machine learning to better crunch the numbers your body is throwing out. Its memory has also been increased, holding up to 250 days of data before it needs to sync with your smartphone. As well as improvements to durability, the new ring is also easier to cut apart in the hopefully rare event your finger, or its battery, begins to swell.

Image of the Ultrahuman Pro Charge on a table
Ultrahuman

I’ll admit, having seen a prototype Pro Charger in person back in January, that it’s the prettiest way to re-juice a smart ring I’ve ever seen. Whereas Samsung and Oura have both opted for discreet, ring box-style hardware, Ultrahuman made something designed to sit on your nightstand. It’s not taking up space just for show, either, since it includes the aforementioned battery, LED charge indicator, speaker and haptics. It’s also got the ability to diagnose and address firmware issues to eliminate worries around firmware issues bricking devices.

Image of Jade, Ultrahuman's new AI
Ultrahuman

At the same time, Ultrahuman is pulling the covers off Jade, its new “real time biointelligence AI.” The company promises Jade will be able to “pull real-time actionable insights, and even start breathwork or trigger Afib detection.” Jade is expected to get new features over time, with some examples being ordering good, changing your room temperature or flagging potential health issues. The idea is that Jade will keep a constant eye on your health, pulling in data from the ring, M1 continuous glucose monitor and environmental stats from your Ultrahuman Home.

Naturally, we’ll be getting in the Pro to test and will give our opinions on how effective all of this is when we’ve spent a month or two actually using it. But if you’d rather not wait and you’re based outside the US, you can pre-order the Ultrahuman Ring Pro right now, for $479, with shipments beginning in March. If you already have an Ultrahuman Ring, you can also get a trade-in deal to help cut the cost of the new model.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/wearables/ultrahumans-new-pro-ring-comes-with-15-days-battery-life-120038820.html?src=rss

HDMI 2.2 vs DisplayPort 2.1 : Which Should You Use In 2026?

HDMI 2.2 vs DisplayPort 2.1 : Which Should You Use In 2026? Hdmi 2.2 vs Displayport 2.1

HDMI and DisplayPort are two widely used standards for connecting displays, each designed with specific strengths to cater to different needs. As highlighted by Switch and Click, HDMI is often the go-to choice for home entertainment systems due to features like ARC (Audio Return Channel) and ALLM (Auto Low-Latency Mode), which enhance audio setups and […]

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The Definitive 2026 Guide to iPhone Video Settings

The Definitive 2026 Guide to iPhone Video Settings iphone video settings

Recording high-quality videos on your iPhone involves more than simply pointing and shooting. By understanding and optimizing your device’s video settings, you can significantly enhance the quality of your footage. From selecting the right resolution and frame rates to using advanced features like Apple ProRes, this guide provides a comprehensive breakdown to help you achieve […]

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OpenAI will notify authorities of credible threats after Canada mass shooter’s second account was discovered

OpenAI has vowed to strengthen its safety protocols and to notify law enforcement of credible threats sooner in a letter addressed to Canadian authorities, according to Politico and The Washington Post. If you’ll recall, Canadian politicians summoned the company’s leaders after reports came out that it didn’t notify authorities when it banned the account owned by the Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia mass shooting suspect back in 2025. Some of OpenAI’s leaders have already met with Candian officials, and British Columbia Premier David Eby said Sam Altman had also agreed to meet with him.

While OpenAI has yet to announce changes to its rules, Ann O’Leary, its vice president of global policy, reportedly wrote in the letter that the company will tweak its detection systems so that they can better prevent banned users from coming back to the platform. Apparently, after OpenAI banned the shooter’s original account due to “potential warnings of committing real-world violence,” the perpetrator was able to create another account. The company only discovered the second account after the shooter’s name was released, and it has since notified authorities.

Further, OpenAI will now notify authorities if it detects “imminent and credible” threats in ChatGPT conversations, even if the user doesn’t reveal “a target, means, and timing of planned violence.” O’Leary explained that if the new rules had been in effect when the shooter’s account was banned in 2025, the company would have notified the police. OpenAI will also establish a point of contact for Canadian law enforcement so it can quickly share information with authorities when needed.

The Canadian government sees OpenAI’s decision not to report the shooter’s original account as a failure. It threatened to regulate AI chatbots in the country if their creators cannot show that they have proper safeguards to protect its users. It’s unclear at the moment if OpenAI also plans to roll out the same changes in the US and elsewhere in the world.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/openai-will-notify-authorities-of-credible-threats-after-canada-mass-shooters-second-account-was-discovered-112706548.html?src=rss