Review: Does the $599 MacBook Neo Fit in Your Life? -- WSJ

Dow Jones03-14 21:00

By Nicole Nguyen

Is the $599 MacBook Neo too good to be true?

Apple's new budget laptop runs on a year-old iPhone chip. I had low expectations but, after a week of testing, I find it far more capable than its specs suggest. I brushed up against the Neo's limits, yet I think it's a no-brainer for a lot of people. Especially kids, when you consider that, with an education discount, it's $499.

Here's how it stacks up to its pricier sibling, the MacBook Air, and some key competitors.

The limits: Tabs, games and AI

"It's giving iPad-with-a-keyboard vibes," said many commenters after my first impressions of the Neo.

Respectfully, I disagree. Working on a Mac is freer and faster than on an iPad. I understand the sentiment, though. The Neo has just 8GB of RAM -- half of what now comes standard on a MacBook Air and even many iPads. (RAM, aka random access memory, determines how much your computer can juggle at one time.)

So what, exactly, is the Neo's limit? I designed a personal computing triathlon to find out: a swim through dozens of browser tabs, a 3-D cycling obstacle course and an agentic AI run.

I also invited the new M5 MacBook Air ($1,099 and up), as well as similarly priced competitors: the $479 Acer Chromebook Plus 516 and Lenovo's IdeaPad Slim 3x ($550 and up).

The browser challenge: I opened 25 Chrome browser tabs...then 25 more...then 25 more. The Neo slowed after the 51st tab: a Google Meet video call.

The Lenovo Windows and MacBook Air have double the memory of the Neo. Both could multitask -- nearly 100 tabs! -- with almost no lag. I had to be more diligent about closing windows on the Neo.

The videogame challenge: Roblox games are useful for checking how well cheap laptops can keep up. None of these are true gaming machines, but I still enjoyed playing the "Obby But You're On a Bike" obstacle course and the space exploration-gone-wrong adventure "Beyond the Dark."

The differences were subtle. Some areas looked pixelated on the Chromebook, and on the Air I noticed details, like the leaves of a fern or rust on an airlock door, that weren't as clear on the others.

The AI challenge: By now you've heard of Claude Code and other AI agents. Running AI on your computer can be taxing but also powerful. I was able to run Anthropic's new Claude Cowork software on both Macs, but on the Neo, performance slowed significantly and the activity monitor revealed I was nearly maxed out of RAM.

A MacBook Air, where the software excelled, is definitely the baseline system for people who want to recruit AI assistants. Unfortunately, neither the Chromebook nor the Lenovo I tested were compatible with the software (though most Windows PCs are).

What did I learn? The Neo loads apps quickly, can handle dozens of tabs and take on more demanding workloads. Even some basic 4K video editing didn't slow it down. But there is a ceiling. From time to time, I saw a hiccup here, a little sluggishness there.

The Chromebook was still too limited by comparison, and the Lenovo machine was a little slower but that extra RAM made it a better multitasker. Their main advantage is bigger screens at bargain prices, as long as you're willing to venture outside of Apple's walled garden.

The compromises: Screen, battery and ports

The MacBook Air is in a different class altogether. If you're weighing the Neo vs. Air, here's what you get by saving $500:

-- A smaller screen

-- Shorter battery life

-- A worse webcam

-- Fewer speakers

-- No backlit keyboard

-- Slower ports

-- No MagSafe charging

Apple says the Neo can run for 11 hours of web browsing, while the Air can last up to 15 hours. In my normal-work-day testing, I got seven to eight hours from the Neo, and 11 to 12 from the Air. That's over Wi-Fi with constant typing and Spotify streaming, plus the occasional video call.

There are just two USB-C ports. Only one can recognize an external monitor, and I had some trouble with that: I had to buy a $35 cable so that the Neo would talk to my 4K display.

The second USB-C port is slower, which can affect data transfers. The lack of MagSafe is worse. Without that magnetic breakaway power cable found on higher-end MacBooks, the Neo might go crashing to the ground when someone stumbles by. (If you're dead set on an Air, last year's M4 model is currently on sale, refurbished, for $759.)

The economics: How much will you spend?

The memory-chip shortage now hitting consumer electronics will drive computer prices up 17% this year, Gartner estimates. By 2028, the market research firm expects the low-margin, under-$500 PC category will disappear altogether.

Parents looking for cheap machines for their kids have other worries, too. Apple's Screen Time parental controls, while not perfect, are easy enough to manage from an iPhone. That's a big advantage for the Neo, which also benefits from other Apple ecosystem perks like iMessage and AirDrop.

Besides, the Neo has fun baked into its design, and candy colors may matter more than features for tweens and teens -- and even some adults.

But if you go with the Neo, try to get the $699 step-up model with 512GB of storage and, more importantly, Touch ID. In our brave new world, even young kids need a fingerprint reader.

Write to Nicole Nguyen at nicole.nguyen@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

By Nicole Nguyen

Is the $599 MacBook Neo too good to be true?

Apple's new budget laptop runs on a year-old iPhone chip. I had low expectations but, after a week of testing, I find it far more capable than its specs suggest. I brushed up against the Neo's limits, yet I think it's a no-brainer for a lot of people. Especially kids, when you consider that, with an education discount, it's $499.

Here's how it stacks up to its pricier sibling, the MacBook Air, and some key competitors.

The limits: Tabs, games and AI

"It's giving iPad-with-a-keyboard vibes," said many commenters after my first impressions of the Neo.

Respectfully, I disagree. Working on a Mac is freer and faster than on an iPad. I understand the sentiment, though. The Neo has just 8GB of RAM -- half of what now comes standard on a MacBook Air and even many iPads. (RAM, aka random access memory, determines how much your computer can juggle at one time.)

So what, exactly, is the Neo's limit? I designed a personal computing triathlon to find out: a swim through dozens of browser tabs, a 3-D cycling obstacle course and an agentic AI run.

I also invited the new M5 MacBook Air ($1,099 and up), as well as similarly priced competitors: the $479 Acer Chromebook Plus 516 and Lenovo's IdeaPad Slim 3x ($550 and up).

The browser challenge: I opened 25 Chrome browser tabs...then 25 more...then 25 more. The Neo slowed after the 51st tab: a Google Meet video call.

The Lenovo Windows and MacBook Air have double the memory of the Neo. Both could multitask -- nearly 100 tabs! -- with almost no lag. I had to be more diligent about closing windows on the Neo.

The videogame challenge: Roblox games are useful for checking how well cheap laptops can keep up. None of these are true gaming machines, but I still enjoyed playing the "Obby But You're On a Bike" obstacle course and the space exploration-gone-wrong adventure "Beyond the Dark."

The differences were subtle. Some areas looked pixelated on the Chromebook, and on the Air I noticed details, like the leaves of a fern or rust on an airlock door, that weren't as clear on the others.

The AI challenge: By now you've heard of Claude Code and other AI agents. Running AI on your computer can be taxing but also powerful. I was able to run Anthropic's new Claude Cowork software on both Macs, but on the Neo, performance slowed significantly and the activity monitor revealed I was nearly maxed out of RAM.

A MacBook Air, where the software excelled, is definitely the baseline system for people who want to recruit AI assistants. Unfortunately, neither the Chromebook nor the Lenovo I tested were compatible with the software (though most Windows PCs are).

What did I learn? The Neo loads apps quickly, can handle dozens of tabs and take on more demanding workloads. Even some basic 4K video editing didn't slow it down. But there is a ceiling. From time to time, I saw a hiccup here, a little sluggishness there.

The Chromebook was still too limited by comparison, and the Lenovo machine was a little slower but that extra RAM made it a better multitasker. Their main advantage is bigger screens at bargain prices, as long as you're willing to venture outside of Apple's walled garden.

The compromises: Screen, battery and ports

The MacBook Air is in a different class altogether. If you're weighing the Neo vs. Air, here's what you get by saving $500:

-- A smaller screen

-- Shorter battery life

-- A worse webcam

-- Fewer speakers

-- No backlit keyboard

-- Slower ports

-- No MagSafe charging

Apple says the Neo can run for 11 hours of web browsing, while the Air can last up to 15 hours. In my normal-work-day testing, I got seven to eight hours from the Neo, and 11 to 12 from the Air. That's over Wi-Fi with constant typing and Spotify streaming, plus the occasional video call.

There are just two USB-C ports. Only one can recognize an external monitor, and I had some trouble with that: I had to buy a $35 cable so that the Neo would talk to my 4K display.

The second USB-C port is slower, which can affect data transfers. The lack of MagSafe is worse. Without that magnetic breakaway power cable found on higher-end MacBooks, the Neo might go crashing to the ground when someone stumbles by. (If you're dead set on an Air, last year's M4 model is currently on sale, refurbished, for $759.)

The economics: How much will you spend?

The memory-chip shortage now hitting consumer electronics will drive computer prices up 17% this year, Gartner estimates. By 2028, the market research firm expects the low-margin, under-$500 PC category will disappear altogether.

Parents looking for cheap machines for their kids have other worries, too. Apple's Screen Time parental controls, while not perfect, are easy enough to manage from an iPhone. That's a big advantage for the Neo, which also benefits from other Apple ecosystem perks like iMessage and AirDrop.

Besides, the Neo has fun baked into its design, and candy colors may matter more than features for tweens and teens -- and even some adults.

But if you go with the Neo, try to get the $699 step-up model with 512GB of storage and, more importantly, Touch ID. In our brave new world, even young kids need a fingerprint reader.

Write to Nicole Nguyen at nicole.nguyen@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

March 14, 2026 09:32 ET (13:32 GMT)

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