close

Apple working on MacBook Air with 13.4-inch OLED display, says report

MacBook Pro will not likely get an OLED display until 2026, when the company's supply chain is anticipated to have enough capacity to produce notebook-optimized OLED displays

IANS San Francisco
Apple inc  (Wikimedia Commons)

Listen to This Article

Apple is reportedly working on a MacBook Air model which will feature a 13.4-inch OLED display, a media report said.

The information came from display analyst Ross Young who claimed that the new model will come with a slightly smaller display as compared to the existing MacBook Air with a 13.6-inch LCD panel, reports MacRumors.

According to Young, the MacBook Pro will not likely get an OLED display until 2026, when the company's supply chain is anticipated to have enough capacity to produce notebook-optimized OLED displays.

Until then, suppliers are expected to be focused on OLED displays for tablets, such as the iPad Pro.

In December last year, Young had said that the iPhone maker was planning to launch the MacBook Air and 11.1-inch or 13-inch iPad Pro models with OLED displays in 2024.

Earlier this month, it was reported that the tech giant's upcoming 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Air devices will feature an M3 chip.

Also Read

Apple's upcoming OLED iPad Pro may cost equal to MacBook Pro: Report

Apple may launch new MacBook Air with 15-inch display in April: Report

Apple announces M2 chips-powered MacBook Pro 14 and 16, Mac mini: Details

Apple may release first touchscreen OLED MacBook Pro in 2025: Report

Apple may launch macOS Ventura this month supporting upcoming MacBook Pro

Google starts testing generative AI features in Gmail, Docs: Report

Twitter's 'Verification for Organisations' now available globally

Jio launches new JioFiber Backup plan with unlimited data ahead of IPL 2023

In a bid to cut costs, Meta looking to trim employee bonus payouts

Twitter launches new API with free, basic, and enterprise access tiers

--IANS

aj/ksk/

First Published: Mar 31 2023 | 12:05 PM IST