The Apple MacBook Neo’s $599 starting price is a “shock” to the Windows PC industry, according to an Asus executive.

Hsu said he believes all the PC players—including Microsoft, Intel, and AMD—take the MacBook Neo threat seriously. “In fact, in the entire PC ecosystem, there have been a lot of discussions about how to compete with this product,” he added, given that rumors about the MacBook Neo have been making the rounds for at least a year.

Despite the competitive threat, Hsu argued that the MacBook Neo could have limited appeal. He pointed to the laptop’s 8GB of “unified memory,” or what amounts to its RAM, and how customers can’t upgrade it.

  • vane@lemmy.world
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    He also described the MacBook Neo as a “content consumption” device, similar to an iPad. “This is different from the use case of a mainstream notebook," which can handle more compute-intensive tasks, Hsu said.

    I don’t know what Windows have out of the box but is MacBook really content consuming device ?

    Free build in OS offline office apps Word = Pages, Excel=Numbers, Power Point = Keynote, Notes, Calendar, Email, Reminders, PDF viewer = Preview, movie editor = iMovie, Journal, Password Manager = Keychain, Maps app ( yes you can download parts of map to use offline), Garage band where you can connect your midi devices and record them.

    • Squizzy@lemmy.world
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      23 minutes ago

      I wouldnt have said content consumption but it is going to be a hit with students who will basically use a browser for everything. They have cloud office suites by default and apple has student subscriptions to offer.

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    8 hours ago

    Dude, the difference between you and Apple is Windows 11. They don’t have a crappy copilot or Edge hoarding 4GB in the background just to show the weather.

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      3 hours ago

      That’s a big difference but not all. The sub-$1000 ultrabook sector has SO MUCH garbage, like Intel Celerons that stutter when you scroll down a web page designed in 2022+. Manufacturers are happy because they can sell rubbish and uncle John with no idea about computers will say “I want a laptop with 1 TB so it’s faster, and it must have free office 365 and an antivirus”…

      So when someone puts a phone processor in a laptop and builds a chassis that isn’t a $5 extruded plastic shell, they panic because it still manages to be better in both benchmarks and real world use despite the paltry amount of RAM.

    • Scrollone@feddit.it
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      5 hours ago

      Exactly. They should start installing Linux Mint and call it a day.

      Fuck Microsoft.

    • qat@feddit.nl
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      6 hours ago

      Indeed. PC manufacturers should just invest in the Linux ecosystem.

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    6 hours ago

    The industry problem is mainly that RAM makers do not want to piss off Apple, who has already had long term contracts set prior to rampocalypse. But 8gb linux native is a better product for systems that need to be offered at 8gb for affordability.

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    10 hours ago

    The perfect time for a relatively cheap Apple laptop when Microsoft is forcing people to buy new hardware just to use their latest version of their operating system. I wonder what the percentage of Microsoft folks who go to the MacBook will be. I wonder what the percentage of users who go the UNIX/Linux route would be. I’m not an apple fan myself so would go linux, but a good business move from Apple though.

    • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      That would be interesting to watch.

      If I ever had to buy a personal laptop again, it’d definitely make the list.

      Obnoxious hardware prices are what kept me off mac for so long. Now all prices are obnoxious maybe it would even out.

      Great move if they can capitalize on it

      • vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org
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        7 hours ago

        They were making a lot on build quality, convenience, brand, ecosystem, cultism, software quality, but not so much on power.

        Now power became more expensive for suppliers, and for things listed before it you have to restructure marketing and everything. Apple doesn’t have that problem. They also have rid themselves of the legacy problem by two softer changes (dropping 32 bit Intel, then moving to ARM) instead of one hard change.

    • fallaciousBasis@lemmy.world
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      Why would you move to Mac os?

      Windows still runs software from the 90s.

      Mac’s… Lol… Good luck with that.

      • Son_of_Macha@lemmy.cafe
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        15 minutes ago

        You can run Windows on the Mac with some amazingly integrated emulation software and all that 90s software is there.

      • Kiwi_fella@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        I can’t see teenagers and 20-somethings going, “What I really want is a laptop that runs software from the 90s.”

        • fallaciousBasis@lemmy.world
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          Just because you have no appreciation for history you think no one else does either?

          Just be nice to be so detached from reality

          • ShadyGrove@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            as much as I appreciate old software, I don’t think Mac’s target audience cares about it all that much.

  • CovfefeKills@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    It really is not appealing a mac air with 16gb RAM was $999 AUD and the NEO is $899 AUD. It’s a step backwards…

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    15 hours ago

    In Europe the price it’s not that appealing, it’s €699 and because they “care about environment 😉” the €99 charger (which is almost mandatory for a new user) is sold separately.

    At €798 for 256g/8g it’s not as good as the $599 they’re selling in the US.

    If someone is price sensitive, can get 3-4 refurbished ThinkPads with better specs for that price and run Linux much easier without hoping on some volunteer wizard to reverse engineer the proprietary components

    • Zak@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      because they “care about environment 😉” the €99 charger (which is almost mandatory for a new user) is sold separately.

      It’s because they’re required by law to offer it without a power supply. See Article 3a, section 10.

      Apple’s first-party power supply isn’t “almost mandatory”, and doesn’t cost 99€. The 20W model shipped with the Macbook Neo in other markets costs 25€ on Apple’s German store, and a generic 8€ power supply from Amazon will work. The power supply most people already have for their phone will usually also work.

      • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        It’s because they’re required by law to offer it without a power supply. See Article 3a, section 10.

        the problem is not that, but that they are still including the price of the charger in the deal

        • Zak@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          How much cheaper do you think it should be for not including a 20W power supply? I’d be surprised if Apple’s cost for that part is more than 5€.

          • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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            5 hours ago

            it should be cheaper with the full price of the charger

            in my european country, apple’s website says the 1 meter 60 watt usb-c charger cable costs 25 EUR, and the 30 watt usb c charger adapter costs 45 EUR. these are the most budget options I could find on apple’s site

            so, the devife should be 70 EUR cheaper, to be exact

    • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Got an L440, upgraded it to 16 GB and to i7, now it’s a beast. Had to “reset” its battery, otherwise it didn’t last for more than 20-30 minutes. Maybe will swap the screen to a 1080p IPS one and upgrade the WiFi/Bluetooth to modern standards.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      11 hours ago

      I also hate that they no longer ship chargers, but it’s a USB-C charger. Don’t most people have at least one by now? The Neo in particular doesn’t require a very powerful one.

      Now the fact that if you get an M5 Max 16" MBP which takes like a 100ish watt charger (can charge with slightly less, but with 20-30 it’ll be hopeless), you still get no charger, is utter bullshit because most people don’t have such a powerful USB-C charger around unless they’ve had a Macbook Pro made in the last decade already.

      “care about environment 😉”

      Most definitely something they’re doing for improved profit margins, but at the same time, slightly smaller boxes = more boxes per load of cargo = a bunch of CO2 saved on transport. Also they get to manufacture fewer chargers, as repeat customers won’t buy multiple chargers anymore. I do think the impact is significantly more pronounced with phones which get replaced more often and where the charger would take up a bigger percentage of the total box size.

  • Ice@lemmy.zip
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    15 hours ago

    Am I the only one even a little happy to see the head of a major company mentioning upgradability as an appeal for customers?

    Please do stick with two unsoldered SODIMM slots for your laptops Asus.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      11 hours ago

      I don’t know what Asus is doing as I haven’t owned one, but some manufacturers are finally starting to do LPCAMM2. Which near me is actually cheaper than SODIMMs. And is technically superior. One reason (besides being able to sell you a new device when memory goes bad) that manufacturers solder RAM it is that it allows for faster speeds than SODIMMs, at lower power requirements.

      • bitwolf@sh.itjust.works
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        4 hours ago

        Really?!

        The only laptop I was with LPCAMM was a specific Lenovo laptop that used LPCAMM to connect to a SODIMM daughter board.

        Are there others you know of?

        • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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          4 hours ago

          Thinkpad P1 Gen 7 and the upcoming T14 Gen 7. The latter got 10/10 in repairability from iFixit, and the T lineup has always been great at longevity, repairability, and drive-over-it-with-a-tractor-or-pour-water-on-the-keyboard-survivability. I’m suspecting most upcoming Thinkpads will have it. Some Thinkbooks do as well, but I don’t trust any Lenovo without a Thinkpad name on it, and not even all of those.

          Dell Pro Max lineup as well.

          They’re only just starting to come out. Within the next few years I imagine most manufacturers will have offerings with LPCAMM.

      • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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        7 hours ago

        That may be the case, but the most irritating thing is that thy fill all available spots with the lowest-capacity chips that meet the requested provisioning spec, instead of taking the requested provisioning and using the fewest higher-capacity chips needed to meet the provisioning spec. The latter, at least, would leave spots open for an authorized repair location to manually solder on more approved chips of compatible spec.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    17 hours ago

    I think the real shock is the quality of windows and Microsoft, and the pc laptop industry also… When everything about a pc laptop is worse than a mac laptop, why do we expect?

    It really is like no pc laptop manifacturer has pride in what they create anymore. They dont care if its a bad screen, shitty keyboard, horrible battery time. Just get it on market so the people can buy, and pay reviewers for good reviews.

    • invertedspear@lemmy.zip
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      16 hours ago

      It’s always super frustrating that even on “high end“ pc laptops they’ll use some shitty combined Bluetooth and WiFi chip that will bottleneck everything.

    • notgold@aussie.zone
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      11 hours ago

      I got me a dell rugged laptop and the build quality is excellent. It’s effing heavy but solid as anything.

  • BigTrout75@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I can’t speak for Macs. But in the Linux world, 8GB is fine. In Windows it’s awful because of all that bloat. I’m guessing Macs fair better for OS efficiency.

    • [object Object]@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      in the Linux world, 8GB is fine

      So I presume you’re saying that the entire system shouldn’t slow down when Firefox starts swapping?

    • Anivia@feddit.org
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      10 hours ago

      The only time I ever use more than 8gb on my M4 Mac Mini is when I run a Win 11 VM through Parallels

    • MadMadBunny@lemmy.ca
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      23 hours ago

      8GB of ram on Macs is fine for work and medium photo/video editing, as long as you have plenty of SSD space and don’t use Apple Intelligence.

      People forget that MacOS is UNIX at its core.

    • spaghettiwestern@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      23 hours ago

      I’m running Mint on an 8BG laptop and I’m surprised by just how much can be running at one time. Right now I’m running Firefox with 10 open tabs, Waterfox with 8 tabs, Thunderbird, Keepass, Calibre, Signal, a Whatsapp client, Syncthing, Libreoffice Writer with 2 open docs & Calc with 2 open small spreadsheets, a couple of terminals and Gedit, and didn’t even notice it until came across these comments. A friend who uses Windows 11 says 32GB is recommended now.

      Microsoft must be thrilled with age verification being required at the OS level. What a great way to lock people into their Microslop garbage.

      • gurty@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        I’m running Arch on a Macbook Air with 2GB of RAM. Its limited, but it does what I want it to.

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Right now I’m running Firefox with 10 open tabs,

        Oh…I guess I’m the only one who opens firefox, and literally thousands of tabs.

        One day I closed one window and it said “Are you sure you want to close 158 tabs?”

        I said yes. It was one window. I had 23 more windows.

        • spaghettiwestern@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          23 hours ago

          When I get to 20 or so I have to start closing some tabs to keep track of things. How do you find the tab you’re looking for when you have that many open?

          • LeapSecond@lemmy.zip
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            14 hours ago

            Even without any extensions, there is a shortcut in Firefox to search and switch to a tab by typing % on the address bar

          • masterofn001@lemmy.ca
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            23 hours ago

            Tab search.

            Tab groups.

            Color coding.

            I use sideberry addon on Firefox and workspaces in Vivaldi.

          • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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            22 hours ago

            Zen (firefox (gecko) derivative, No AI, focus on decluttered interface) has bloody excellent tab management these days, workspaces, folders, horizontal tab lists (like sideberry), essentials (tab icons pinned to the top), auto unload, all built in, and everything disappears when reading a page.

            • LucidNightmare@anarchist.nexus
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              6 hours ago

              Glance is the most used feature on Zen for me. Everything else I like Firefox for more, but that damn Glance feature really helps me when doing research or looking into things! I NEED it for Firefox! :'(

        • NekoKoneko@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          Literally thousands? Have you tried bookmarking things after they’ve sat unused for awhile?

          I typically just periodically save my browser windows with a tab manager extension. I just say because thousands sounds like way too much to keep track of…

      • Faceman🇦🇺@discuss.tchncs.de
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        20 hours ago

        on my work PC at the moment (lovely little AMD 5700u mini-pc with 16Gb ram) I have a debloated LTSC build on W11 and two profiles of firefox running with a total of 25 tabs, a couple of them are more complex web apps but most are static pages, plus a couple of file browser, an old dumb custom invoicing app we use (~2003 application so its very light) and a VNC viewer with another machine running.

        7.9gb of ram use.

        it’s not that bad really, I mean it’s a lot for just mostly websites but we know they arent as light as they used to be, 8gb would be too little since I need some dedicated for Vram as I run 3 displays but I certainly dont need much more than 16.

        I did have 32gb in this machine at first since I was doing some light photoshop and basic CAD/CAM, but it very rarely exceeded 16gb, so I cut it back and it’s been absolutely fine.

        If you give windows more ram, it will use more ram as a baseline of course, unused ram is wasted ram.

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      21 hours ago

      Many entry level MacBooks of the last decade have probably been 8 GB. I have a M1 MacBook Air and that is 8 GB. It is fine for me.

      • Ulrich@feddit.org
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        20 hours ago

        Not “probably”. They were. For the last decade, up until like last year. And they were awful, and a ripoff. At least they’re not trying to charge $1k+ for this one.

        • Cousin Mose@lemmy.hogru.ch
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          17 hours ago

          Hard disagree. I have the same MacBook Air and it’s still crazy fast. What are y’all really doing that more RAM is so necessary?

            • Cousin Mose@lemmy.hogru.ch
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              16 hours ago

              Ugh, I see this on people’s computers at work during screen sharing. First off, Chrome is the clunkiest browser you could possibly use on macOS and second, why so many tabs? How do y’all need 20 tabs open — like you can’t even see the titles because there are so many?

              • LeapSecond@lemmy.zip
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                14 hours ago

                You don’t need to see the titles (and you can always see them with vertical tabs anyway). There are good cases for having many tabs open. It’s just that chrome is terrible at dealing with them.

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            12 hours ago

            A handful of apps and a few browser tabs will do it. I can go through twice that fairly frequently.

        • MangoCats@feddit.it
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          20 hours ago

          And the RAM upgrade prices have been a consistent Apple profit center for over 20 years now.

        • Rioting Pacifist@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          Most people still browse bloated websites, doesn’t matter what OS you’re using 8GB is going to be tight.

          • Cousin Mose@lemmy.hogru.ch
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            17 hours ago

            As a web developer… what?? If your website needs 8GB on the client to run there are serious, deeply ingrained problems with your front end. I recently scoffed at coworkers who wanted 8GB of memory for just one instance of their web server — I can’t even fathom how cursed the codebase is if the browser plows through 8GB of RAM on a page load.

              • snowdriftissue@lemmy.world
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                14 hours ago

                Exactly. I am not a heavy user but occasionally I need to multitask a bit. I upgraded from 16 gb to 32 gb a while back because with 4 open workspaces, a browser window in each one plus an email client, signal, a couple libreoffice apps open, and my notes app, it was having to use enough swap space that I noticed the performance hit. I’ve had to use some very poorly optimized sites for work that literally used a gig of ram for one tab. A small number of very light users might be ok with 8gb, but most will likely have issues.

              • Eat_Your_Paisley@lemmy.world
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                11 hours ago

                I have 13 tabs open over two browsers (Safari and Firefox) and a text editor open on my Mac and I’m using 1.82GB

                M1 Max MacStudio

        • Ulrich@feddit.org
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          12 hours ago

          I use my computer for simple tasks and can power through double that pretty easily. My family is full of Mac sheep who are constantly coming to me to make their computers faster and I have to tell them I can’t help because their machine was deliberately kneecapped by the OEM and there’s no way to fix it. Fortunately one of them just upgraded to the new Air w/ 16GB and they remark how much faster it is. Obviously it’s faster in lots of other ways, but none of those would do anything if they were still capped at 8GB.

      • Nindelofocho@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        My old laptop is running Pop!OS on 8gigs really well. I mostly do document editing, vector graphics, and a little light gaming. Have not updated to COSMIC yet so will see how that goes. I definitely dont load it up like my beefy desktop though.

      • bitwolf@sh.itjust.works
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        4 hours ago

        How so? I have a work Mac and it uses more ram in general despite both the Mac and my personal laptop both employing memory compression and caching.

        • BladeFederation@piefed.social
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          To clarify, some versions of Linux are lighter weight with resources, and macOS does tend to take up more RAM at rest to make things pull up snappier, if you have it to spare. But their compression algorithm is better, and if you are using near the limit, it will be more efficient with the use of the RAM you have available before lagging. With Windows and Linux, it feels more like if you’re out of RAM you’re out if RAM. It’s less likely to happen at all on Linux though.

          • Rioting Pacifist@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            What compression algorithm? The osx kernel is largely open source so they aren’t doing some secret compression, do they hardware offload it or something?

            OSX enables zswap by default, but on a laptop that regular uses it, I’m not convinced it’s a trade-off that’s worth it, although swapping is different on OSX (IMO worse on modern desktops as it swaps whole apps) so I could be wrong.

        • setsubyou@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          There are some advantages macOS can have but it depends on usage patterns and user knowledge:

          • You don’t have to configure swap on macOS, while on Linux you can get into a situation where e.g. at install time you set up some default 2 GB swap but then it’s not enough and you don’t know that’s a thing that can be changed.
          • You don’t have to configure compression for RAM or swap on macOS; on Linux you often have to know you can set up zram/zswap if you want it. Compression can make a huge difference for users that switch between memory heavy applications as long as they don’t literally switch every 5 seconds.
          • On macOS, applications generally use the same frameworks e.g. for UI (because there is not much choice), and they can be loaded once and shared between all of them. Linux can share libraries too but users can run into situations where their applications use multiple different versions of Qt, GTK, etc. at the same time, and then you have stuff like snap on top that comes with its own copies of even basic system libraries. Containers also do this. As a Linux user you can avoid library bloat to some extent but “normal” users are not aware of it in the first place.
          • Rioting Pacifist@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Dynamic swap and zswap aren’t really the same as efficient ram usage it’s just good ways to mitigate when you run out. But when your using actual swap it’s in my experience more noticable on OSX than Linux, which at least for me remains responsive until you’re using a lot of swap.

            Linux can share libraries too but users can run into situations where their applications use multiple different versions of Qt, GTK, etc. at the same time

            Maybe Arch & Flatpak users hit this, but avoiding multiple versions of the same library is what distros exist for and avoiding loading different frameworks is what Desktop Environments are for. Although the ability to restore apps after closing them is pretty sweet and built in to OSX in a way that lets me safely kill apps to reduce the memory I’m using.

            I think the main reason my Linux setup consumes less memory is probably because I used Kate for most file editing instead of vscode, which is probably an unfair advantage to Linux.

            • setsubyou@lemmy.world
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              14 hours ago

              Dynamic swap and zswap aren’t really the same as efficient ram usage it’s just good ways to mitigate when you run out.

              I disagree. If the OS automatically identifies unneeded pages and compresses them or swaps them out, it’s certainly using the physical memory more efficiently than if it wasn’t doing these things.

              avoiding multiple versions of the same library is what distros exist for

              But they can’t if the applications they want to ship don’t all use the same version. E.g. Ubuntu ships GTK 2, 3, and 4. Arch even still ships GTK 1 in addition to these three.

              avoiding loading different frameworks is what Desktop Environments are for

              What happens is you run KDE but then you still want to run Firefox so you still need GTK.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        51 minutes ago

        That’s not true at all.

        I constantly have Illustrator, Photoshop, Sibelius, Scrivener, and about 100 browser tabs open on my 10 year old MacBook with 8gb of RAM without issue.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        5 hours ago

        It can also do things and still use the same 6 gigs.

        MacOS caches a lot. That memory is freed when it’s needed for other things.

        • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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          2 hours ago

          No I keep seeing this “caches a lot” thing keeps getting repeated. Memory break downs already accounts for that. They shows the different break downs of ram usage. In use vs cached.

          This is 6gb of inuse memory while the laptop is chilling. Cached memory is typically like 80% of whatever the ram is on your device. If you hit that 8gb your app is getting killed before the kernel kills a system process.