19 pointsby gslin15 hours ago2 comments
  • donkeylazy45610 hours ago
    I remember Intel MBP 16" suffered VRM overheat and the method that transfer heat to bottom shell case by attaching thermal pad was there too.

    Sometime Apple intentionally ignores engineering problems when they want to push some product design aspects.

    • simulator5g5 hours ago
      On the other hand I see a very hot bottom case as an engineering problem that Apple solved by not using a thermal pad. Sometimes higher clock speeds don't really mean much for the user experience. For example I can set my gaming laptop to run in eco mode, or turbo mode, and the performance with simple tasks like web browsing is roughly the same. In these sorts of situations, its better to let the chip slow down a bit to preserve my thighs.
      • donkeylazy4563 hours ago
        The problem was mbp retail product couldn't provide performance processor can do. I am not saying they needed to apply thermal pad to transfer heat via bottom case. They should provide proper VRM cooling solution at that time.

        actually, the throttle people suffered also can interfere normal use-case not only for power hogging scenario.

  • ActorNightly13 hours ago
    I really don't get why Apple hasn't got into the dock game at all. With full vertical integration, they could literally make a doc that has cooling interface built in which can make laptops able to run faster.
    • 4fterd4rk10 hours ago
      Good lord you people truly don’t have any understanding of what normal people like or why Apple is so successful.
    • simulator5g5 hours ago
      That's a very un-Apple idea. Their philosophy is that the user shouldn't have to think about things like thermals. You buy the system that can handle your workload. They don't want you buying the cheap option and hot rodding it.

      Maybe this makes more sense in 2026 with the focus on local AI models, but I think Apple would prefer to sell high end desktops AND high end laptops to people who want both portability and maximum performance.