Apple Business

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/03/introducing-apple-business-a-new-all-in-one-platform-for-businesses-of-all-sizes/

Comments

meegoMar 24, 2026, 4:55 PM
I recently tried setting Apple Business Manager for our ≈20 people SME.

The first step was "Domain Lock/Capture" which takes over all Apple accounts for a specific domain.

I've never had a worse experience from Apple.

The process is buggy, filled with foot-guns and dead ends. It expects huge amounts of work from users who have had their account for more than a few weeks and are expected to remove a lot of their personal data before their account can be migrated (e.g. do you know how to delete all your Health data?). The process is also impossible to cancel.

Phone support was par for the course, e.g. tickets escalated to the abyss, suggestions to restore workstations to factory settings, etc.

Be warned.

geoffharcourtMar 24, 2026, 5:11 PM
The domain lock process was an absolute fiasco at our company. I think this could work if you did this at the time your company launched, but the moment you have employees who have Apple IDs tied to their work email that aren't from the Business Essentials system you are stuck in an impossible-to-mange place.

There are several cheap MDM solutions for Apple devices that I would rather pay for than be dependent on this. (We've used SimpleMDM and love them.)

cocoflunchyMar 24, 2026, 5:15 PM
I'm currently in that hellish process too... I don't know how to get out of it. Did you know that your employees will be forbidden from downloading from the App store once you launched that migration? It's a nightmare
FireBeyondMar 24, 2026, 6:52 PM
Apple and MDM has always been a shit show. In the days as recently as Ventura (last time I tried it), MDM bypass was as simple as "null route 4 DNS entries during install process, remove null routing after install complete, and never be bothered by it again". This is on Apple Silicon. With no workarounds or anything, upgrades work all the way up to Tahoe.

Like really Apple, that's your device "locking"? I could test activate my work Mac with my personal Apple ID while doing this, no alarm bells, nothing, effectively "It's your laptop now".

IrishTechieMar 24, 2026, 7:57 PM
The baffling thing is that iOS+MDM has been fantastic over the years. macOS is a completely different beast though.
jamiecurleMar 24, 2026, 10:43 PM
MacOS used to be excellent for a short period of time when Fleetsmith existed. Then Apple purchased Fleetsmith around 2020 and killed the product not long after.

Fortunately around the same time, JamF ended the practice of the mandatory Jamf JumpStart (£5K fee), which finally made Jamf a feasible option for the company I was in at the time.

wolvoleoMar 25, 2026, 9:08 AM
True, I remember looking at jamf at one point and the mandatory consulting was so annoying because we already had it dialled in on the free trial.

In the end we just made do with intune. It's a lot less capable for Mac but these days you can get by with it.

bzmrgonzMar 25, 2026, 5:35 PM
hopefully there's no kill switch for macs on intune, if not, the threat of wiping machines with one click is real, just ask stryker; https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/stryker-attack-device...
wolvoleoMar 25, 2026, 11:27 PM
Of course there is a kill switch. This is one of the key features of an MDM/endpoint manager. You won't be able to sell one without it. It's also built in to apple's management protocol (which most endpoint management systems leverage) and in activesync.

You just have to secure it properly. Have limits to how many one admin can wipe etc. But trust me every company with managed IT assets has this capability. Often even in BOYD scenarios! Stryker just failed to secure access to it properly and to set sensible limits.

However, the feature isn't very effective in the field. It's very unlikely for an attacker to be smart enough to bypass the password on a stolen Mac which is needed to connect it to WiFi, yet at the same time be dumb enough to connect it to the unfiltered internet so it can receive the wipe command. The overlap between these sets of people is almost zero. We do fire a wipe at every stolen computer but I doubt it ever actually happens. If it ever happens it'll be a total end user fail (like writing the password on a post-it with the laptop)

Either you will lose it to a common thief who won't be able to breach the login (99% of cases), or to a really targeted adversary who has cellebrite or something similar and won't connect it to the internet ever again. This is still the most risky scenario because if someone like that steals it, there's bound to be something really valuable on it.

In practice this is something more suited to mobile devices.

wpmMar 24, 2026, 7:49 PM
Well yeah, the idea is that if you have ABM, you have an MDM you can use to purchase licenses for them and install the apps with the MDM.
IrishTechieMar 24, 2026, 7:55 PM
It can be done that way, but it is definitely not the norm. Businesses will generally “purchase” (many for €0) apps in ABM that are to be used for business purposes and push those to devices, the user can then use an Apple ID to download any other apps they want for personal use.
ndespresMar 24, 2026, 8:15 PM
If they’re using Managed Apple IDs they will have no access at all to the app store and won’t be able to download their own apps anymore. IT department will have to buy and assign any apps that anyone needs, even the $0 ones that only 1 person needs.
Anon1096Mar 25, 2026, 4:02 PM
Yep. Truly horrid policy. Where I work our issued iPhones suck to use without App Store access; no Bitwarden was the killer for me personally. Everyone I checked with uses their personal email/Apple ID instead of the MAID, and there's a sword over your head if you ever accidently copy/paste something from internal emails to something like Notes which has iCloud sync (we're semi serious about leaker). Absolute failure of an MDM setup by Apple.
wpmMar 25, 2026, 4:19 PM
MDM can restrict pasteboard from managed apps to non-managed apps, as well as allowing iCloud sign-ins but restricting which iCloud services are allowed.

It's an absolute failure of the MDM server administrator for allowing such things, not on Apple.

lynx97Mar 25, 2026, 5:58 AM
If my employer did that to me, I would seriously consider sueing them.
jazzyjacksonMar 25, 2026, 6:29 AM
You’ve never been issued a work computer that’s not yours to fuck around with?
ghaffMar 25, 2026, 6:45 AM
I haven’t. Did have issued laptops that were company managed but I basically didn’t use and, in any case, I like many others reinstalled a clean operating system image and did my own support.
bacheaulMar 25, 2026, 9:59 AM
At most decent sized companies with a cyber security and network admin team, this is probably the fastest way to get disconnected from the internal corporate network with no way to reconnect.
PxldLtdMar 25, 2026, 10:41 AM
I always seem to end up with local admin at the bigger places I've been at because I'm so annoying with onboarding and requesting access to download development tools.
ghaffMar 25, 2026, 8:58 PM
This was a larger company and they did not care so long as you followed policies like turning on encryption. Companies do differ.
wolvoleoMar 25, 2026, 8:49 AM
You could do that in our place but you'd lose access to everything due to not being in compliance.

In a small shop that might work but not in an enterprise with ISO norms and security certifications to meet.

lynx97Mar 25, 2026, 7:46 AM
I was talking about domain capture. If you own my apple ID just because I used the company email to register it, I will definitely consider sueing you.
onion2kMar 25, 2026, 7:58 AM
Just on a personal note, tying your personal devices to your work email account is a very silly thing to do. Even if it's your company you could be locked out of your company email account at any time (HR grievance, SEC investigation, hostile takeover...) Losing access to your devices and not being able to access things like reset emails at the same time would not be fun.
pavlovMar 25, 2026, 9:56 AM
Sue for what? Do you think you own the company email address?
anxmanMar 24, 2026, 8:58 PM
This was a big pain in the ass for me to figure out. I ended up using the free version of Mosyle and hiring someone on Fiverr to help me figure out how to get the licenses assigned to our managed devices.
geoffharcourtMar 25, 2026, 4:12 PM
I did not. If I had known what would happen when we tried this we would have skipped the process entirely. Our staff (roughly 125) was so confused and it wasted a lot of time communicating about it, then trying to roll it back, etc.
TheNewsIsHereMar 26, 2026, 10:11 PM
The Domain Capture process cannot be canceled once it’s started. It’s also not required, unless by your company policy.

The point is to make sure there’s not a mess on the other end when you enforce SSO for MAIDs.

Apple’s documentation for ABM and ABE is atrocious, but they do manage to document a bunch of footguns, just poorly and in seemingly bizarre places.

For example, ABE doesn’t support MDM migration (either as source or destination), despite the fact that the feature launched with macOS/iOS/iPadOS 26 and is supported by other MDM solutions.

And you cannot push custom config profiles with ABE which declare a non-Apple preference domain. Utter nonsense.

If you’re using the full ABM-with-ADE and MDM stack, it’s expected that you push apps to employees.

You can also use Munki to make apps available to users. You can just push only Munki via MDM if you want, and let it manage app installs and self service installs for you. There are caveats.

pottertheotterMar 24, 2026, 10:33 PM
> I think this could work if you did this at the time your company launched, but the moment you have employees who have Apple IDs tied to their work email that aren't from the Business Essentials system you are stuck in an impossible-to-mange place.

I had the same thing happen but with Microsoft. A friend and I had started a small consulting business and were using Google Workspace, but I needed a Microsoft account to interact with a client. I made one with my business email. None of us knew any better, but I couldn’t connect with our client’s Microsoft setup because it was a personal account. So I went to set up a business account. It was a whole fiasco and the only way I could really fix it was create an alias and use that for Microsoft.

AdamNMar 25, 2026, 9:29 AM
That's why Enterprise vendors try so hard to get startups using their stuff. Lock-in is so strong. I can't imagine having a working system at a 100 person company and then trying to migrate to something else unless the current situation was truly awful.
SoftTalkerMar 25, 2026, 6:50 PM
> the moment you have employees who have Apple IDs tied to their work email that aren't from the Business Essentials system you are stuck in an impossible-to-mange place

So give all the employees an email alias they can use to create a new Apple ID for this purpose?

yabutlivnWoodsMar 24, 2026, 11:24 PM
> I think this could work if you did this at the time your company launched

This should not be a surprise. Greenfield services have not existed long enough to resolve edge cases that inevitably arise while integrating existing operating models already in use.

geoffharcourtMar 25, 2026, 11:11 PM
The broken part of this process (domain claim) has existed for several years as part of ABE, it isn't new.
yabutlivnWoodsMar 27, 2026, 1:44 AM
My point was trying to fit a new company with no barnacles into an existing process model will always be easier than retrofitting an existing company model full of edge cases the service never had to engineer around

Not really sure why you made that point only to wave it away later saying it's always been broken regardless

wil421Mar 24, 2026, 9:53 PM
How does a company allow personal Apple IDs?
rescbrMar 25, 2026, 3:08 AM
Employee needs to download Microsoft Remote Desktop (sorry, Windows App) that is only distributed through App Store.

Employee does not trust the company having access to everything else in their personal iCloud account - photos, mails, messages, calendar, reminders, etc.

Employee registers a new Apple ID with company email, as it would be only used for downloading one single app.

wil421Mar 25, 2026, 4:38 PM
Got it. It’s registering with the company email first, not their personal one.
pottertheotterMar 24, 2026, 10:25 PM
I think the idea is that it happens before they lock the domain as a business. Before that, if you have an email address you can create a personal account with it.
jamiecurleMar 24, 2026, 10:36 PM
yes, that's exactly how it happens.
clawooMar 25, 2026, 12:08 PM
I had a "wonderful" experience as well.

I wanted to evaluate it for MDM purposes so I applied for an ABM account for a company I work for, got soft-approved, created an entirely new Apple ID (as required by the ABM), used it to log on a test device I intended to manage, then sort of forgot about it while awaiting for Apple to conclude their hard-approval for the ABM account creation.

Apple was supposed to contact the business owner to verify company details and finalize the process over the next few days, but they never did.

30 days later they canceled the ABM company account and deleted all the associated users along with the Apple ID which I used to log into a testing device, which now became a fairly expensive paperweight.

I had very little expectations about the experience and I was still disappointed.

TimByteMar 25, 2026, 2:15 PM
This is the kind of failure mode that makes people nervous about tightly coupled identity + device management
AnthonyMouseMar 25, 2026, 10:04 AM
> Be warned.

This is exactly what I would have expected from an Apple "business" offering. Apple's whole shtick is to take away most of your choices so that they can focus on the limited number of things they still allow you to do. Businesses need the opposite of that.

Businesses will show up needing integrations with multiple existing third party (often legacy) systems with inherent complexity and then want something that allows them to manage that complexity since it can't be eliminated. It's not really possible in that context to have the experience people otherwise expect Apple to provide, and the thing Apple normally does will often make it worse by removing choices you may have needed in order to make interaction with a third party system less of a pain.

SoleilAbsoluMar 24, 2026, 8:39 PM
FWIW, my experience doing this process for a ~130 person org last year was pretty painless compared to other Domain Claims I've initiated for other SAAS vendors (Docusign in particular), and MDM nightmares (expired JAMF certificates, I'm looking at you).

We had to do it as ppl had made personal Apple accounts using our domain, meaning if they logged in with such an account and left, their iPhone magically transformed into an expensive, elegant paperweight. Due to a setting in our previous MDM we were unable to migrate data cleanly using Apple Biz Manager without committing to use ABM as our MDM (we couldn't) so we told people to "move it yourself following these detailed instructions, otherwise it can't be migrated." Regarding personal data like health on company-managed devices, I certainly don't share that type of info with my employer, and make it clear to staff that it's not our responsibility to migrate such data.

bzmrgonzMar 25, 2026, 5:36 PM
Can you expand on this, specifically how it compares with jamf? It is a direct competitor to jamf right? Essentially Apple vying to eat their lunch right?
czscoutMar 24, 2026, 8:49 PM
Yes, as an IT professional at a company where a few people have insisted on using Macs, the ABM workflow is by far the most frustrating, half baked product I've had the displeasure of using. People love to complain about Entra/Azure AD, but ABM is another level of obtuse.
pseufauxMar 24, 2026, 10:12 PM
What's bad is that it's so much better than it used to be and still this bad.
cjMar 24, 2026, 6:19 PM
We use Apple Business Manager. Locking a domain is not a requirement if you're just doing basic MDM, I'm pretty sure. (I also had a negative experience with it, so we didn't use it and everyone just uses their personal apple IDs). Is it no longer possible to skip this step in setting up the account?
gregoriolMar 25, 2026, 12:04 PM
In any serious business, you don't want people to use their personal Apple IDs: that could lock their company provided devices for ever when they leave, you also don't want to buy them apps that you won't be able to re-use when they leave, ...
cjMar 25, 2026, 12:41 PM
> that could lock their company provided devices for ever when they leave

MDMs like JamF offer override codes to disable activation lock. Hasn’t been an issue in my experience.

matt_daemonMar 24, 2026, 9:57 PM
Apple's cloud software has been buggy as hell for a long time, at least for me.

I'm in a family iCloud group with my parents... one day I just woke up and had all my podcasts and music replaced with my Mum's :/

Would not want this anywhere near a "business" experience

ezfeMar 25, 2026, 2:01 AM
I'm just gonna go ahead and say that I'm not sure what happened there but either you or your mom signed in with your account on the other device.

I have a lot of technical understanding with how CloudKit works and there's not a pathway for what you're describing to come out of a family group.

jazzyjacksonMar 25, 2026, 6:35 AM
Maybe Something to do with Family Purchase Sharing. I didn’t realize when I bought an audio book it would appear in my dad’s library. Kind of embarrassing. Apple’s help pages make it sound very opt in but I think there are bugs where libraries are merged by default. Some say on a quiet night you can still hear Bono singing “sexy boots”…
ezfeMar 26, 2026, 1:13 AM
Libraries are not merged, only purchase history. It does not download to their device in any scenario automatically.

A lot of people have their iTunes accounts signed in on other devices which would do what you describe, but not family sharing.

ukuinaMar 25, 2026, 5:30 AM
Hence, "buggy".
true_religionMar 24, 2026, 7:09 PM
AFAIK, it works with subdomains, so you can use something like employees.example.com as your domain, and capture over that.
slynMar 24, 2026, 7:48 PM
The org I work for just makes alias's - @ourbrandmdm.com for ABM that forward to their @ourbrand.com emails.
jillesvangurpMar 24, 2026, 8:53 PM
Same here, I never even got in. I never managed to get in. My account is good enough to take my money for other things but somehow I can't manage to onboard into the damn thing so that I can actually manage devices for my company. I just gave up in the end. Couldn't get it done.

I'll try again next month see how far I get with this. This needs to be way simpler than it currently is. Hopefully they fixed a few things there.

wolvoleoMar 25, 2026, 8:45 AM
It's completely impossible for a 60k employee shop too yeah. They also want you to rearrange the azure ad the way Apple wants. Also impossible for us.

And we have like 20k or so users with manually created Apple IDs on their company email and every one of them has to be manually resolved. It's a joke.

theprattMar 25, 2026, 1:39 PM
Our recent (ongoing) experience with Apple Business Manager is just as bad. With no reason or contact they've sent "we can't verify so we've disabled your account because you don't meet the requirements". We ring support and they tell us to try again with no additional information. We then get "we can't verify so we've deleted your accounts" with no information. "Amazing" "experience".

This is also after they've verified us (and our DUNS number) for app signing and distribution. We already have a verified account in another service of theirs!

quietsegfaultMar 24, 2026, 6:34 PM
This was my experience switching from GMail to Apple’s mail service. I switched back after a few days.
givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:36 PM
Genuinely curious, what were the Apple mail service issues for you? I hate gmail and have had zero issues with my @Mac.com email in 20+ years, that I’ve noticed. Thanks
quietsegfaultMar 24, 2026, 10:40 PM
Lots and lots of missing messages. That was the big one. Anything from a SaaS just never arrived, like tickets, notifications, etc. I had random IMAP authentication failures too.
xp84Mar 24, 2026, 10:44 PM
Do you find that iCloud email can correctly handle both “true spam” (meaning the nonsense garbage kind) and “promotional email” effectively?
razakelMar 24, 2026, 8:26 PM
I gave up when it wanted a Dun and Bradstreet number (whoever they are) and the website to get one didn't work.
dlgMar 24, 2026, 8:30 PM
I have had the misfortune of having to get D&B numbers (for various Apple things). I believe is the source for lead lists where you start to get dozens to text and phone spam calls per day. Do not pay hundreds of dollars for this if you can at all avoid it.
keerthikoMar 24, 2026, 8:56 PM
Definitely avoid unless you are distributing a consumer application through the dominant app stores (App Store and Google Play) ~globally, in which case you may not be able to avoid (or avoiding will be just as much work).

Google and Apple require it for lots of mobile apps targeting certain consumer segments because some countries (eg: Brazil, IIRC? don't quote me on that) have chosen to use D&B as a qualified unique identifier of business legitimacy and it requires exposing personal information of your company's leadership to them.

yolo3000Mar 24, 2026, 9:22 PM
Afaik every company has a DNB number. It's a credit risk company which sources company data from every country.
bitwizeMar 25, 2026, 2:51 AM
Dun & Bradstreet is a business credit agency. Having a D-U-N-S number, which they issue, is like table stakes for being taken seriously as a business.
nuodagMar 24, 2026, 11:14 PM
I also organised this process at work, and it went rather well, (300ppl 10 year old), but of course no one had health data connected under the company domain, thats a crazy idea and it’s probably good apple enforces that to be deleted / moved / disentangled.

It is also clearly described how to move an account that is used privately to a different domain / mail.

jiveturkeyMar 24, 2026, 9:04 PM
you only need to do the domain lock part if you plan to use MAIDs. For 20 people you probably didn't need to do that, at least not at the same time as the rest. You can do it as a later step, not the first step.
tom1337Mar 25, 2026, 1:36 PM
Ohh we had a similar experience with Google Cloud. Added our organization and Domain into their Auth system and suddenly all users were migrated into a (invisible / transparent) workspace and could no longer use their calendar or google drive as the workspace had no free usage like you have on a normal free tier.
cyptusMar 25, 2026, 7:29 AM
some years ago i tried this setup for a german company with a special char in its name („ä“) and failed because Apple was not able to match it against DUNS. It took months of support to get it done.
neuroelectronMar 25, 2026, 5:50 AM
>The process is also impossible to cancel.

This sort of thing should probably be illegal.

TimByteMar 25, 2026, 2:13 PM
Apple's clean separation model only really works if you start that way from day one
classifiedMar 25, 2026, 2:50 PM
Apple really seems to go out of their way to show users the middle finger.
legitsterMar 24, 2026, 9:27 PM
This announcement is pretty sad. If you're wondering why Apple is an IT department nightmare, this announcement is more of a confession. Today your corporate MacBook can have ... preinstalled software! And user groups (for the Apple store and iCloud).

Wait, there's more!

> In addition, customers can now set up business email, calendar, and directory services with their own domain name for seamless and elevated communication and collaboration.

Wow, a custom domain name!

> Apple Business enables automated Managed Apple Account creation for new employees through integration with an identity service provider, including Google Workspace, Microsoft Entra ID, and more.

In the year 2026, I can finally start logging into my corporate laptop with my corporate ID. Wow!

Them stapling on the announcement of advertisements for Apple Maps is especially hilarious. I don't think the people managing fleet devices at a corporation are the same people who are interested in setting their location ad strategy. But Apple saw they had two vaguely business-y things at the same time and thought they would really hit it off together.

I have to imagine that the Apple Neo is heavily aimed at volume sales - low level white collar workers and education. These features seem to be hastily assembled to meet the needs of these potential buyers.

weslleyskahMar 25, 2026, 12:40 AM
Why people bother with all of this to lock the environment into some kind of corporate nightmare? Why not allow some freedom for the worker. I don't see the appeal, it feels like a claustrophobic cage
ArainachMar 25, 2026, 1:10 AM
There are many reasons.

* Preprovisioning - devices have the right certificates and know about your corporate networks. They have the necessary apps and just work.

* Tracking - if a device is lost or stolen, monitor where it is and remotely lock or wipe it

* Monitoring - have a log to audit if someone does something malicious

* Security - reduce the chance of your employees installing malware, spyware, etc. whether by accident or intention

* Locking things down - put gates in the way of bad actions like copying sensitive data into public apps or clouds. Even if you're unable to block everything, attempts to block remind honest employees and provide strong evidence that anyone who proceeds was intentionally violating policy and should be fired.

Etc., etc.

dabocksterMar 25, 2026, 11:17 PM
Bigger one:

* Predictability - eliminating the number of unknown factors that could cause a person to have issues using their computer. Reminds me of how a secretary I serviced was somehow able to install Google Desktop back in the day, and how that caused a massive argument between my boss and theirs when their computer needed to be re-imaged. Most IT approved programs are known to store user data in known locations on a computer, which makes backups and restorations very easy. Stuff like Google Desktop did not do that, which means likely breaking someone's workflow in the re-image process.

microtonalMar 25, 2026, 10:26 AM
A lot of it is compliance. To get some types of customers you need to pass some security compliance certification or checks, which often have requirements like only giving access to crucial infrastructure when devices are up-to-date, the possibility to remote-disable/erase a device when it is stolen, some kind of anti-virus installed (yeah, I know), etc.

I can understand the underlying reasons, you would be surprised how many employees have bad security hygiene, which becomes an issue when they have access to high value information, tokens, etc. But since they often somewhat draconian rules, they tend to have bad side-effects (similar to password reminders). E.g. Linux users will often set up ClamAV to fulfill the anti-virus requirement. However, ClamAV parses untrusted data in C code without any sandboxing, so it probably opens a new attack vector (as opposed to Windows Defender, which as far as AFAIR uses sandboxing or a micro-VM to parse untrusted data).

legitsterMar 25, 2026, 2:09 AM
The most clear and obvious use case is for school computers. You do NOT want to provision student devices en masse without protections (for both the students and the district). I envision this is a deal breaker right now that Apple is dealing with.

Even if your Corp doesn't want to do full user surveillance, there's still a lot of advantages to group policy. Roll out new software instantly, SSO enforcement, remote troubleshooting, etc.

eastboundMar 25, 2026, 6:02 AM
SOC2 requires to ensure all computers have the software updates installed. While certification apps can check every desktop with a monitor, ABM could just do it and enforce it.

SOC2 also encourages SSO.

notatoadMar 25, 2026, 7:31 PM
ever worked in IT support? letting people customize their environment both increases the amount of support that users require, and increases the difficulty of providing that support.

a laptop in a stock configuration can be swapped out for a new one when it breaks. a laptop that has three years of accumulated customizations installed on it means that the employee wants their laptop back when it breaks, and they want it fixed ASAP.

when you're supporting a user who doesn't know how to type a URL into their web browser, it's a whole lot easier if you don't have to start that call with asking what web browser they're using.

umviMar 25, 2026, 9:32 PM
Regulatory compliance. If you want to sell your product to the UK, for example, you have to (see: UK Cyber Essentials). The more you try to expand your market, the more regulations you will run into that are solved with spyware and locked down computers.
pjc50Mar 25, 2026, 10:04 AM
Single-sign-on is actually useful.

Most of the rest of this stuff .. well, who is responsible if the laptop is compromised?

ryukopostingMar 25, 2026, 1:20 AM
Because corporations like to control their peons. I'm sure your work laptop is laden with the same kind of corporate bullshit, it's just that MS Exchange stopped being a hot topic like 25 years ago.
stephenrMar 25, 2026, 5:29 AM
It's an announcement that they're providing first party integrated first party services for something that until now has largely relied on third party solutions.

Not knowing about the exiting solutions to provision/manage Macs is one thing. Not knowing about them and claiming they're inferior because of what you didn't know is just bizarre.

I don't know what it is about the type of people who end up doing pc support, but an irrational dislike of Macs seems to be systemic. I worked in an IT department when Novell was still a thing, an a senior guy with years of Unix experience would make jokes about "toy operating system" while also alternating between screaming at and practically fellating windows XP.

general_revealMar 25, 2026, 12:38 AM
Apple will probably deliver the best unified AI experience for productivity. Digging into Microsoft’s domain (which has been seriously selling off). Your workers will want iOS and right now its perfect timing to sell LLM subs. This is a very aggressive and opportunistic move.
bitpushMar 25, 2026, 7:18 PM
True, like Siri.

Sorry Apple Intelligence.

dfabulichMar 24, 2026, 5:26 PM
Strategically, Apple's not setting themselves up for success here by giving Apple Business away for free (with paid per-user storage bumps).

As a lot of people on this thread have pointed out, Apple's Business Manager needs a lot of improvements. ("Bring your own device" support is terrible, for example. Changing business names requires a perilous migration step. Support reps don't have the tools to fix serious issues.)

If Apple Business were a real revenue source, if they charged luxury prices for a luxurious business support experience, they could pay for developers to fix their stuff.

Instead, Apple Business is a free side hustle for Apple, a hobby. But they're proposing to control your entire domain, to Domain Lock all Apple accounts for your domain, to put your businesses's life in their hands, for "free."

Don't fall for it.

Spooky23Mar 24, 2026, 10:50 PM
You’re not thinking it through. There’s a rich enterprise ecosystem for MDM. Microsoft, Google, Omnissa, IBM, etc.

They don’t want to compete with those partners, and wouldn’t be effective if they did. But, there’s a gap of smaller companies and institutions where they benefit from MDM capabilities but don’t have the budget or wherewithal to even know how to shop for MDM.

So they spend a bit of money, give Apple Store reps something to do and add an incentive to buy another iPhone.

hnlmorgMar 24, 2026, 8:43 PM
> If Apple Business were a real revenue source, if they charged luxury prices for a luxurious business support experience, they could pay for developers to fix their stuff.

Apple can already easily afford those developers. They’re not exactly running at a loss ;)

Plus given how each new iteration of macOS and iOS is a steady step backwards for usability, I don’t have a huge amount of trust in their abilities to fix Business if it had become a strategic product tomorrow.

matthewfcarlsonMar 24, 2026, 9:08 PM
The reality is that every business unit needs to justify its existence and when asking for headcount, it’s easier to point to a revenue stream you’re tied to rather than “we help sell some things to businesses”
hnlmorgMar 24, 2026, 11:46 PM
I don’t disagree with that. But equally most business units in Apple are not tied to revenue streams. From R&D though to developers for other non-subscription software. And that’s before you then factor in the non-delivery team (eg finance, HR, lawyers, etc).

So it’s not like a review stream is a requirement.

Moreover, even back when they did have back office tooling as a revenue stream (eg OSX Server), Apple still left it to slowly rot before finally discontinuing it.

So I just don’t think this is something anyone’s Apple cares enough about. If they did, then we wouldn’t be having this conversation to begin with.

raw_anon_1111Mar 24, 2026, 10:04 PM
If that were the case, the only business units that would ever be get funding would be the hardware sales.

Even with AWS I doubt many of the service teams make enough money to justify their existence alone.

carlosjobimMar 24, 2026, 10:03 PM
Are you sure Apple does their accounting in that way?
xp84Mar 24, 2026, 10:46 PM
Do you have a reason to believe they don’t? We’re not talking about some weird or obscure custom, it’s just basic business ideas.
robotresearcherMar 24, 2026, 11:56 PM
Apple famously doesn't have conventional business units.

https://www.apple.com/careers/pdf/HBR_How_Apple_Is_Organized...

carlosjobimMar 24, 2026, 11:46 PM
I think the burden of evidence is with you in this case. It doesn't make sense for Apple to do their accounting with such a method.
dabocksterMar 25, 2026, 11:30 PM
"If Apple Business were a real revenue source, if they charged luxury prices for a luxurious business support experience, they could pay for developers to fix their stuff. Instead, Apple Business is a free side hustle for Apple, a hobby."

I'm wrestling with something similar to this right now in Linux. The only real player that charges "enough" to have a "absolutely zero tolerance for base OS breakage" approach to OS development is Red Hat. Ubuntu LTS is more widespread but only really because it's $0 even for large businesses, and that's honestly reflected in it sometimes having hardware breakage during a version's initial two year mainstream support run. Having Windows's business backed level of "doesn't break" on hardware is rare on Linux.

xp84Mar 24, 2026, 10:51 PM
Agreed, and honestly, I’m put off by the freeness because I agree it means that support will be nothing, just the Tier 1 call center reps who can read you scripts of how to hold down the power button to reset your computer, etc.

And I’d be very skeptical any business user anywhere can skate by on the iCloud Free Tier. Of all the stingy free tiers, it’s that one.

If they cared, they would make a Teams/Slack equivalent, a Zoom Killer, maybe a Confluence Killer, and charge per head, and offer storage tiers comparable to what MS and GOOG do.

(And no, don’t even joke that Messages and FaceTime are Slack and Zoom killers.)

sleepybrettMar 24, 2026, 5:59 PM
Seems like par for the course for a product launch like this. I'll see where they are in a year.
gowldMar 24, 2026, 7:20 PM
Who would pay them for it before "developers fixed their stuff"?
WaterluvianMar 24, 2026, 8:59 PM
The way it works is that Apple would have committed more resources if the projected outcome was more revenue. By choosing to approach it as a free option, they committed a free option's worth of resourcing to it.
9devMar 24, 2026, 8:44 PM
People fooled by an expectation of quality extrapolated from their end-user experience. Alternatively, people who have to carry out orders from managers who never have to interact with it personally.
martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:21 PM
599$ serviceable MacBooks, easy to use MDM, Cloud, Email and Calendar and flat-fee AppleCare all baked in?

New businesses under 50 employees are going to eat this up like there's no tomorrow.

I'd be scared if I was certain Redmond corporation who makes their money on 365 and Intune.

selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 4:25 PM
Microsoft is a giant enterprise software company that also publishes Candy Crush and Call of Duty.

Intune and Windows are 'nice to have' but are not the business-business. The business is 365 (which runs on Macs and is worlds better than Apple's office suite + Apple's hosted email is god awful) and Azure.

genthreeMar 24, 2026, 4:49 PM
Apple's office suite is my favorite I've ever used, and it's not close.

After that, old copies of MSOffice.

Next-best would be a hodgepodge of the lighter options on Linux and such. Gnumeric, Abiword, that sort of thing. Not great, but at least they're light on resources and easy to use.

Distantly after that, LibreOffice.

Then, modern MSOffice in last place.

The only reason I'd count any of them as "worse" than modern MSOffice is that ~perfect office compatibility and a bulletproof excuse when things go wrong ("I'm also using MSOffice, don't know why your document isn't working") is non-negotiable in any business context.

[EDIT] Oh I forgot about Google. That's actually the true last-place. Modern MSOffice isn't worse than that. Christ the performance is awful.

MidnightRider39Mar 24, 2026, 5:06 PM
Crazy how different people experience this.

For me it’s completely inverted; Google is top place, then Libreoffice, then MSOffice, then anything by Apple last place.

aftergibsonMar 24, 2026, 6:09 PM
Yeah that would by my ranking too. At work is Google because it's the best, particularly for collabotation, personally all in on FOSS.
genthreeMar 24, 2026, 5:25 PM
I value performance and stability highly, and Apple's productivity programs are so light I can leave them open in the background and forget they're running for months at a time even on fairly old, weak machines. And I'm not sure I've ever seen any of them crash (I can't say the same about, say, LibreOffice or pretty much any other Linux-associated productivity software). That they're a ton more polished and stable than things like Abiword or Gnumeric, and have most modern features I'd expect (even live collaborative editing) puts them solidly above those other light options.

I hate modern MSOffice's UI, plus it's full of slow, heavy webtech which deducts a lot of points from basically anything for me. Google's leaks memory (like most of their software... so do Gmail tabs) and is so slow that it introduces a ton of input latency, which drives me nuts, I hate to type in it, aside from my experience with most of its formatting and editing features being that they're very janky even by the standards of GUI word processors. Both are very heavy on resources, which means they have a huge hurdle to overcome on the feature side before I'd consider them anything but extremely-unpleasant.

Old (like... '00s) MSOffice is pretty good because it's not such a resource hog, and the UI used to be really good.

ryandrakeMar 24, 2026, 8:38 PM
I have a google sheet with less than 200 rows in it. Not exactly Big Data. When I load it, the first 100 rows appear pretty much instantly, but the following <100 rows take 9 seconds to load! WTF? I don't know any other spreadsheet that takes that long to load more than 100 rows.
ghaffMar 25, 2026, 7:27 AM
Google does essentially everything I need. If I were more of a spreadsheet power user these days, Excel. And maybe other Office apps as needed for compatibility.
echelonMar 24, 2026, 5:25 PM
That's my exact ranking as well.
hnlmorgMar 24, 2026, 8:47 PM
I do like Keynote (their PowerPoint alternative) but I do agree that everything else is absolute garbage. But I guess someone has to like it.
AnonCMar 24, 2026, 6:06 PM
> Apple's office suite is my favorite I've ever used, and it's not close.

I’ve written many comments criticizing this. Do you use a lot of keyboard shortcuts when you use Numbers or Pages or Keynote or do you use the trackpad/mouse a lot? I generally find these apps and others lacking on the keyboard front, by which I mean that it’s almost impossible to use them without a trackpad or a mouse. I can completely live with just a keyboard on Excel or LibreOffice Calc.

BTW, I hate all the MS Office applications (and find them quite buggy and annoying) except for Excel. Maybe I’m just a lot more used to using Excel.

bt1aMar 24, 2026, 7:33 PM
You may want to look into Karabiner Elements. Understandable if one doesn't want to have to allow a privileged daemon access to key inputs, but it allows for complex, application-focus-aware shortcuts. In the past I used a "Windows on MacOS" config preset because it allowed for my 60~70 key keyboard to operate similarly across win/linux/macos. Finally killed my last windows boot drive and main linux... but I do have a ritualistic annual step into a windows vm to file taxes on crack err with a crakced turbotax hehehe. In-tooits lobbying malpractice is deserving of petty flippancy
chongliMar 24, 2026, 9:58 PM
Numbers has a lot of keyboard shortcuts [1]. Are there particular ones you're missing? Or is your issue that Numbers has different keyboard shortcuts from the ones you're used to in Excel?

[1] https://support.apple.com/en-ca/guide/numbers/tana45192591/m...

AnonCMar 26, 2026, 6:03 AM
Actually both.

A lot of menu options don’t seem to have keyboard shortcuts. I know I can assign them, but defaults should be better.

But the second one hits harder for me: “Or is your issue that Numbers has different keyboard shortcuts from the ones you're used to in Excel?” Considering that Numbers came much later than Excel, some of the common ones could’ve been directly adapted with Mac specific substitutions (like using Cmd instead of Ctrl).

quietsegfaultMar 24, 2026, 6:35 PM
Can’t you set up keyboard shortcuts for basically any action in a MacOS app?
crooked-vMar 24, 2026, 7:10 PM
As long as it has a menu item (easy) or is exposed to Automator/Shortcuts (more complicated).
cyberge99Mar 24, 2026, 10:26 PM
There are apps to assign a key combinations to any menubar dropdown menus.
crooked-vMar 24, 2026, 11:19 PM
You don't need an app for that, you can do it through through System Settings -> Keyboard -> Keyboard Shortcuts -> App Shortcuts.
AnonCMar 26, 2026, 6:04 AM
My issue is with the defaults that are (not) available in comparison to Excel or LibreOffice Calc.
selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:33 PM
I liked the way Pages 09 looked - it was beautiful - but the compatibility wasn't there. Modern Pages is hideous.

And you hit the nail on the head with the whole 'Office = the document always opens/looks right' thing.

chipotle_coyoteMar 24, 2026, 6:01 PM
It's not pretty, but both Pages and Numbers are pretty powerful in their modern incarnations. If you actually need Microsoft Office, then you need it, but a lot of people who don't think they could get away with just Apple's freebies probably could.

(Disclosure: I write 99% of my stuff in Emacs now, so I'm not going to go that far out on a limb for iWork. It's just that it's the best "Works"-style suite that I've used.)

thewebguydMar 24, 2026, 7:28 PM
> If you actually need Microsoft Office

I also like Apple's office suite, the problem is network effects. I'd even argue most people don't actually need MS Office. The amount of people using PowerQuery, VBA, etc. is probably less than 2% of users.

The problem is, because everyone else (in business) already has and uses office, if you want to collaborate, that's what you have to use. Open file formats didn't win out in the end.

ClosiMar 24, 2026, 7:58 PM
> the problem is network effects

This is absolutely the problem - with the added issue of platform support.

I’m the only Mac user in our company of 15, which means I’m also the only person that can open a .pages file. Anyone can read a .docx, and if authored in word it will actually look the same on both computers.

bigyabaiMar 25, 2026, 5:17 PM
> Open file formats didn't win out in the end.

It's not "the end" yet. Many governments and sufficiently motivated orgs are switching to ODF - it's only over for proprietary file formats that pretend they can stand toe-to-toe with docx. By eschewing open formats you're making all the mistakes of .docx with none of the upsides of the network effect.

jimbokunMar 24, 2026, 8:40 PM
Is it 2% who author content using those tools, or are you also including anyone who might need to open and use a spreadsheet using one of those technologies?
selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 6:20 PM
Needing VBA is more common than you think. Excel really has no competitor.
johnwalkrMar 25, 2026, 6:18 PM
Personally, I like Apple's iWork. Keynote is slightly less fiddly than Powerpoint. I like that in Numbers you can have multiple movable tables on one screen without constraining column widths etc to each other. I also like that Pages is simpler than word with much more manageable styles, especially when copy and pasting from multiple other documents. But lots of people don't have Macs or like iWork, and in most businesses you eventually need MS Office to work with outside parties so for work the choice is really iWork plus MS Office vs MS Office.

MS Office collaboration features work well these days but when you are using Office 365 for work, it's almost inevitable that different files get saved locally, on MS teams, Sharepoint, and OneDrive. It's a version control nightmare.

I really like google's suite for work because it nudges everyone towards using only one location for all files, without a other places to save a copy. And it's good enough with Office files that you might only need a few roles to also need MS Office.

slashdaveMar 25, 2026, 5:08 AM
You can drag a pdf into Keynote, and get a vector quality image. This feature is great for science when a plot is made elsewhere (R or matplotlib). Or you can even drag in an SVG, even from something you find in a browser. Drag, drop.

Why in heaven's name is it nearly impossible to do the same with Powerpoint is a mystery. You still have to paste a bit image.

ireadmevsMar 24, 2026, 5:39 PM
And below everything else is the web version of MSOffice. How I hate whenever I’m forced to use that…
sleepybrettMar 24, 2026, 6:01 PM
I used word for windows 2.0 well into the early 2000s. My needs aren't crazy and I don't think word has added a single feature I've cared about since. Pages is my current go-to.
WarcrimeActualMar 24, 2026, 8:44 PM
>and it's not close.

This line right he is where I will always stop reading any reply, and block any YouTube channel that uses it in a title. Mind numbingly overused. It's literally verbal clickbait.

jimmooresMar 24, 2026, 10:42 PM
Frankly, if you think that, you're not exactly a power user of office suites. Apple apps are a complete joke in the professional world.
FoivosMar 24, 2026, 7:02 PM
Did you really have compatibility issues with MS office in the last 15 years?
martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:28 PM
A lot of new businesses are going the Notion/Google Drive route for docs, tables and knowledge, plus Canva for presentations and more visual work. It's not the majority, but the market is there.
radicaldreamerMar 24, 2026, 4:43 PM
That might be true for tech startups, but many businesses (even "new" ones) go with Microsoft 365 as a default, especially outside of the west coast or NYC.
TacticalCoderMar 24, 2026, 8:37 PM
Europe here. I disagree. Many SMEs are totally happy with Google Workspace and Canva, as GP mentioned. I know people using just that. And they don't understand why there are people suffering from the Microsoft-Stockholm syndrome.

The market may not yet be 365-sized but as GP mentioned: it's there.

And there are young people arriving at an age to open a business who have never used a Windows computer in their entire life. To them Microsoft is the company that make the virus-infested, slow, computers full of ads they see at their grandparents' house. That cohort ain't buying Windows / buying Office / using Azure.

selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:31 PM
Exactly. 365 gets you perfect compatibility and the 'real tools that professionals use'. Not Google Docs or some weird Apple thing - the tools that always will read the document.
nolist_policyMar 24, 2026, 6:59 PM
Google docs actually has better MS Office compatibility than the 365 Web Apps.
sleepybrettMar 24, 2026, 6:02 PM
If you can navigate the terrible UI enough to find the open button on the proper 'ribbon', that is. The ribbon makeover should have textbooks written about it so we can teach our future UI designers not to make the same mistakes again.
oblioMar 24, 2026, 7:52 PM
Meh. Techies keep ranting about it but regular users are just fine with it.
sleepybrettMar 24, 2026, 8:37 PM
As someone 'technical' who sat close to 'normies' who hated the helpdesk guys so much they would interrupt me with their problems, no they do not.
oblioMar 25, 2026, 1:53 AM
I don't see why the ribbon would be inherently worse than a menu. It's still hierarchical, everything is labeled and has an icon and it's bigger. Oh, and everything has a shortcut that's highlighted...
martibravoMar 24, 2026, 5:31 PM
I’m talking about the context I know which is Barcelona companies
martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:31 PM
Plus Pages, Numbers and Keynote are free on Macs, minus the new paid features. I think it's a no brainer for new businesses
pixeldash928Mar 25, 2026, 6:04 AM
Unfortunately, there's a reason people prefer paid office software over Apple's free suite. Apps like Numbers are chaotic in the face of Excel.
codeulikeMar 24, 2026, 5:33 PM
Exactly. So many people on hn have no idea how diversified Microsoft is, and have no inkling of what the enterprise market is like
PetersipoiMar 24, 2026, 5:47 PM
On the contrary, nobody here is suggesting Microsoft isn't really diverse. They're suggesting that Apple is going to start to eat into their SMB market.

Nobody at Microsoft is saying, "we don't care if Apple chips away at SMB because we have Call of Duty"

selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:52 PM
Microsoft offers Office for Mac. It's a thing they do. It's the full fledged Office suite. They see a Mac user the same way they see a Windows user - a source of revenue.
FoivosMar 24, 2026, 7:13 PM
Office for Mac is increasingly getting feature parity with the windows version, but it is not fully there yet.

For example, if you want to use "data model" in Excel, it is only available in the windows version.

wolvoleoMar 25, 2026, 9:10 AM
Yeah and ms access is completely missing. It lacks the full version of onenote too.

The one thing that shines is Mac outlook where on windows you'll soon have to put up with that joke of a web app.

grumpyproleMar 24, 2026, 6:51 PM
Not always. There's no Minecraft for Mac, they even prohibited Macs running the iPad version. It's essentially been ported to Apples APIs but purposely withheld from macOS.
selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 6:56 PM
I'm talking about enterprise software, not games. Minecraft exists for Mac, grab the Java version.
genthreeMar 24, 2026, 7:17 PM
Anyone on Bedrock Minecraft is probably there for the cross-platform multiplayer. The Java version doesn't substitute for that. (MS made Bedrock and Java incompatible so they can rent-seek on closed mod and server-hosting "marketplaces"; can't let people share things and have fun without paying a middleman after all, think of the wasted "productivity"!)
selfmodruntimeMar 24, 2026, 7:51 PM
No way. Intune and Entra are the vendor-lock in technologies that cement a business via m365 for the long haul.
downrightmikeMar 24, 2026, 10:25 PM
No, it isn't 365, it is 365 + (forced ai)
rcontiMar 24, 2026, 5:35 PM
They need to _commit_ to this, and execute, though. This feels very much like yet another half-hearted Apple initiative.
Henchman21Mar 24, 2026, 7:16 PM
Everything is half-hearted from Apple since Steve died. He was the beating heart. Who has stepped into that role? Like for real? Anyone? I’m just not seeing it
rogerrogerrMar 24, 2026, 7:40 PM
Does it matter? Apple's revenue/profit was $108B/$25B in 2011. It was $416B/$112B in 2025. They're clearly doing something right.
theonemindMar 24, 2026, 10:34 PM
I think the average idiot can take a really strong business and weaken the bones for some quarters or years of extra profit, possibly insane profit, before lack of focus on what really made the company strong starts to erode the fundamentals. I think we’re seeing that with Apple personally. It’s just colossal though so there’s a lot of squeezing and a lot of profit before it really catches up. And they don’t even disappear. They just become lumbering monsters like Microsoft, IBM, and HP that people don’t use because they want to. HP was legitimately a great company.
rogerrogerrMar 25, 2026, 2:59 AM
But this isn’t some quarters or years, it’s been _fifteen_ years. I think we’ve seen enough genuine innovation (Apple silicon, to name the major one) that it’s clear Apple isn’t shutting down the innovation pipeline to squeeze margin out of revenue.
Henchman21Mar 25, 2026, 6:24 PM
Apple Silicon started under Steve didn't it? He died in 2011, first A4 was out in 2010 IIRC? That implies to me that Steve had a hand in it -- because he reputedly had a hand in everything.

But that's it, thats the innovation. The singular one since he died. I think my point stands tbh: everything is half-hearted since Steve died.

Henchman21Mar 25, 2026, 6:21 PM
Only looking at these numbers and not the general sentiment around the company, I'd say yes, it matters. Myopically focusing on profits and assuming profit = good is, well, its super common but also pretty nutty.

At this point to take part in modern life a smart phone is required. Having captured a market for an essential "luxury good" doesn't mean they're doing something right. It just means we have no other choices.

bombcarMar 24, 2026, 5:21 PM
$599 per device? Redmond will make more profit the first year selling a 365 subscription than Apple does on the Neo.

The real competition is going to come from companies using the $599 Neo + Google Workgroups or whatever they're calling it - now Microsoft is cut out entirely.

nolokMar 24, 2026, 5:34 PM
> The real competition is going to come from companies using the $599 Neo + Google Workgroups or whatever they're calling it - now Microsoft is cut out entirely.

The companies doing that are cut in two groups. The one that don't fully plan it and they need to do with complex excel or whatever files here and there and they're still in microsoft's grasp, or those that fully do and move to disposable chromebook.

john_strinlaiMar 24, 2026, 7:19 PM
>I'd be scared if I was certain Redmond corporation who makes their money on 365 and Intune.

scared of what? microsoft doesnt need to care about new businesses with under 50 employees at all. they have governments, banks, universities, colleges, and large non-tech enterprises completely locked down. small business with 10-50 devices are a drop in the ocean.

>New businesses under 50 employees are going to eat this up like there's no tomorrow.

i seriously doubt people outside of the tech or design spheres (i.e. most people) are going to go with apple for their businesses. when you are starting a business, you dont want to also have to teach all of your employees (and possibly yourself) how to use a new operating system.

you are going to look up "local IT company" or "local MSP", ask them to set you up, and they will integrate you into their existing microsoft ecosystem and send over some thinkpads, while you focus on your business.

TheGamerUncleMar 25, 2026, 12:34 AM
It really depends on the context and the context within the context. I used to manage a medium sized IT firm in Colombia on a hybrid manner.

One of our biggest clients had a sort of high end boutique set of businesses and two bigger businesses that interacted quite more with the regular public.

For the high end boutiques he asked us ONLY and ONLY to use mac's both because down there they are synonym of "prestige and class" and because the (very attractive) women that he hired for most roles were only familiar, or preferred mac's and were consumer's exclusively of apple's walled garden.

We had a bunch of customers like that, the real issue is that if this were on place I would have made it an option for my clients, eventually some things like security or software may move a significant number of users there, specially after the new mac mini, the neo and the ma air become budget options compared to a lot of what microsoft is offering in latam and some parts of Europe.

x0x0Mar 24, 2026, 7:42 PM
Apple would be near the top of my list of companies incapable of building software that will do this. I cannot believe anyone who has tried Mail.app would be interested in using that for their business. I tried it for 3-ish months and had immense trouble reliably threading, seeing responses, with search, etc.

There's 0 way they have competent, reliable, working group calendaring.

aucisson_masqueMar 24, 2026, 10:49 PM
I have had plenty of issues with outlook, I had to force close it at least once per day. Macos mail app was very good for my business need, it was a small one but had to deal with hundreds of mails everyday.

Plus you don't get that proprietary format pst when you backup the mails.

givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:42 PM
Are you talking Mac or iOS? I have never had an issue on iPhone’s mail app, though my desktop is Linux so I don’t know? Hence the question. I’ve never experienced any of that. Thanks
p_ingMar 24, 2026, 7:01 PM
This ignores that Apple is unable to manufacture enough computers per year to be disruptive.

25m Macs in calendar year 2025. Lenovo manufactured 19m PCs in Q4 2025.

Apple simply lacks volume.

tengbretsonMar 24, 2026, 7:08 PM
I imagine the company that currently ships 250m iPhones a year can figure that part out.
FinnKuhnMar 24, 2026, 7:17 PM
Especially due to Apple having a lot less SKUs (compared to Lenovo) and having a lot more control over important parts such as CPUs.
dijitMar 24, 2026, 7:04 PM
Weird, never had an issue getting my hands on an Apple laptop of any desired configuration, even odd keyboard layouts for the region (UK and Sweden).

Had plenty of issues getting specific specification Thinkpads: because they are largely sold through resellers and they don’t stock all SKUs I suppose.

p_ingMar 24, 2026, 7:15 PM
No where did I say you can’t get a hold of one, I said they don’t have the volume. They’re behind Lenovo, HP, and Dell.

The x86 market is massive and dwarfs Apple’s Mac manufacturing.

dijitMar 24, 2026, 7:17 PM
I don’t buy this reasoning until there is evidence of orders going unfulfilled.

I could make 20M units of something and leave my resellers as bagholders who then have to sell years old hardware at a discount- and by the internal consistency of your logic: I would have the volumes.

mlsuMar 24, 2026, 7:19 PM
Isn't this an artifact of the demand side and not the supply side?

Yes, apple shipped fewer laptops than dell in 2025. That's because Apple laptops started at $1100 in 2025.

They won't have a problem securing the chips for Mac Neo's, they're the same SOC as the iPhone. What, Apple is going to have an issue manufacturing a few million motherboards?

odirootMar 24, 2026, 7:24 PM
So Lenovo wins in both quantity and quality (at least for T/X series), let alone configurability.
doctorpanglossMar 24, 2026, 7:04 PM
okay dude, how many phones did it manufacture in Q4 2025?

87m

https://www.semiconductor-today.com/news_items/2026/mar/tern...

do you think lenovo would rather manufacture 19m PCs or 87m phones? i don't know, you raise an interesting point that is wrong.

p_ingMar 24, 2026, 7:16 PM
It looks like you have this discussion confused. This is about Macs, not phones.
F7F7F7Mar 24, 2026, 8:19 PM
Sure, Apple's dominance in sourcing, manufacturing and all other aspects of logistics surely has no place in this conversation. '

The NEO is a masterclass in how integrated these systems actually are.

bombcarMar 24, 2026, 11:26 PM
The Neo is a phone with a big screen.
Kirby64Mar 25, 2026, 2:42 AM
Does it matter if the main difference is the OS? Chromebooks are way worse spec wise, and they’re still “phones with big screens” and a different OS. If someone made a windows laptop that was actually good without compromises in an ARM SoC, I’m sure it’d sell well too. The Qualcomm ones seem to have too many compromises today with the OS/driver layer unfortunately.
bombcarMar 25, 2026, 1:36 PM
That last part is the stumbling block for sure - the Microsoft Surface Laptops are nice machines but damn if the driver thing doesn't continually piss me off.

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/devices/surface-lapt... but at $900, and the Neo literally just being a Mac and doing everything any other Mac does (except some hardware related limitations like driving a 6k monitor, but doing 4k is "enough for most") means you save $300 and don't run into annoyances like "can't install my printer driver".

BeetleBMar 24, 2026, 7:39 PM
I recently switched from a Microsoft heavy company to an Apple heavy company.

Since the early 2000's, I've been bad mouthing Outlook, for a whole lot of reasons.

Let's just say: I miss Outlook. And it's still terrible.

monster_truckMar 24, 2026, 7:31 PM
The companies I know of that would be most likely to do this would never buy these because of the integrated webcams, and no "you can disconnect them easily" is not acceptable, as a matter of policy.
999900000999Mar 24, 2026, 4:31 PM
*499$ with an EDU discount which definitely means they have margin for business deals.

Revenge of the Mac. Theirs simply no reason for any normal person to buy anything else. The year of Linux is deferred yet again.

dangusMar 24, 2026, 5:27 PM
I keep shouting from the rooftops the fact that the Neo is really not that disruptive or even necessarily that good of a deal.

Like, have any of you actually looked at street prices at Micro Center or Best Buy recently? In the price range of the higher model Neo you can get a Yoga 7 with an OLED convertible touch screen, 1TB storage, 16GB of RAM, along with a processor with better multicore and iGPU performance (Ryzen 7 AI 350) in a 2-in-1 convertible package that has better battery life doing office tasks.

Yes, the Neo is a cheap machine, with a lot of the exact same cheap machine compromises that are all over the $500-800 laptop market. Not really the best CPU, extremely cut-down battery, missing features, etc.

It even loses keyboard backlighting which is such a standard feature that it might be the only laptop on sale without it.

Losing the haptic trackpad means that the Acer you can buy at Micro Center for $530 with double the RAM and way better I/O (USB4, USB-A 3.0, microSD, and HDMI) has a pretty similar quality of trackpad experience. Yes, I tried both in store, the MacBook Neo's trackpad is really at the same level of all the PC competition.

MacBook Pro/Air Trackpad: 10/10

Best PC haptic trackpads available: 8/10

MacBook Neo trackpad: 7/10

Typical PC mechanical trackpads: 6 or 7/10

Hell, the older generation HP EliteBook 840 G10 that Micro Center sells as a business laptop makes a bunch more sense in a lot of ways. It's also an all-aluminum build thin and light system, comes with more RAM, which is upgradable, has a fingerprint reader, backlit keyboard, etc.

selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:35 PM
The trackpad on the Neo is at the level of a Surface trackpad, which is to say it is worlds better than the typical budget junk you can pick up from Acer.
dangusMar 24, 2026, 5:38 PM
I disagree strongly. Again, I tried it in store at the exact same time as trying other laptops.

Yes, it's a little bit better than the alternatives, but, critically, not by much. Not by enough to sway a purchase decision.

It's not better than diving board mechanical trackpads by enough of a margin for most consumers to notice.

Also, macOS over-relies on trackpad gestures. You don't really need them anywhere near as much in Windows or Linux. This is Apple's intention: to try and sell more proprietary trackpads, because they know if their OS was optimized for normal mice consumers would just buy the cheap $20 mice that are better than their $100+ accessories.

The PC industry barely has to adapt to compete with the Neo. I think we'll start seeing that in late 2026 and 2027 when competitors arrive on Apple's doorstep.

givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:46 PM
I will be absolutely shocked if any current pc company can even approach the neos build quality/performance/price combo. See you next year, happy to wait .
dangusMar 26, 2026, 3:11 PM
I think we’ll actually see some serious responses from PC manufacturers. They basically have to.

They really aren’t that far off as it is. I’ve brought up a number of similarly priced models in my other comments on this thread.

Even on the premium end, the surface laptop really isn’t that far off on pricing. It was priced and specced to essentially match the Air. I think there’s no reason a cut down model couldn’t match the Neo.

I think the most important thing is for Microsoft to crack down more on OEMs’ use of third party junkware like McAfee. They need to just disallow it as a hard policy. Hopefully the Neo is also a wake up call to Microsoft.

I also think that an x86 processor that performs 20-40% slower really isn’t a big deal in the context of the Neo’s competitors. They mostly need to match the pricing and build quality. Nobody cares that the hybrid Toyota Corolla is slower than the hybrid Honda Civic when they go buy the car. They care that it has the attributes they’re looking for (packaging, reliability, quality, price). And I think the Neo’s great chip is hampered by RAM anyway. The SoC package was designed for a mobile system that only has partial multitasking.

selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:42 PM
One of the things is an Acer. The other is a Mac. That sways purchase decisoons - one is a nice thing, the other one is a low end PC.

I have used countless modern PC devices, including some from Acer. Few PCs have a trackpad of the level of the Neo and none from Acer.

Your logic with "Apple's intentions" reveals a person who is incapable of decent analysis; macOS relies on gestures a lot because the vast majority of macOS devices are laptops. The desktop market is an after thought because the people keep buying laptops. That's it. There's no conspiracy, just a focus on the devices that the users choose to buy.

The PC industry has almost no shot of competing with the Neo. You have to spend much more than $1000 to get a nice object that looks and feels nice. Right now, the PC industry is selling Old Navy products when Hermès is the same price. That is a real problem.

Microsoft is going to be fine. Companies that rely on selling low end devices to consumers are going to suffer.

dangusMar 24, 2026, 5:55 PM
My point is that Apple is in many ways joining Acer, not bringing their luxury product down to the masses.

Yes, in many ways they’re bringing a very polished product to the space. But in many other ways, look closely and you’ll see the cut corners.

Again, I’ve felt the Neo in person. The chassis feels nice, sure. It’s not built to the same level as Apple’s other products, though.

The bottom plate is not CNCed, it’s a stamped aluminum plate. That means there is variation in the gap along the bottom of the laptop between the man case and the bottom plate that doesn’t exist on the Air or Pro.

Again, the trackpad is good but is worse than many haptic trackpads offered by PC manufacturers like Lenovo.

Again, if you think the PC industry has no chance of competing, go to your retailer website and look at street prices. Look at laptop reviews from places like Just Josh Tech on YouTube. PC manufacturers aren’t making trash.

Acer is actually a great example of a really solid PC. I felt the $530 model Micro Center is selling and it seemed to do the job: thin and light enough, felt sturdy, similar trackpad to the Neo, better specs and I/O. I’d say I only wanted the display to be a little better, though on the plus side it was bigger than the Neo’s cramped 13”.

This isn’t 2005. There is a misguided assumption to assume that PCs are still trash like they were 10 years ago. They just aren’t.

One little random bit to point out: there are 100 million Mac users globally as of 2024. There are more than 900 million PC gamers globally.

So, if I’m a high school student or college student who has money for one computer and I am a member of that group of 900 million PC gamers, I might just go get a last gen Lenovo LOQ with the RTX 4050 or something similar in the current gen from someone like MSI with an RTX 5050.

I would deal with a chunkier plastickier laptop but it would get similar battery life to the Neo for office tasks and I could actually play games. 16GB RAM. Modular storage. Price is around $700.

And I’ll be honest, that trackpad ain’t gonna be much worse than the Neo. And I’ll get to keep my backlit keyboard and have some I/O.

givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:48 PM
>Look at laptop reviews from places like Just Josh Tech on YouTube

I stopped reading here.

dangusMar 26, 2026, 1:40 AM
Okay? So you don’t look at reviews or something? What’s the problem that made you stop reading?
selectivelyMar 24, 2026, 5:58 PM
You are deeply confused (you do not understand public perception/you do not understand how choosing a ''good pc'' is hard for most people/you don't grasp that a luxury brand versus Acer for the same price is a no brainer for most people, regardless of I/O or whatever) and - frankly - you are not worth discussing anything with. Have a good rest of your day.
999900000999Mar 24, 2026, 5:47 PM
And it comes with Windows.

Back in the normal world people don't use Linux. If you have the funds you can get an M4 Air with 16GB for 800$.

I still have a 8GB M1 air, it's fine for filling out paper work and watching YouTube, which is the extent of what most people do

drnick1Mar 24, 2026, 8:54 PM
> Hell, the older generation HP EliteBook 840 G10 that Micro Center sells as a business laptop makes a bunch more sense in a lot of ways.

And the best thing is that you can format the drive, install Linux, and be completely free of Microsoft and Apple.

qmrMar 25, 2026, 4:58 AM
... the Yoga doesn't run MacOS though.
dangusMar 26, 2026, 1:54 AM
Okay? Windows and macOS are basically the same.

Only biased fanboy people say otherwise.

martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:36 PM
Agreed. I'd love to see what prices companies get for volume purchases. I'm the IT Manager in a small team and if the Neo and this was available last year when we set up MDM/Exchange/SharePoint I would have considered it. Specially on the hardware side, ROI/longevity on an Apple Silicon Macbook is times higher than any given Windows laptop.
999900000999Mar 24, 2026, 4:47 PM
Less stuff to go wrong.

One point of contact for support.

Microsoft isn't going to get it together anytime soon, it's a new dawn.

RussianCowMar 24, 2026, 5:01 PM
> Theirs simply no reason for any normal person to buy anything else.

My wife currently has an old MacBook with 8GB of memory, and she hits the memory limit somewhat regularly just from web browsing and light productivity work. But whether more breathing room in terms of memory is worth almost double the price...

dhosekMar 24, 2026, 5:42 PM
Intel or Apple Silicon? The latter manages memory much better.
RussianCowMar 24, 2026, 7:04 PM
Intel. That's good to know! Do you know why this is? Presumably because of the shared memory pool across CPU/GPU, or are there other factors?
unvglobal022Mar 24, 2026, 5:43 PM
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alcidesfonsecaMar 24, 2026, 5:20 PM
The next neo might have the SSDs of the current pros, making swapping less problematic.
butILoveLifeMar 24, 2026, 6:56 PM
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dangusMar 24, 2026, 5:35 PM
Serviceable != upgradable or long-lasting.

So many people are going to get burned by the hypnotism of these Neos. They're going to be gateways into being traded in within 2-3 years to get something with more RAM and storage when their owners find out how much they struggle with basic tasks due to insufficient RAM and storage.

If you actually go on Best Buy or Micro Center websites and look at street prices you'll realize that the Neo isn't actually that disruptive.

The trackpad is mid. I've tried it. It's mid enough that basically any PC can compete with the trackpad experience. There are multiple $500-800 PCs that are easy recommendations as alternatives, all with 16GB of RAM, all with modular storage.

The battery in the Neo is so small that even with the extremely efficient iPhone processor inside, basic Windows laptops can beat the Neo in battery life. Grab a Yoga 7 and you've got double the RAM, 2-in-1 convertible touch screen, and better battery life. Oh yeah, and you get a better OLED panel, too.

SchiendelmanMar 24, 2026, 7:32 PM
I think you might be very surprised by what you can do with eight gigs of RAM on Apple Silicon. Apple does hardware compression into memory - it performs as well as a 16 GB machine did with an Intel chip.
dangusMar 25, 2026, 12:54 AM
I don't know where this myth has come from that macOS magically uses less RAM even though you are using the same applications as everyone else.

The Just Josh Tech review of the MacBook Neo demonstrated that the Neo cannot do a fractional resolution playback of a very simple Adobe Premiere project. We are not even talking about doing any editing work, simply playing back the project in the timeline.

The ~$500 Acer loaded with 16GB of RAM performed much better on that workflow.

I think it's worth pointing out that the base RAM on a MacBook Air was 8GB six years ago.

The Neo is a low end machine that trades RAM, storage, keyboard backlight, I/O and battery capacity for fit and finish and aesthetics.

It is a machine that will introduce many people to the Mac, and it will be very successful, but I also think it is a machine that for many people will not last them a very long time. And who knows, that might have the same negative impact that cheap Windows PCs have had for Microsoft in the long run, which was the whole reason they started their premium Surface brand.

kube-systemMar 25, 2026, 4:06 AM
> I don't know where this myth has come from that macOS magically uses less RAM even though you are using the same applications as everyone else.

Well, you're certainly not running the same code on both systems. Some applications absolutely use less RAM on MacOS... some use less on Windows.

Some of this is due to the various builds of the software itself, some of it is due to architectural differences in memory management, CPU instructions, differing memory access capabilities, etc.

8GB is tight for power users, definitely. But it is certainly very usable for on a Mac for the average person.

dangusMar 26, 2026, 3:22 PM
I agree that it’s usable, but I think it’s still worth pointing out that it was the base configuration of the M1 Air almost 6 full years ago.

It feels to me a lot like past cut down systems such as the eMac or that horrendous 21” 1080p Intel iMac that sort of make sense by being cheap but don’t make as much sense in wider context of available choices.

Of course, I think the Neo will be a huge success and is a good product overall, but a product where an informed buyer can do better.

It is potentially a purchase decision that really won’t last as long as a cheap Acer with 16GB of memory, even though the Neo is built better.

SchiendelmanMar 27, 2026, 4:34 AM
In the last six years, the memory footprint of most Mac apps I use has decreased. When Apple Silicon was new, a lot of apps were still running Intel binaries. Now they almost all have native binaries and memory footprint has shrunk quite a bit!
gtvwillMar 24, 2026, 11:51 PM
8gb on a apple is not enough and its not surprising at all.

Source: dealing with dozens of Mac devices with 8gb memory that clients had which all can't handle their workloads. I've switched whole companies from Mac back to pcs. And I've watched companies try switch to Apple and go from reasonably problem free operations to a nightmare of broken systems. Want to use apples data transfer to migrate from windows to Mac? Good luck it just plain doesn't work.

Device management on macs is an absolute nightmare along with the hell hole that is apple ID and the app store. Not to mention their absolutely abysmal performance with rmm. You can literally configure a machines permissions to allow remote access apps to work then a week later they just break the software and your access to manage the device is broken too.

Apple products are absolutely terrible for business from phones to laptops to their entire office suite.

dointheatlMar 24, 2026, 8:11 PM
I don't think you get it, OC tried the trackpad in a MicroCenter. It's game over.
givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:50 PM
Thank you, point well made!
PetersipoiMar 24, 2026, 5:48 PM
$500 for 2-3 years is great. And it will last much longer than that in reality.

It's pretty plain to see that the Neo eats any competitors lunch at that price point. It isn't close.

dangusMar 24, 2026, 6:02 PM
The computer is $600. It’s only $500 on the education store. Many Apple customers will not have access. Anyone who walks into a physical Apple Store will have to prove their eduction status.

I am not sure why it’s eating competitors lunch when many very well-regarded competitors are in the price range available at stores.

What’s better about a Neo than a Yoga 7? Same price range.

https://www.bestbuy.com/product/lenovo-yoga-7-2-in-1-copilot...

This is $40 more than the Neo’s top model and you get double the RAM and an OLED convertible touch screen.

philistineMar 24, 2026, 7:03 PM
Aside from the pitiful screen resolution for a 14-inch screen and the fact that the Lenovo has a fan, they are indeed similar.

But I don't know why you cannot see it as terrible for the PC makers that Apple finally has entered the sub-1000$ market. Since Apple has existed they've been in the high-end of the market, and now they're not. The Lenovo I'm sure is fine, but what it doesn't have is clarity of purpose. The Neo is a laptop and nothing else. Which leads me to question whether that very complicated Lenovo hinge will survive the 7 years my Mac laptops give me.

dangusMar 25, 2026, 12:42 AM
160 ppi is not pitiful, it's the same as a 27" 4K monitor.

Is "clarity of purpose" ghost of Steve Jobs speak for refusing features to customers?

Why is it so hard to conceive of a student wanting to write hand-written notes on a 2-in-1 laptop? Apple would rather sell you a second device.

Why are we assuming the hinge on 2-in-1 laptops can't survive? These are not new products. These are well-regarded, highly reviewed products from the #1 PC manufacturer in the world (Apple is #4).

robotresearcherMar 25, 2026, 12:09 AM
> What’s better about a Neo than a Yoga 7?

If you already have an iPhone, there are lovely little integration things that sound like small beans but are really valuable over time, eg.:

- copy-paste text between devices

- get verification codes from text messages to auto-fill in Safari on Mac

I don't know if Yoga 7 is good in this regard, but when you open the lid on a Macbook, it's awake and interactive before you've finished swinging it open. And battery life is outstanding. I'd miss things like that.

dangusMar 25, 2026, 12:52 AM
So the Apple advantage is, essentially, the evasion of antitrust rules. Nice. In any event, I use KDE Connect to send my clipboard around between iOS, Windows, Android, and Linux.

The whole "instant on when you open the lid" thing is not impressive in 2026. Even with Linux my laptop is instant-on from sleep in a very similar fashion.

And, again, here I am as a broken record repeating this since nobody is listening because they've been indoctrinated by Apple marketing:

The MacBook Neo does not have as good battery life as the more expensive models! In comparison testing with other similar PC laptops the battery life is very middle of the road!

carlosjobimMar 24, 2026, 7:05 PM
Millions and millions of normal people have used 8GB M-series Macbooks for the past 5 years, and nobody has those problems you describe. In fact, everybody is happy to have machines which don't have the usual problems that PCs have.

Computing tasks related to real world scenarios don't need giant RAM repositories, as evident in that people could do these tasks just fine when 32 megabytes of RAM was enough.

dangusMar 25, 2026, 12:44 AM
So what you're saying is that the same 8GB of RAM that MacBook Air M1 had 6 years ago is a good idea for a brand new laptop?

Like I said, the MacBook Neo is squarely a low-end device. Make excuses all you want, it trades RAM, storage, keyboard backlight, and battery size for a nice chassis and portability.

carlosjobimMar 25, 2026, 12:04 PM
Yes, it's an excellent idea. For normal people a computer is a tool to get things done, and any 8GB Apple Silicon machine will serve them very well.

Think about it this way: If you loose 5 days of productivity then you have lost $500. A Windows or Linux machine is guaranteed to cause many more days than that of productivity loss per year.

And with "normal people" I mean everybody who is not a developer or hacker, including millions and millions of people who work professionally with computers.

The RAM doesn't matter as much as people here insist. What do I care that my computer has half the RAM, when it completes any and every task blazingly fast and never freezes up or crashes? RAM turns into an abstract.

Look at it this way: You're arguing that a diesel truck is always better than a motorcycle because it has more horsepowers. Okay, but the motorcycle gets me where I want twice as fast and is more comfortable, and doesn't break down all the time. That's what I care about.

dangusMar 26, 2026, 1:39 AM
I don’t understand why there’s a strange assumption that Windows or Linux users are just burning productivity all the time and macOS users are the only ones where “everything just works.” Heck leave Linux out of it for all I care: Windows isn’t some kind of immature OS that that requires tons of fiddling. It’s basically the same thing as macOS when it comes down to non-technical users. They open up the windows store or Mac app Store click a button and get their apps and they’re on their way.

It’s just a biased take that is 100% subjective.

I think this narrative comes from the Windows XP user experience from 30 years ago that no longer exists.

Yeah, the RAM fucking matters because Google Chrome has 90% browser marketshare, because Spotify is the market leader, not Apple Music, because more people use Microsoft Outlook than Apple Mail, more people use Slack than…well, Apple doesn’t have a workplace chat program. These are big memory-sucking apps.

8GB of RAM is great for Apple native optimized apps but regular users run many more things than that.

carlosjobimMar 26, 2026, 10:39 AM
Linux is too complicated for a normal person to use productively, and it doesn't have the productivity software needed by non-hackers.

Windows: Yes, the user experience is that bad. My observations of Windows users is that it's hard for them to get things done effectively because of the faults of the system. Talking about non-hacker people, who might be very proficient in photo editing or spreadsheets or word processing.

Just booting a Windows machine is a chore. These have the same specs or better specs than Macs, but how come you can instantly use a Mac by opening the lid, and Windows PCs take their merry minutes to be ready?

I won't even mention malware and such.

For a normal, non-technical person, there isn't any problem in using stock Mac Mail, Safari, and native productivity tools. And honestly, those memory hogs you mention aren't a problem either on Apple silicon. It's still faster to use than on a PC with double the RAM.

dangusMar 26, 2026, 3:04 PM
Can you go into more specific details about these observations you made? Which people were they?

Do you have any benchmarks that show this “faster than a PC with double the RAM” claim?

Because when I saw real world tests on the Neo versus the Acer Aspire AI 14, the Acer machine was faster at video playback in Adobe Premiere (as an example) due to the lack of memory pressure.

I can tell you at work we have a mixed environment and the Windows users and Mac users don’t seem to have any difference in difficulty doing things like showing their work in presentations. Our company metrics show zero difference in employee productivity based on what operating system they use (I’m a manager and can see these things).

carlosjobimMar 26, 2026, 5:52 PM
Well, just about everyone I know who uses Windows machines. The most common problem is that the laptop starts downloading and installing Windows updates as soon as it boots up. This hogs all of the CPU and all of the internet bandwidth. And there's no way for non-technical users to understand what's going on. They just say "Well, my computer is slow because it's old. Better go and buy a new one soon, what has the most RAM per dollar spent?" Because their techie friends told them that this is the only thing which matters on a computer.

Or there's a ton of pop-ups of every kind when they're using the machine. Most people just click the biggest button on any popup appearing, without even looking at what it says.

And these are people who work professionally with their computers, but they're not sysadmins or operating system experts.

I don't doubt what you say about Adobe Premiere playback speed. That might be an exception where more RAM does actually matter. But that's hardly a reason to dismiss the 8GB Macbooks. They are great for most users and most professional users.

kube-systemMar 25, 2026, 4:30 AM
My last Windows laptop was a 2-in-1 Yoga. It was the reason I switched to Macs.

Sure, the specs were good... on paper. But all of the little firmware bugs really destroyed the experience. Mine had both throttling and display output issues, which really suck for a development machine. Also Windows kind of sucks in general these days -- and when I installed Linux on the thing, then I got the classic lackluster power management issue where it would slowly discharge in my backpack. So there goes the battery life advantages.

Apple benefits from great vertical integration so their damn firmware usually works, and if there are issues, they tend to fix them, where as Lenovo and most PC integrators seem to be happy just abandoning products from last quarter and releasing fifteen new models instead. And it's posix and doesn't put ads in my start menu, right out of the box.

dangusMar 26, 2026, 2:03 AM
Throttling issues?

Did you know the MacBook Neo has no fan? It can go 2x faster FPS in games if it’s cooled better:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=lswbpVtAhrc

Even a simple quiet and mostly-off fan would have been a $5 addition to the system that would have boosted performance by ~10%. But Apple wanted to make an iPad computer.

Apple advertises their subscription services directly in the system settings when you buy the system (they give you a trial that is shown as a system settings notification and when you refer it they do the thing where you have to cancel on the last day or else forfeit the remaining trial term before it’s over; accidental subscription dark pattern where you can’t turn off auto-renew without forfeiting remaining time) and also advertises apple subs via toast notifications.

As far as device firmware, I dunno, I felt like my Intel MacBook Pro 16” had pretty shit firmware that ended up abandoned because Apple went straight to M1 and the whole T2 thing where they tried to customize Intel’s stack never really worked all that well. Apple almost certainly half-assed that machine knowing their next platform was on the way.

Like the whole “instant open lid wake from sleep” that was great in the past but turned into crazy lag on those late Intel machines.

Oh yeah and I just got my last settlement check for my 2016 butterfly keyboard. That machine was a lovely ownership experience.

So this idea that only PC laptops have firmware issues and bad long term support…idk man, I just don’t fully buy that. I’m sure Apple is mostly better but I’ve had enough bad experiences that I don’t consider them to be anything wildly special.

kube-systemMar 26, 2026, 3:37 AM
It didn’t have “throttling issues” as in “it implements throttling” but as in “the throttling was broken and it throttled when it wasn’t even hot”

> I just got my last settlement check for my 2016 butterfly keyboard

That’s nice, I didn’t get anything

dangusMar 26, 2026, 2:53 PM
Tomato, tomato. I would consider removing a basic feature like a small and quiet fan as “throttling when it wasn’t even hot.”

Sorry in advance to continue ranting about this, but the consumer-hostile bit is it’s used as a price segmentation strategy. Consumers don’t care if their laptop has a modest quiet cooling fan, but Apple acts like customers hate them. The cooling fan inside the Nintendo Switch has alienated zero potential customers, is basically inaudible, and it’s still an extremely portable device.

The only reason the MacBook Air M5 is slower than the MacBook Pro M5 is the lack of cooling. It’s done on purpose. It’s not “save costs and offer a cheaper product,” it’s “purposefully remove a ‘free’ benefit to push you up the product lineup.”

Similarly, it would have cost Apple almost nothing to bump the Neo to 12GB of memory but they’re going to hold back that upgrade so that first gen buyers buy their next system sooner.

I think I got the settlement email because I took my system in to Apple to get the keyboard fixed and the lawyers for the class action had my contact info as a result.

sleepybrettMar 24, 2026, 6:04 PM
My phone costs twice as much and I replace it every 2-3 years.

You know what people who outgrow their applebooks are going to do? Buy a macbook air or pro. They aren't going to buy a windows machine. Some might buy a linux machine.

monegatorMar 24, 2026, 4:28 PM
Will we be able to change our company details? A couple of years ago we changed the business name, so let's change it in the account for billing and such.

Not possible.

Ok, let's ask support what to do: the only thing we can do is create a new account, get the approval, etc. and then ask for a migration that may or may not be approved and may or may not end succesfully.

In the end we keep receiving the bills in the old name, then change it manually or append a note.

MarsymarsMar 24, 2026, 4:46 PM
A bit like the awful workflow around developer agreements in App Store Connect. Every few months our CI breaks because Apple has updated one agreement or another and someone has to go pester the executive who's marked as the account owner and has legal authority to sign new agreements to unbreak our CI.

It's also impossible to delegate this authority to anyone other than the account owner, and there's no concept of shared or service accounts, so nobody other than the account owner, with access to their 2FA method is able to do this.

Heaven forbid if the account owner was ever to put their 2FA method as a personal device / phone and then leave the company.

monegatorMar 24, 2026, 7:21 PM
All of these, too. Then for some goddamn reason i no longer can just input the username and password: for one of the developer accounts it has decided that i also have to decide wether i want to authenticate with an apple device, or by password. So it's another couple of clicks i can't get rid of
cyberrockMar 26, 2026, 11:20 AM
Years ago when the ARM China CEO held the company hostage with the company seal, there was much reporting that exoticized seals. But I was just thinking, the modern systems we've built with 2FA aren't much different!

(Product idea: seal that also prints time and TOTP?)

embedding-shapeMar 24, 2026, 4:44 PM
I guess ultimately it's easier and works better than when you move country and would like to update the country for PSN (PlayStation Network). Sony's advice? Close the old account and open a new one with the correct country, then buy the same stuff again.
iknowstuffMar 24, 2026, 5:07 PM
Haha ah of course. It’s not like you ever actually owned them in the first place.
moduspolMar 24, 2026, 5:32 PM
I'm called by a name that is not the same as my legal name. I somehow got an Apple Developer account during the first few years of it with my preferred name, but it had my parents' house as the mailing address.

I was essentially told that I could update the mailing address but going through the steps for that process would result in the name on my account being changed to the legal name. And so today, it still has my parents' mailing address. Thankfully they haven't moved.

technothrasherMar 24, 2026, 7:19 PM
I've still got a phantom child on my Apple account because when I tried to create a child's account many years ago for my son it somehow messed up and used the current year instead of his birth year. Support said too bad, no possible way to fix that. So I had to create another account for my real son, and while he grew up and moved out, my phantom son still lives with us for another nine years until it is old enough that I can delete it.
moduspolMar 24, 2026, 7:27 PM
I hope he at least gets his own cake on his birthday.
cheriotMar 24, 2026, 10:28 PM
Jamf shareholders got very lucky. The acquisition closed less than 2 months ago. Tough day for the new PE owners, though.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/francisco-partners-completes-...

neeeeeealMar 24, 2026, 10:32 PM
Not so sure about this. The level of configurability in AB is significantly less than what is available in established platforms like Jamf, Addigy, etc. The AB offering seems squarely targeted at smaller orgs, and may be a great fit, but is nowhere near as mature as a midsize/enterprise customer would need.

That said, who knows where this will go in the coming years.

simonwMar 24, 2026, 4:19 PM
I wonder if this was timed to lineup with the MacBook Neo launch, which makes the idea of equipping your entire company with Mac laptops a lot more compelling from a cost perspective.
10729287Mar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
There’s a grey one. So obviously, it was timed.
butILoveLifeMar 24, 2026, 6:58 PM
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aetherspawnMar 24, 2026, 9:29 PM
A few months ago, on a price hike announcement for Office365 posted here to YC HN, I made a comment that MDM is expensive, had high MOQs (Mosyle, Jamf) and fundamentally still doesn’t work as well as Windows and Intune. I also lamented that Microsoft keeps hiking prices and that it’s silly we’re normalising $20+ per user per month when we used to pay once for these things.

I lamented how Apple hardware is now the same price as the other vendors, yet best in class for quality and how Dell and HP are hiking their laptop pricing lately due to supply shortages. Especially on their pro lines, which have been quoted to me as twice the price of equivalent MacBooks.

I mentioned Apple would be silly not to make a further global move into MDM and email hosting territory. Particularly for small business owners: 1-10 person shops and retail who use mostly cloud based POS applications.

Others responded at the time, and I agreed with it, that it seems unlikely Apple would make a business move. After all, they don’t have much history with business, or perhaps they did but they didn’t like the market and wrapped it up.

Well, with this announcement, and with the confirmation that *Apple native email hosting is coming* I am very excited to trial it when it lands in April. Over the last few months, our small business has already cracked it and downgraded most of our email hosting to Exchange Plan 1 and dropped the desktop Office suite in favour of Pages and Numbers, which are both free and absolutely working fine. In fact, I’ve found Pages to be less laggy and more stable than Word in very large documents such as 300+ pages. The logical next step for us is to fully drop our third-party MDM and review whether Apple’s native MDM, email and identity systems are adequate for transition. We have saved thousands of $$ so far and stand to save a lot more!

SamuelAdamsMar 24, 2026, 4:27 PM
So do enterprises still need Jamf [1]? For context, Jamf is one of the most common MDM tools for organizations.

[1]: https://www.jamf.com/

Someone1234Mar 24, 2026, 4:55 PM
Yep. People who have never tried to add Mac support to an existing organization do not realize how freaking expensive it is.

There are basically two cases. If you use Microsoft, you are often already paying for Entra ID and Intune, then still adding the Apple-side pieces for Mac support: Apple Business Manager and often Jamf or Kandji. If you do not use Microsoft, you are buying the full stack yourself: Okta or JumpCloud for identity, Jamf or Kandji for device management, and Apple Business Manager for enrollment. Apple Business Manager is free, but the rest is not, and the cost adds up fast.

This means that, in practice, a managed Mac can easily end up costing close to twice as much to support as a Windows device.

9devMar 24, 2026, 8:51 PM
Actually Intune handles MacOS reasonably well, you don’t need Jamf; that’s the way we went, and it’s okay-ish for the most part. By far the annoyingest thing is getting Macs bought before we went down the Business Manager integration route into MDM.

You think there’s a standard way to do that? Just install company portal? That worked in exactly 1/20 cases. It’s an exciting new error on every single device. Awful. Just awful.

xbryanxMar 24, 2026, 5:13 PM
Totally agree on the hidden costs. We've seen some great value in going with Mosyle for this. Lots cheaper, and it "just works."

https://mosyle.com/

wpmMar 24, 2026, 6:30 PM
The only thing you need out of any of those to correctly support the Mac is an MDM, of which there are free ones and expensive ones and everything in between. So long as it can deploy configuration profiles and declarative management configs, you can spin up Munki to be your pkg/script runner and script the rest. Installomator to install and patch applications.

But if you also wanted identity, there are plenty of free selfhostable SSO/ID providers out there. If you're just starting out and not at the scale where a big Microsoft CoPilotM365OfficeWhatever contract makes sense, you probably don't even really have a need for a lot of this stuff. A minimum contract for Jamf Pro is like $5k a year or something. That's two well kitted developer MacBook Pros per year in license costs.

awakeasleepMar 24, 2026, 4:33 PM
Big yes. Enterprises need support and a relationship with their supplier where their needs can change product direction.

Jamf will do that. Apple will not.

drcongoMar 24, 2026, 4:44 PM
Dunno if you've ever had a business relationship with Apple but they're really good on that front. Proactive and helpful, along with always trying to sell you stuff, but proactive and helpful nonetheless.
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 4:47 PM
A B2C relationship and a B2B relationship are not the same thing. Apple does well with the B2C pipeline, but they will only surpass Jamf in the B2B department if they play dirty.
drcongoMar 24, 2026, 5:11 PM
By business relationship I meant B2B. They're excellent.
awakeasleepMar 24, 2026, 6:01 PM
I have managed multiple relationships with Apple business and the only thing I can think you could possibly be talking about is having a local store reserve devices for you to buy.

As far as identifying a bug in the software and getting it fixed, or requesting a feature, you run into a brick wall. Taking that feedback from customers is not the Apple way. This is why there is a market for third party MDM companies in the first place.

drcongoMar 24, 2026, 7:43 PM
I've decided you're probably right, I retract my earlier comments.
gregoriolMar 25, 2026, 2:35 PM
By excellent, you mean excellent at not being able to talk to someone about your real world problem and need to rely on your linkedin contacts to find someone to talk to?
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 8:04 PM
Relative to what? The top comment in this thread is a 3-person chain explaining how their B2B accounts were locked with no communication or recourse.
ShankMar 25, 2026, 5:24 AM
I would say that most SMBs don't need Jamf because they provide overlapping features. The most important thing you want is remote erasure of company data (for compliance purposes), app assignment, and ensuring your devices have screen lock. This basically makes the most important parts of MDM for Apple devices totally free.
ibejoebMar 24, 2026, 8:04 PM
It's not apparent that this apple mdm will do internal distribution or just provide for encouraging a set of installed apps already on the app store. If it does, that would be the biggest reason for me to jump to the free product.
HarHarVeryFunnyMar 24, 2026, 10:32 PM
I read the first page of text of Apple's announcement, and still have absolutely zero idea what "Apple Business" is, apart from the fact that it will "manage devices" and "configure employee groups".

Since I have no employees and my devices are under control, I guess it's not for me, whatever it is.

MathMonkeyManMar 25, 2026, 9:34 AM
It's a way to manage a fleet of corporate workstations, and some other things that businesses with lots of people on laptops end up needing.
gioboxMar 24, 2026, 4:21 PM
How does this differ from the existing "Business Essentials" tool? The landing page for each looks like much the same product, at least the MDM stuff does?

> https://business.apple.com/preview

> https://www.apple.com/business/essentials/

jacobgkauMar 24, 2026, 4:27 PM
One of the footnotes at the bottom of the page says:

> Apple Business Essentials, Apple Business Manager, and Apple Business Connect will no longer be available once Apple Business launches.

So it's a consolidation. They call out Business Connect data as "including claimed locations, place card information, photos, organization information, account details, and more," so that's some of what differs from Business Essentials.

martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:23 PM
Email, Calendar and company directory built in, custom domains in emails I think... It's more like a MS365 basic version. Which for most small teams is more than enough
workfromspaceMar 24, 2026, 4:27 PM
Maybe also 200 countries included, instead of just the USA?
SunshineTheCatMar 24, 2026, 4:20 PM
It's kinda crazy it took Apple this long to make this.

I've worked with two agencies now that used only Macs across the business and had a really fun time signing in to and integrating 58 Google services every time they hired someone new.

It's possible people may continue to use Google Workspaces in these places, however, the fact that there was never even an Apple option was always wild to me.

philistineMar 24, 2026, 9:18 PM
There is now an option ONLY if you're in the US. The mail, calendar etc. stuff is US-only.
zzyzxdMar 24, 2026, 4:59 PM
This is interesting to me as the IT support for my family. I have been considering using MDM to provision Wi-Fi credentials and other device configurations. 3rd party solutions are a little bit too much for what I need.

Apple Business Essentials with AppleCare+ for 3 devices and 200GB iCloud storage is $19.99 per user/mo. That's the same price as AppleCare One alone.

MelatonicMar 24, 2026, 9:52 PM
For home use I think you can just generate configuration profiles manually ? If you don't want to pay
alchemist1e9Mar 24, 2026, 5:05 PM
I wanted to use the existing ABE product for exactly that, especially as you can actually lockdown apple devices properly to stop teens from undoing VPN settings etc … however it’s explicitly against their policies to use ABE for personal devices and I’d guess the same for this new iteration of it.
zzyzxdMar 24, 2026, 5:17 PM
You are right. I didn't read the terms. Looks like ABE can only be used by a business entity.
connorgurneyMar 25, 2026, 12:47 PM
I’ve been doing exactly this with Jamf Pro for my personal devices. I’ll be interested to see if I can scrap it now.
bitpushMar 24, 2026, 4:18 PM
Who will Apple serve? Users, Apple or their partners?

It has always been Apple > Users > Partners.

There's a reason why Microsoft is still the king of enterprises. Anybody getting involved with this with Apple will deserve everything thats coming their way

NetMageSCWMar 24, 2026, 4:38 PM
Thousands in annual savings?
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 4:44 PM
Not on iOS, being locked into the App Store never saved me a dime.
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 8:29 PM
Anyone who's downvoting me better pay full price for FFVI Pixel Remaster instead of emulating it, you filthy dogs.
georgeburdellMar 24, 2026, 3:37 PM
One of the last great consumer companies is going B2B
dagmxMar 24, 2026, 3:40 PM
Apple always had a B2B component. This is just the latest attempt to not make it completely subpar.
furyofantaresMar 24, 2026, 4:16 PM
This sucks. This page makes it clear this is the motivation for "Ads on Maps", as they talk about it prominently here - they are now directly selling the attention of their device consumers to their business customers.

I guess they were doing that before in the App Store, which is of course also awful.

BarbingMar 24, 2026, 4:39 PM
Their voice assistant is somewhat opinionated about how it will search the App Store for you

https://i.ibb.co/zV8d9gbc/IMG-2177.jpg

They dynamically reveal 1-3 results and only show a “see more options in App Store” button when they feel like it.

andyferrisMar 25, 2026, 5:48 AM
I think what they've announced is the best fit for small businesses, not large enterprises. They can still treat it as a B2C-style service - many tiny customers with similar needs. Mom and Pop can now get a domain name through Apple, with email accounts - for a lot of people that might be the only way they'd know how to do something like that.

The business needs here aren't so different to family manangement features, say.

Throwing in Entra ID / Google Workspace authentication and multiple Apple IDs per device is probably the most "interesting" part as to where that ends up in the distant future.

sneakMar 25, 2026, 7:57 PM
Apple has gone the way of AmEx and Uber. There are no massmarket "great consumer companies" left in the USA, as far as I can tell.
mindwokMar 24, 2026, 10:22 PM
I had the same thought. When you're a B2B and B2C company and you have to make a bold decision, the B wins because they hold the enterprise $$$.
ameliusMar 24, 2026, 4:18 PM
They need to go OEM.
nhubbardMar 24, 2026, 5:32 PM
They did it in the 1990s and it failed so hard that it almost took down the company.
ameliusMar 24, 2026, 5:39 PM
Why can others do it?
nielsbotMar 24, 2026, 7:59 PM
Apple's entire success story is their vertical integration. They can't do that and OEM.

As for the PC makers: they don't innovate. Microsoft doesn't care who sells PCs, Intel doesn't care who sells PCs. Every PC maker is essentially an assembly company. If you appreciate Apple's innovation in the laptop space over the past x years, then you don't want Apple to be an OEM.

dhosekMar 24, 2026, 5:45 PM
Who has successfully managed this kind of transition? The obvious case is IBM which is now essentially a consulting company and doesn’t sell PCs anymore.
lvspiffMar 24, 2026, 4:16 PM
its the only path to go to be able to continue to support their pricing models - they've priced the consumer/pro-sumer out of the market prettymuch and so B2B is the more sustainable paying population.
swiftcoderMar 24, 2026, 4:49 PM
> they've priced the consumer/pro-sumer out of the market prettymuch

I'd argue that (the low end of) Apple products are the cheapest they've ever been - the $599 iPhone 17e is below the inflation-adjusted price of the original iPhone, and at $599 the MacBook Neo is the cheapest launch price an Apple laptop has ever listed at (not even adjusting for inflation!)

The maximum amount you can spend at the high-end has certainly gone up over time, although the basic MacBook Pro Max config costs roughly the same as it's peer from 10-15 years ago - nobody's forcing folks to shell out for the 128GB of RAM (something that didn't exist on laptops at all till very recently)

kstrauserMar 24, 2026, 4:18 PM
The company that just made a $600 Macbook?
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 4:54 PM
Yes, the phone company that is known for taking home a bronze medal in personal computing for the past 30 years running.

Apple knows the score internally, this won't change the world any more than the 12" Retina Macbook did.

mpweiherMar 24, 2026, 7:14 PM
The world's firs trillion dollar and three trillion dollar company. Yes, completely insignificant.

The company that captures 60-70% of the global PC industry's profits. Definitely completely insignificant.

Apple has known the score internally for decades and is laughing that score all the way to the bank.

bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 8:27 PM
None of that refutes anything that was said. macOS is a third-class citizen measured by market share, and the total sum of annual Mac profits is lower than what the iPad ecosystem makes in a year.

Consumers do not want the Mac. Datacenters don't want Apple Silicon. People want the iPhone, they want Airpods, but the M-series Macs have spent 5 years changing absolutely nothing.

philistineMar 24, 2026, 9:25 PM
> and the total sum of annual Mac profits is lower than what the iPad ecosystem makes in a year.

So the company that makes between 50-60% of all profits in personal computers has created a market where it makes 100% of the profits, but albeit smaller than the whole PC market. That's terrrrible, what was Apple thinking!

Market share is far from everything when people live in poverty and do not have money to spend on good hardware and software. Apple makes stuff for affluent people, and then makes a ton of money from those rich folks. Making Apple the most valuable company in the history of humanity. Boy, that's a terrible place to be in!

bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 9:42 PM
I shouldn't have to repeat myself; this still doesn't refute the claim that Apple has ceded the consumer compute market. Cheap Macs have flooded the used market for years, and people still gravitate towards plastic Wintel boxes and Chromebooks.

> Apple makes stuff for affluent people

is just repeating the original claim upthread:

>> they've priced the consumer/pro-sumer out of the market prettymuch and so B2B is the more sustainable paying population.

philistineMar 25, 2026, 12:18 PM
The fact Apple maximizes for profits, and does not care about market share, does not mean it has ceded the market at all. It’s the exact contrary. Apple’s making money akin to the #2 position while being #4 and that’s an issue for you?

Once again you retreat to anecdata; how can you prove that used Mac laptops are not popular?

swiftcoderMar 24, 2026, 9:58 PM
> Consumers do not want the Mac

Really? As far as I can tell, consumers mostly would love to use Macs, but aren't willing to pay the price of entry

> Datacenters don't want Apple Silicon

Do you know how many people salivate at the prospect of an M-based return of the Xserve?

givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 9:59 PM
> but the M-series Macs have spent 5 years changing absolutely nothing.

You clearly keep up with tech news, kudos! I’ve seen no changes from other major pc manufacturers in response to Apple silicon, at all. /s

HamukoMar 24, 2026, 7:11 PM
>Company data remains secure while employee data remains private, with cryptographic separation of work and personal data on devices.

Does this mean that I'm able to enroll two Apple Accounts on an iPhone at once? Or does Apple actually think that I'm gonna be storing personal data, such as my health data, on a company device with a company-managed Apple Account?

At the moment I just have two iPhones: my personal iPhone that has my data and is connected to my Apple Watch, and my work iPhone, which sits on a desk and does nothing. The separate Apple Account on the work one means that I can't connect it to an Apple Watch and I can't download my apps on it, so you either can't accumulate any personal data on the device, or you need to submit all of your personal data to your employer's Apple Account. Including whatever health data your Apple Watch produces.

eemilMar 25, 2026, 6:47 PM
Would be nice if you could buy a Macbook with a proper on-site warranty.

Dell, Lenovo, HP will gladly send a technician to your house, and their NBD warranties cost about the same as Applecare. And they don't care if you're an enterprise or an individual buying one measly laptop.

sneakMar 25, 2026, 7:55 PM
They're cheap enough and Apple stores ubiquitous enough that you just go and replace it as needed, and send the now-defunct one in for repair.
drnick1Mar 24, 2026, 9:01 PM
Out of curiosity, why would any business with an IT department choose this over an in-house solution built from standard open source components. Think email server on premises or in the cloud using postfix/dovecot/LDAP, maybe Nextcloud with OnlyOffice, Jitsi as a Zoom substitute, etc. These are all mature solutions that are free of vendor lock-in, and can be easily managed by any competent IT team.
tonymetMar 24, 2026, 9:16 PM
so they can fire the IT department and save $500k+ / year
jiveturkeyMar 24, 2026, 9:04 PM
you wouldn't. a business without an IT department would choose this.
jryioMar 24, 2026, 4:48 PM
When Apple vertically integrates it works for them. All the way from the cloud to the OS to the hardware. Pretty sure this will beat out tools like JAMF on user privacy alone by running trusted MDM adjacent tools in kernel space.

Yes sure you can use a different tool for any of these, defaults dominate for the same reason Google pays ~15 billion to be the default search engine on iPhones.

TrasterMar 24, 2026, 10:52 PM
This is just Apple saying "We own all user compute now". Yeah you guys can fight over data centres. But every device that a user physically has will be an Apple device. They've now got the full range of price points from low cost to prosumer, and they've got the software stack to back it up so you can have your sales staff running neos logging in to their CRM, engineers running their Mabcook Pros.

It's kind of insane the advantage Apple Silicon has brought along with the brutal price competition PC sales. The only question I have is whether this touches the sides. That is to say - they sell a billion iPhones, is the consumer laptop and low end business sales enough to bump the numbers. They're thinner margins, and that market has to some extent been on a downward trend (which is why the stock market is running to data centres where the compute actually happens).

ryanschaeferMar 25, 2026, 11:48 AM
> And Apple Business can help millions of companies grow their reach and connect with local customers across Apple Maps, Mail, Wallet, Siri, and more, including a new option coming this summer that will enable businesses in the U.S. and Canada to place local ads in Maps during key search and discovery moments. Apple Business will be available starting Tuesday, April 14, in more than 200 countries and regions

Burying the lede about ADs coming to everything in this announcement. Seems like the contract most people implicitly signed when choosing Apple just broke.

danpascaMar 24, 2026, 10:44 PM
> Starting April 14, Apple Business will be available as a free service in the U.S. and 200+ countries and regions to new and existing users of Apple Business Connect, Apple Business Essentials, and Apple Business Manager.

> Apple Business Essentials, Apple Business Manager, and Apple Business Connect will no longer be available once Apple Business launches. Business Essentials customers will no longer be charged their monthly service fee for device management after April 14. Existing Business Connect data — including claimed locations, place card information, photos, organization information, account details, and more — will automatically migrate to Apple Business at launch.

I don't get it. Is this free? If so this is insane value compared to everything else.

pjmlpMar 24, 2026, 9:07 PM
Given previous Apple adventures on the server room, not sure if I would bet on this staying around.
BrajeshwarMar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
> Starting April 14, Apple Business will be available as a free service in the U.S. and 200+ countries and regions to new and existing users of Apple Business Connect, Apple Business Essentials, and Apple Business Manager.

Does this mean — Always Free or Introductory Free for now?

martibravoMar 24, 2026, 4:38 PM
I understand it's free to set up the business but iCloud, AppleCare and Email/Calendar storage past the free (I suppose tiny) allowance are paid. As Apple loves, freemium with in-app purchases!
AlotOfReadingMar 24, 2026, 4:26 PM
I occasionally trial complete switches to Apple services to see if they're viable as Google alternatives. This weekend was Apple maps and it's finally met my standard of "usable", though not quite "good". One of the places it beat Google maps was the lack of integrated advertising places, which have enshittified the latter.

I'm glad Apple announced their own plans to enshittify before I got my hopes up.

moondanceMar 25, 2026, 6:22 AM
Live gas prices on GMaps is the only feature yet to make it over to Apple Maps, as far as I can tell. Once Apple integrates that one, my phone will finally be free of Google services.
BarbingMar 24, 2026, 4:41 PM
Such a huge bummer.

Hey, Big Ad Tech, come try enshitify my Rand McNally.

zb3Mar 24, 2026, 4:42 PM
So will Apple users be able disable these ads in maps?
lowdudeMar 24, 2026, 6:13 PM
The nice thing about many of the native apps compared to their Google pendants is the absence of ads, with the glaring exception of the app store, which looks like a dumpster-fire. It is so disheartening to see the trend of shoving ads everywhere continue with Apple as well. I guess the profits are just too tempting to stick with idealistic UX decisions, if there was any of that left in the first place.
cdrnsfMar 24, 2026, 5:08 PM
I would expect, much like the App Store, they will not. Their maps will give you directions to navigate the enshittification curve.
aucisson_masqueMar 24, 2026, 10:40 PM
> including a new option coming this summer that will enable businesses in the U.S. and Canada to place local ads in Maps during key search and discovery moments.

It's happening. The end is near !!!

miskinMar 24, 2026, 7:30 PM
It would be great if you could get correct invoice and pay price without VAT in EU as a VAT registered business. It is incredible they can get around without providing such a basic thing for so long.
jms703Mar 24, 2026, 7:57 PM
Worth repeating: Never tie your personal phone to your work stuff.
dandellionMar 24, 2026, 8:00 PM
Worth repeating as well: Never tie your work stuff to Apple.
kossov-itMar 25, 2026, 8:28 AM
Considering the discussion here, i am still looking forward to, since it's the best solution apple provided so far with comprehensive management and in the end, after enrollment, what do you really need? the management looks very simple and flawless, all necessary things are covered (mail, calendar, icloud, backup, management). Excited!
julianozenMar 24, 2026, 8:24 PM
Does Apple support multiple iCloud accounts on a device yet?
connorgurneyMar 25, 2026, 4:50 PM
Mac requires separate users as other have said.

However, for iOS and iPadOS, the answer is “Sort of”.

As taken from https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/deployment/dep4d9e9cd2...:

> If a user is signed in with a personal Apple Account and Managed Apple Account, Sign in with Apple automatically uses the Managed Apple Account for managed apps and the personal Apple Account for unmanaged apps.

npilkMar 24, 2026, 9:30 PM
Can you not make two user accounts on a Mac and sign them into different iCloud accounts? I know you're limited to one on iPhone and iPad, though.
jiveturkeyMar 24, 2026, 9:07 PM
no, but many apps can independently use a different Apple (nee iCloud) Account specifically for that app.

that said, you can create multiple users per macOS device, and each can have a different Apple Account. that's a nightmare, because some significant areas of device management assume a single Apple Account. So for example you can use a 2nd account to get around Activation Lock in some cases.

eastboundMar 24, 2026, 9:59 PM
The big news here is the MDM, for free!

It used to be necessary to use a slew of dodgy providers like Jama, with is 2000 website (and why would I trust any small company with all my enterprise data). ABM didn’t provide the MDM part and that was most annoying. It seems normal to integrate account management and MDM, so I’d love to use it.

That ABM is full of bugs, the Apple team incompetent, and D&B being Dumb and Dunber is another question.

TimByteMar 25, 2026, 2:12 PM
There's a real gap for small businesses that are too big for ad-hoc setups but too small for full IT
dehrmannMar 24, 2026, 4:15 PM
Apple's really late to this.
tencentshillMar 24, 2026, 5:15 PM
They are just combining existing services: Apple Business Essentials, Apple Business Manager, and Apple Business Connect.

It's like Microsoft now - put everything under one massive convoluted control panel.

AndrewKemendoMar 24, 2026, 4:18 PM
Apple is “late” to everything which is why it’s the leader

Being early is the same as being wrong and there’s no business value in costly exploration of new territory at least in the 21st century

Name me a single company that is still in business and dominating a market based on being first to market with a new product.

sosodevMar 24, 2026, 4:26 PM
TSMC. They dominate the semiconductor market because they're consistently first to market with the world's most advanced chip fabrication.
ceejayozMar 24, 2026, 4:31 PM
But they're an example of the same phenomeon; they were founded in 1987, long after chip fabrication was a thing. They just did it right.
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
They took extreme risks on EUV lithography and accumulated market share by being the first to shrink nodes.
sosodevMar 24, 2026, 4:53 PM
I think it's hard to know where to draw the line between derivative product and something unique. If we follow your logic that TSMC hasn't done anything new, then aren't all computer manufacturers just rehashing the ENIAC or whatever? Is a Tesla just a better model T? No, arguably we would say that these products are new to market because they've integrated new technologies in unique ways and often expended massive capital on R&D to do so. TSMC is no different.
AndrewKemendoMar 24, 2026, 4:34 PM
Absolutely not TSMC was and has always been a pure play “execution” of chip foundry, based on the government of Taiwan taking financial bets on a growing chip market.

In no way was TSMC the first to market for chips or chip production or even any major chip fab product at its outset.

In fact they did exactly the Apple model and took what TI was doing and used government money to scale it. I don’t know a single unique product from TSMC

If anything Texas Instruments (which is I grew up around in Houston) could be considered actually building a good product from scratch, look at them now…

grumbelbart2Mar 25, 2026, 2:09 PM
TSMC had the first copper interconnects, kind of their breakthrough node at the time, and the first EV-based process.
jackdhMar 24, 2026, 4:48 PM
Depending on how you define "new" but there are certainly examples of this, Spotify is the first to come to mind, AWS could be another.
AndrewKemendoMar 26, 2026, 1:10 AM
AWS was a literal spinout that’s a different thing entirely
valzamMar 24, 2026, 4:43 PM
Ok but "Business Email" wasn't exactly invented yesterday...
AndrewKemendoMar 24, 2026, 5:21 PM
Which is my point. They did basically nothing new internally and will be able to capture what...10-20% of overall business suite market?

That’s genius

bitpushMar 24, 2026, 4:19 PM
Vision Pro.
d-us-vbMar 24, 2026, 4:23 PM
A costly gamble for tech they really wanted that wasn't mature yet.
NetMageSCWMar 24, 2026, 4:36 PM
They were still late, just not late enough.
layer8Mar 24, 2026, 5:27 PM
Dominating the market??
AndrewKemendoMar 24, 2026, 4:35 PM
Vision Pro failed

Apple fails at every novel thing they try and crushes it at every thing they copy

JoelMcCrackenMar 24, 2026, 4:48 PM
The iPhone was revolutionary. There really was nothing like it at the time. The closest thing (the PDA) was _nothing_ like it.
spogbiperMar 24, 2026, 5:41 PM
there were tons of smartphones on the market prior to the iphone. i used several of them. mostly windows mobile devices that required a stylus or keypad for input. they had apps stores, web browsers, email, etc. copy and paste, which the iphone lacked at release. from a functionality stance there were many options very much like the iphone available. the interface on the iphone was nicer for most things, and it had a nicer web browser. not a different world of functionality at all, just a bit nicer overall but also with some big trade offs.
iknowstuffMar 24, 2026, 6:55 PM
A world of difference. Completely different products.
givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 10:03 PM
Couldn’t agree more. Those amalgam windows mobile devices were an interesting for the time, but hellish experience imho.
spogbiperMar 25, 2026, 3:46 PM
i don't understand this take at all. what did the iphone do that the existing devices did not do?
iknowstuffMar 25, 2026, 4:49 PM
Multitouch
spogbiperMar 25, 2026, 7:33 PM
thats certainly a nicer input method, but is that what you're referring to when you say its an entirely different product?
iknowstuffMar 27, 2026, 5:26 PM
Wait, were you not there? Did you not see how much the world changed pre vs post iPhone? In 2007 some nerds failed to see the forest for the trees and bitched about MMS but we have 2 decades of hindsight so let’s not. Why are we having this discussion
spogbiperMar 27, 2026, 6:59 PM
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acdhaMar 24, 2026, 4:40 PM
That doesn’t fit: Apple’s been experimenting with VR since the 90s and Vision Pro was hardly novel–well executed, but not novel. I think it’s more complex where you have to think about the products executives and Wall Street analysts want to exist providing pressure against the “is it good enough to buy?” response.
NetMageSCWMar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
Apple Watch.
AndrewKemendoMar 24, 2026, 4:46 PM
There were literally thousands of smart watches that were launched prior to the Apple Watch

Garmin anyone?

I think Timex and Casio even had ones in the 90s

givinguflacMar 24, 2026, 10:04 PM
Which ones of those can do notifications, health tracking, sleep cycle, temperature/blood pressure? I’ll wait.
velocity3230Mar 24, 2026, 10:40 PM
Garmin.
df3dsfsMar 25, 2026, 1:17 AM
Does anyone take this bozo seriously?

He writes like.... the worst comments. I genuinely hope he gets much needed help. He seems like a bitter sad man.

AndrewKemendoMar 25, 2026, 4:15 AM
+1

I appreciate that you made a whole ass new account just for this comment

Cheers to that

unshavedyakMar 24, 2026, 4:34 PM
Honestly seems like a supportive argument. Yea, your amendment clearly shows Apple isn't always right/late, but Vision Pro is an example of them being early and how far they miss when they're early hah.

(I don't have a side in this discussion)

acdhaMar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
And I’d add that like AI, there was clearly a conflict inside Apple between people who wanted to be in the game and the people who correctly recognized that it wasn’t yet where most consumers wanted.
bigyabaiMar 24, 2026, 4:39 PM
Like AI, the Vision Pro would have been a better product if Apple told the detractors to shut up and ship out. NPUs and AR are not going to sway consumers or compete for market share.

Nevermind the godawful Liquid Glass UX they cooked up and imposed on everyone else...

bilsbieMar 24, 2026, 8:50 PM
If I’m understanding this correctly it’s a one stop shop for an entire out of the box it department.
hu3Mar 24, 2026, 8:59 PM
No, there's no mention of MDM.
carlesfeMar 24, 2026, 9:03 PM
Ctrl-F MDM

"Apple Business offers built-in mobile device management (MDM) [...]"

jedbergMar 25, 2026, 5:27 PM
Can I please just have multiple users on my iPads, please?
connorgurneyMar 25, 2026, 7:04 PM
Doesn’t Shared iPad do exactly this?
jedbergMar 25, 2026, 7:20 PM
Yes, but you have to have MDM. I don't want to run MDM for my kids.
connorgurneyMar 27, 2026, 7:26 PM
Ah, sorry, my bad - assumed you were referring to a business use-case, given the context, but makes sense.
joshstrangeMar 24, 2026, 8:39 PM
It’s not clear to me if the MDM is included for free as well or if that will continue to be charged separately (or on top). I looked into their MDM, but ended up going with Mosyle instead because the costs were significantly lower for me.
andyferrisMar 25, 2026, 5:54 AM
I believe it said it will be free, starting April 14.
fhubMar 24, 2026, 11:10 PM
We use Jamf Pro for a small company. I'm not a big fan of the minimum 20 seat pricing model. I hope this will be something small companies can move to easily and have enough coverage to satisfy security reviews.
ZufriedenheitMar 25, 2026, 10:17 AM
Apple future strategy seems to be to sell ad placements throughout their ecosystem. Very sad about that. :( I especially chose Apple because of the clean experience.
boukMar 24, 2026, 4:18 PM
Hopefully some actual competition against GSuite (or whatever it's called these days)
alexchapmanMar 24, 2026, 4:47 PM
Wow, Apple's finally competing with Google and Microsoft, I can see businesses adopting this everywhere lol, then again Idk as a lot of companies are already in Google and Microsoft's ecosystem.
DrewADesignMar 24, 2026, 10:30 PM
Wow… I might be missing something, but not once did I see AI mentioned! Apple is no slouch in the marketing department— this is surely a deliberate omission. It looks like marketers are finally catching up with public sentiment. I’m sure a lot of people will say it was their abject failure to productize their AI initiatives driving this decision, but I doubt it: the people they’re trying to sell business services to probably don’t know, let alone care about that. I think this term and the industry hype around it is just too radioactive to be beneficial in copy.

I’m happy to be corrected if I missed anything, or entertain alternate conclusions. I’m no expert.

mostertoasterMar 25, 2026, 5:47 AM
> Enhanced Discoverability in Apple Maps

My first thought from that heading was “my company will know where I am at all times”. Though that was not the point thankfully.

MagicMoonlightMar 24, 2026, 9:57 PM
If Apple can turn it into a replacement for 365, they could kill microslop altogether. They rinse basically every organisation in the country, even though their products suck.
yaloginMar 25, 2026, 12:24 AM
This is probably an attempt to retarget the education space more with the launch of the neo. Of course targeting a bigger enterprise space is not a bad idea
throwaw12Mar 24, 2026, 4:21 PM
I assume this is a SaaS by Apple which covers some parts of Workday and Google suite for the beginning

They're basically planning to enter the market where Microsoft has dominant position.

minimaxirMar 24, 2026, 4:37 PM
It is very funny that a business-oriented product does not highlight Apple's business productivity software in iWork (Pages/Numbers/Keynote).
steve1977Mar 24, 2026, 6:03 PM
I thought that's now considered creator productivity software.
poemxoMar 24, 2026, 9:22 PM
This is cute but it's missing programmable documents (Microsoft) or hooks to use AI (Google) to really challenge either competitor.
ExoticPearTreeMar 25, 2026, 9:20 PM
I was hoping to see more geographies in which AppleCare would be available.
arikrahmanMar 24, 2026, 9:53 PM
After bricking a 2 year old phone after a software update, I'm reluctant with handling my entire business with them.
cat-turnerMar 24, 2026, 11:12 PM
As long as I don't have to buy/pay for software to manage devices I provide to employees I am satisfied.
anizanMar 24, 2026, 9:52 PM
Apple should compete with Google workplace or at the very least at least offer custom domain e-mail inboxes.
andyferrisMar 25, 2026, 5:55 AM
Custom domains (BYO or buy through Apple) and email hosting is in the announcement, too.
wereHamsterMar 24, 2026, 4:44 PM
business.apple.com doesn't work in Firefox, it redirects you to https://business.apple.com/abm_unsupported_browser?reason=Br...

Fuck you Apple.

lowdudeMar 24, 2026, 6:07 PM
Yes, and it works with a user agent switcher extension for Firefox, which is always the cherry on top.
foresterreMar 25, 2026, 8:03 AM
This is annoying, but that they use user-agent solely to check irritates me even more; even (alternative) Chromium based browser like Vivaldi don't work out of the box. I usually use Vivaldi as an alternative when Firefox doesn't work.

It's 2026. I think we can expect more from Apple. It's not a small indie company after all.

AlifatiskMar 24, 2026, 4:47 PM

  Supported browser:  
  Safari (14.1 or later)  
  Chrome (87 or later)  
  Microsoft Edge (87 or later)
https://support.apple.com/guide/apple-business-manager/progr...

We live in fantastic times

HexigonzMar 24, 2026, 5:57 PM
Hard pass on ads in apple maps. Their navigation was already pretty terrible, this was the reminder I needed to download something else
2OEH8eoCRo0Mar 24, 2026, 5:16 PM
Incredible. What is this? Actual competition? I don't believe my eyes. Is Apple search next?
iknowstuffMar 24, 2026, 6:56 PM
they had an opening in search with Siri and AI and missed it.
steinvakt2Mar 24, 2026, 7:49 PM
Not necessarily missed. Maybe just late.
popupeyecareMar 24, 2026, 6:13 PM
Will this allow iPad profiles? I think that’s a feature in edu? Would be a game changer.
connorgurneyMar 25, 2026, 4:51 PM
Doesn’t Shared iPad enable that already?
NevermarkMar 24, 2026, 4:41 PM
Machines spec’d and priced for education? Support for businesses?

I remember this!

ark4nMar 24, 2026, 5:34 PM
Feels like yet another distraction. I personally believe Apple would benefit from a renewed focus. Product lines are growing, software too, software qualify is not doing well... this is the same pattern that got Apple into a mess before Jobs returned. Sure, things are not exactly the same but it feels like time is echoing here.

I am sure "BUT BUSINESS AND MONEY" is the answer but that feels like a cop out in this case.

creantumMar 24, 2026, 4:36 PM
I had to look at my calendar to be sure it wasn’t 2001
hansonkdMar 24, 2026, 10:32 PM
Apple is terrible for business. Every portal and product require a new apple id. apple store and apple business can't be same apple id. your device id can't be the same as either. Its madness. Last count i have 4 apple ids that I have to shuffle around.
jimmooresMar 24, 2026, 10:39 PM
The statement that Apple has been supporting businesses for decades is just the most self-serving bunch of crap. You can tell how thin this is by the way they push local ads on Maps as some kind of headline feature. What a joke.
obsidianbases1Mar 24, 2026, 10:01 PM
Hey Siri, should I use Apple Business?
nektroMar 24, 2026, 10:45 PM
between the neo and now this, apple is setting itself to eat a lot of google's lunch
d--bMar 24, 2026, 9:51 PM
Are they taking 30% of the payments?
wackgetMar 25, 2026, 2:59 AM
Yeah that's great and all, but can I get something which will let me delete iPhone contacts in bulk?

It's 2026 and you have to delete contacts one at a time, or press and slide to select a group of them until you reach one you don't want to delete, delete that group, then start over again.

Other basic functionality I'd like includes being able to remote control an iPhone from a device which isn't a modern Mac, and being able to plug in an iPhone and use it as a removable storage device.

DeathArrowMar 24, 2026, 7:37 PM
So they try to pull a Microsoft?
wigsterMar 24, 2026, 6:04 PM
do they demand 30% of turnover?
kibwenMar 24, 2026, 9:11 PM
Of course, that's only fair.
loeberMar 25, 2026, 6:13 AM
I previously tried buying Apple for Business and it was an endless runaround with terrible signup nterfaces and having to call dumb flunkies. The whole process sucked and was disrespectful to their business customers, who do not have the time to deal with such nonsense.
ecommerceguyMar 24, 2026, 7:52 PM
It would be nice to kick google to the curb. I hope this product matures.
bobosmradMar 25, 2026, 10:29 AM
Incidentally, today I saw this video of Steve giving a speech in 1999, published just a week ago. I hadn't seen it before and wouldn't be commenting weren't it for the video.

You may, and probably will, call me a fanboy or argue that reminiscing the good old times when Apple had 4 products are long gone and we live in a different world now. That is true, we live in a different world and focusing on 4 products wouldn't suffice for Apple to survive.

And now again, you may, and probably will, think that I'm burying my head in sand and ignoring many aspects a business needs to consider in order to survive, just to focus on the ones I like or am nostalgic about.

But there is something very special in this simplicity communicated by Steve in the speech. There is something that makes me want to buy a product when I see clearly what it is I'm buying.

On the other hand, there is something very repulsive when I read phrases like: seamless, streamline, gain valuable insights, build trust, in a product announcement.

Don't get me wrong, I am indifferent about Apple Business, probably won't use it and it won't harm me either. My observation is just a coincidence having heard the speech and having read the announcement here. Link to video: https://youtu.be/EoM2Y2KO6kU?si=0DybhDUiqKsWG_Nz

jwlakeMar 24, 2026, 4:42 PM
A non-terrible MDM that actually works would be really nice. The rest I doubt they get much traction on. Gmail is too easy, Google docs and sheets if you don't need Microsoft is also way better than Apple's free apps.
joshstrangeMar 24, 2026, 8:44 PM
They’ve had a MDM solution for a number of years now, i’ve not used it because the price was higher than I could afford so I can’t speak to if it actually works or how it is compared to their competitors.

I can say that the MDM solution I went with leaves a lot to be desired, but it works and it’s cheap. Since I’m only managing iPads, I really wanted to go with Apple for the simplicity, but, like I said, the price was too high (at the time at least).

rjrjrjrjMar 24, 2026, 5:33 PM
Is it possible to make a non-terrible MDM?

Not a particular area of expertise for me, but the times I've had to deal with it just seemed like an inherently complex and messy problem.

p2detarMar 24, 2026, 8:42 PM
That's because it is a complex and messy problem. Especially MDMs that try to unify the experience for fundamentally different platforms like Apple's and Google's, and even Microsoft's. I think if it's a platform-dedicated solution it actually does have the chance to be much easier to operate. So this thing by Apple looks interesting.
jwlakeMar 24, 2026, 8:11 PM
I would expect Apple to actually simplify the problem and not overreach and just do activation / provisioning / deactivation / lock and none of the other stuff MDMs try to do that introduces the complexity.
astafrigMar 24, 2026, 11:16 PM
> including a new option coming this summer that will enable businesses in the U.S. and Canada to place local ads in Maps during key search and discovery moments.

The enshittification knows no bounds.

egorfineMar 24, 2026, 6:38 PM
Nothing like account termination with all your corporate email with no recourse and support because fuck you that's why.

Absolutely do not touch this product with a ten-foot pole.

lvl155Mar 24, 2026, 9:01 PM
I detest Apple for constantly bothering me at the store for small business sales pitch. Apple Store experience has really gone down the hill.
FergusArgyllMar 24, 2026, 6:56 PM
Capitalism works, it may work slowly enough for HN to complain but it works. When MSFT fails their customers, Apple picks up the tab...
dzongaMar 24, 2026, 7:45 PM
now Apple is going for the jagular.

if they can also monetize - location api - via Apple Maps + business messaging that's easily 3+ Billion of revenue yearly.

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