Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple’s next Mac event promises ‘scary fast’ reveals

Apple's invitation for its Scary Fast event.
Apple

Apple finally confirmed its next event for 5 p.m. PT on Monday, October 30, and it’s where we expect the company to introduce new Macs. The event, which carries the tagline “Scary Fast,” will be streamed on Apple’s website and Apple TV, but that’s just about all of the details we know about the event right now.

The teaser on Apple’s website shifts between the Apple logo and the Finder logo, further suggesting Apple will be talking about new Macs. The announcement comes about a week after prominent Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo revealed that an upcoming refresh to Apple’s 24-inch iMac had been delayed to 2024.

Recommended Videos

However, we’ve heard plenty of rumors in the past few months that Apple is getting ready to overhaul its Mac lineup with the introduction of the M3 chip, so there could be several updated devices revealed at the event.

M3 incoming?

An iFixit engineer tearing down Apple's Mac Studio by removing an SSD drive.
iFixIt

Much of the speculation around Apple launching new Macs stems from a report from journalist Mark Gurman in July. Gurman said that Apple was preparing to refresh the 24-inch iMac, 13-inch MacBook Air, and 13-inch MacBook Pro with the new M3 chip. This would make sense, as Apple usually introduces new chips to its 13-inch MacBooks first before moving onto the larger MacBook Pros.

There has been some back-and-forth about the specific devices Apple will launch, but the M3 has remained consistent throughout reports. The most recent news we heard was early in October, when a “a verified source” from MacRumors said that Apple could launch M3 any time in October.

We’ve heard rumors of the M3 for about half a year now, so there’s a good chance Apple will use this event to introduce the new chip. The actual devices we’ll see remain a mystery, but we have some good rumors to go on.

Hopefully, an iMac refresh

Man using a 24-inch M1 iMac.
Digital Trends

Apple’s 24-inch iMac is a prime candidate for a refresh. Although we’ve seen some reports that Apple pushed the launch back to 2024, we’ve seen just as many that say Apple will release the iMac in October. If Apple is talking Macs at its October event, we suspect the iMac will be in the conversation.

The main reason why is that the 24-inch iMac hasn’t been updated since 2021. It’s currently still using Apple’s M1 chip, which will be practically ancient by the time M3 rolls around. This is the only Mac in Apple’s current lineup that hasn’t seen a release with the M2, so there’s a strong chance we’ll see an update at the October event.

This isn’t blind speculation, either. The latest version of Gurman’s PowerOn newsletter reports that Apple will launch the new iMac before the end of October. In addition, Apple’s current iMac is in short supply on Apple’s website, with units not shipping until mid-November. That suggests a refresh is coming soon.

We’ve heard some rumors that Apple will use the event to update the iMac with the M2 and M2 Pro chips, as well. If we see M3, that seems unlikely, but it’s not out of the question. It seems unlikely that Apple would hold an event just to refresh the iMac with M2 and M2 Pro, so we expect a little more is going on.

MacBook refreshes?

The MacBook Pro open on a wooden table.
Digital Trends

It’s no secret that MacBooks are much more popular than the iMac, and if we see an M3 at Apple’s event, there’s a good chance it’ll be alongside new MacBooks. The current rumor is that Apple is readying a 13-inch MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook Pro, both with the M3.

This is the loosest rumor we have to go on, however. Although we’ve seen reports that Apple will launch these devices soon, several prominent analysts have said Apple is pushing the release of M3 MacBooks back to 2024. There’s still a chance Apple could reveal them at the October event, but it wouldn’t be surprising if we don’t see the devices until next year.

Strange timing

This is the first time Apple has held an evening event, at least in the U.S. It’s strange to see the timing, but it’s not clear if it points to anything in particular. The date of the event is more important, at least according to Gurman.

The reporter says 2023 is the first time in five years that Apple has held its fall earnings report in November. The earnings report is scheduled for November 2. The timing of the event lines up with 2018, when Apple revealed new iPads and Macs on October 30, just days before its earnings report. It seems we have similar timing here, so we expect at least a few big announcements at the event.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Apple Intelligence: Here’s everything we know so far
Apple Intelligence features.

Apple Intelligence is Apple's take on AI, and it looks to fundamentally change the way we interact with technology, blending advanced machine learning and AI capabilities into everyday devices.
Promising more conversational prose from Siri, automated proofreading and text summarization across apps, and lightning-fast image generation, Apple's AI ecosystem is designed to enhance user experiences and streamline operations across its product lineup. Here's everything you need to know about Apple's transformational new AI.

Apple Intelligence release date and compatibility
Apple Intelligence was originally slated for formal release in September, coinciding with the roll out of iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia. However, as Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported, Apple subsequently decided to slightly delay the release of Intelligence. It is currently available to developers as part of the iOS 18.1 beta release on September 19, though it's looking unlikely that Apple Intelligence will be released publicly before the official 18.1 roll out scheduled for October, per Gurman.
https://twitter.com/markgurman/status/1817632719175901531
The company has specified that, at least initially, the AI features will be available on the iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max, as well as iPads and Macs with M1 or newer chips (and presumably the iPhone 16 handsets as well, since they'll all be running iOS 18). What's more, the features are only available at launch when the user language is set to English.
Why the cutoff? Well, Apple has insisted that the processes are too intensive for older hardware, as they utilize the more advanced neural engines, GPUs, and CPUs of these newer chips.
Users who run an iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 Pro Max part of Apple's Developer program gained access to an early version of Intelligence in July with the release of iOS 18.1 beta.

Read more
Apple may have stealthily confirmed the new Mac mini
The Mac mini on a wooden table.

With the Apple iPhone event now behind us, we are still waiting for official news about new Macs. We recently reported on the slew of Macs that are most likely on the way, but Apple's been silent on the matter -- until now. A stealthy line of code in the new macOS Sequoia update reveals that a new Mac mini might be in the works, and the confirmation fits right in with previous reports.

Let's start with some context. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is readying a new Mac mini with the M4 and the M4 Pro chip. Aside from the chip upgrade, the 2024 Mac mini is said to be redesigned to be smaller than ever before, marking the first major change in the design of the mini PC in many years. It's said to be around the same size as an Apple TV set-top box. To that end, we've heard that Apple might remove all of the USB-A ports on the Mac mini in an effort to make the PC even thinner.

Read more
Apple just proved it learned from the Touch Bar’s failure
The Ultramarine iPhone 16.

Apple revealed a lot of new products and features at the ‘It’s Glowtime’ event earlier this week, but the best moment of all? For me, it was when Apple showed off the Camera Control, a new touch-sensitive button on the iPhone 16 range that lets you snap photos, change the camera’s focus point, switch between controls for depth of field and zoom, and more. You can press it to take a picture, or lightly press and swipe to scroll through various camera controls. For something so small, it packs in an awful lot.

It perfectly encapsulates that elusive Apple magic inside a button that can do so much in some very clever and intuitive ways. It’s the sort of thing that, like so many Apple features, will spawn a legion of imitators, but none will come close to the original.

Read more