Apple Rumored to Use Aluminum "Bricks" as Next Big Thing
New MacBooks are on the way, that much is certain, but the word on the street is that one crucial new feature comes from a metal brick.
According to 9to5Mac, the MacBook “Brick” is special new manufacturing process by Apple intended for a new chassis for upcoming products. Apple’s new technique involves the use of 3D laser technology and water jets to carve out precise structures from a brick of aluminum.
Creating a chassis in such a manner yields one that is custom crafted, seamless and requires fewer screws and fasten points. It should also be stronger and more rigid, while also being lighter.
Sources say that Apple has supposedly created a new factory specifically for this process. Currently, Apple designs its own products but outsources manufacturing to Chinese companies for the actual production.
While Apple products already set themselves apart with trendy and pleasing designs, the "brick" technology could take it to a whole new level – one that combines both new form with improved function – and setting it further apart from other notebooks.
Such a new manufacturing process may also lend credence to the purportedly leaked MacBook pictures from the summer, which showed an aluminum chassis that wore the logo of just “MacBook.”
Current MacBooks are made of plastic, while the aluminum casings are reserved for the more spendy MacBook Pro and MacBook Air. The new aluminum “brick” process could usher the regular entry-level MacBook into new and improved aluminum casing superior to what’s found in the MacBook line today.
In typical Apple fashion, we’re left speculating on what the next thing from Cupertino will be. No one will know for sure until Steve Jobs unveils the next-generation of MacBooks on stage, but such a media event has yet to be set.
More than one sign points to October 14 as being the unveiling date, which would make sense as the ones on the market today are out of production, and Apple needs something new to sell throughout the holiday season.
Stay tuned.
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strange, i thought all apple products were bricks.
"Creating a chassis in such a manner yields one that is custom crafted, seamless and requires fewer screws and fasten points. It should also be stronger and more rigid, while also being lighter."
in other words, we will stop the user from upgrading and repairing there laptops by ensuring they cant open the case, then charge them the earth when a repair is needed.
I'm guessing its not completely seamless, otherwise you'd never get any components IN the brick
This seems a very expensive and timeconsuming way to create laptops. Not very environmentally friendly either.
how many parts different between a regular frame or not?
Last time I opened my compaq or dell laptop it's been make out of one alumnnum frame already....there is no sub frame...
all the rest of the add on are the motherboard, harddrives, casing...ports , LCD screen, keyboard etc etc which still need screws to screw onto the frame...all the parts are still bolt on..
so what's so special about apple's frame that is already had been on most of their laptop except the lowest end ones?
it's not like changing the frame you can reduce any components in the laptop..... it still breaks when you drop on the ground unlike the toughbooks and it still weight a ton except the macbook air that they cheated by adding no ports or cd-rom etc....while their competitors has all the parts and still weight around 2 pounds...go figure.