I wonder how many people used the Neo as their escape-route from Windows 10.
Probably a lot. macOS is better than Windows and easier than Linux. For anyone not playing PC games, it’s a big upgrade.
And neo is good enough for basic things like browsing the web, writing documents, email and such. Even a mobile chip is good enough for that, and has been for about 20 years already. Most people don’t need that much, so neo is perfectly fine for them.
I was playing with editing video on it. Surprisingly capable as long as you aren’t going crazy with tons of effects and such.
Some mad lads and lasses also edit videos on a phone. If you’ve never touched anything better, you don’t even feel the pain that much.
Yup. It’s totally good for that. I’m used to editing on high end Avid systems (yes feature films), and while I wouldn’t want to do that on a Neo, cutting home movies or stuff for school would be cake.
I use Crossover to play windows games on my Mac. It works with pretty much any game that doesn’t use kernel-level anti-cheat.
Well, apple used to be a significant price premium over the competition. Thanks to AI everyone else’s prices seem to have gone up significantly, while Apples have barely moved.
That makes this computer a good deal as much and anything, which given all the other issues Windows an MS has, makes it an easy choice to switch.
If you already had an iPhone then the Neo makes a lot of sense. I love responding to text messages with a full keyboard. You can share browser tabs between the two, copy/paste across devices among other things(Apple’s handoff feature). You can also install and run phone/tablet apps directly on it or phone mirror other apps that don’t allow it(up to developer).
The Neo is a great laptop that I keep on the arm of the couch in my living room. Charge it about once a week or so and use it for my normal browsing instead of my phone. It starts instantly when you crack the lid. Faster even than a MacBook Pro I had for work several years ago(Intel based).
It plays simple games like Balatro or Mini Motorways great. It can play more demanding titles but the battery life does start to suffer.
For the price range the screen, size, and build are top tier. The only thing I kind of miss is an illuminated keyboard but that’s a minor nitpick.
I had another use case for a laptop which was kind of niche. I every so often need to make updates/changes to vehicle software and a laptop is ideal. The issue is that software is windows only. Yes, it runs in wine but it’s kind of a pain. The Neo supports UTM which is a virtual machine software specifically built for Apple Silicon and it runs windows great. So installing that app, windows, and syncing it up to my vehicle was normal fair. I didn’t want to have a cheap windows laptop around for only that purpose that I wouldn’t use otherwise. I found that people in the forum for that vehicle software had the same thought about the Neo that I did. So I knew it worked for this purpose before purchasing.




