What to expect from Apple on October 18

The moment many an Apple fan has been waiting for is almost here: The company today announced its second fall ‘special event’ of the year, where it almost surely will reveal its latest set of ARM-powered MacBook Pros. The event will stream from Apple.com and YouTube on October 18 at 10 AM PT.

There’s a good chance we’ll see some other devices show up too — here’s what you should expect.

Probably: New ‘M1X’ 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros

We’ve been hearing rumors for ages that Apple is planning to announce new 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros in 2021, and next week’s event sure seems like the time for for it. The devices are expected to ship with a more powerful version of the M1 chip in the existing Apple devices like the current MacBook Air and iMac.

Although this new souped-up processor has often been dubbed ‘M1X’ — Apple has even used the term as a tag in a YouTube video — it’s not clear if that’s what the new chip will actually be named. In any case, you can expect a significant performance leap over the M1, which already provides the best performance-per-watt on the market. The M1X is rumored to add an extra two cores, bringing the count to 10.

Perhaps more importantly, the devices should show significant GPU gains in order to compete with devices that have dedicated graphics cards — rumors have pointed to a new 16-core and/or 32-core GPU, instead of the 8-core GPU in M1 devices. Of course, it’s still possible Apple plans to work with AMD on a dedicated GPU instead as it has in the past, but that seems unlikely at this point.

Processing power aside, the devices may also debut Mini LED on a MacBook for the first time, allowing for nearly-OLED-like contrast and super bright displays. The technology showed up on the iPad Pro this year and it’s only a matter of time until it makes its way to MacBooks — not to mention we’ve been hearing rumors about it for ages.

A recent leak also suggests Apple is going for a taller aspect ratio this time around, closer to 3:2 than its traditional 16:10.

Other expected specs include a 1080P webcam, a new MagSafe connector, an SD card slot, and even — gasp — an HDMI port. The devices are also expected to start at 16GB of RAM and 512 GB of storage.

As a Windows guy, I feel like I’m living in a bizarro world, where the ‘Apple Tax’ actually gets you more ports and better performance than you can find on most comparable Windows machines, not just an alternative OS and cool design (by comparison, the Surface Laptop Studio has just two Thunderbolt 4 ports and the optional Surface Connect dock.). That is, if the rumors pan out.

Oh, and the Touch Bar is supposedly going away too. Good riddance.