The Budget Laptop Wars Have Nothing to Do With Robotics, and That's the Problem
Everyone's comparing the MacBook Neo to Acer's Swift Air 14, but I'm sitting here wondering why nobody's building affordable compute for the factory floor.
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Look, here's the thing. I spent my morning reading about Apple and Acer fighting over who makes the better $699 laptop, and all I could think was: where's this energy for industrial computing?
ZDNet ran two nearly identical articles this week comparing the new MacBook Neo against Acer's Swift Air 14. Consumer tech journalists are losing their minds over which budget laptop has the better keyboard feel. Meanwhile, I've got contacts at three different integrators who are still running HMIs on hardware from 2018 because nobody's making affordable, ruggedized compute that doesn't cost as much as a used car.
The disconnect between consumer tech and industrial needs has been growing for years. When I was at Kuka, we had this running joke in the controls department. Every time Apple announced something, we'd check if any of that innovation would trickle down to us. It never did. The M-series chips are genuinely impressive, sure. But try getting Apple to make something that survives 45°C ambient and metal particulate in the air. They're not interested. The margins aren't there.
Acer's Swift Air 14 is apparently a "direct response" to the MacBook Neo, according to the coverage. $699 for both. Thin, light, good battery life. Great for students, remote workers, people who sit in climate-controlled offices. You know who's not buying either of these? Anyone running a packaging line or a welding cell.
I'll be honest, this isn't really about laptops. It's about where the industry's attention goes. We've got robotics companies struggling to source affordable edge compute that can handle real-time vision processing. Fanuc and ABB have their own solutions, but they're proprietary and priced accordingly. The dream of commoditized, powerful, cheap industrial computing keeps getting pushed back another year.
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