Summary created by Smart Answers AI
In summary:
- Macworld reports that Apple’s Doug Brooks highlighted Apple silicon’s strengths for AI tasks, citing unified memory and power-efficient performance as key advantages.
- Brooks specifically praised Mac mini and Mac Studio as amazing platforms for AI and agentic tools during a pre-WWDC interview.
- Recent Apple price hikes, including the M3 Ultra Mac Studio jumping from $3,999 to $5,299, undermine previous claims about compelling price-performance ratios.
WWDC wasn’t even a month ago, but it feels like an eternity. In the four weeks since the keynote aired, Apple has released two OS 27 betas, unleashed Siri AI on the world, and raised prices on Macs and iPads by hundreds of dollars.
That’s why this interview with senior Apple silicon product manager Doug Brooks by The Deep View, a “daily guide to the fast-moving world of AI,” feels so out of touch. It’s not so much what he says, but rather when he said it.
The interview, which is relatively short and light on news, was conducted “ahead of WWDC 2026 in June” and was only just published late last week ahead of the Fourth of July holiday in the U.S. As expected, it’s all about how primed Apple silicon is for on-device AI, but in light of all that’s happened in the past month, it sort of misses the mark.
For one, Brooks notes that AI’s performance demands, which rely on “the whole chip contributing to different parts of the task,” are a good match for the “strengths of Apple silicon.” He adds that Apple is “maintaining our core strengths around unified memory and incredibly power-efficient performance,” and points out that “the momentum around AI capabilities continues to be phenomenal.”
He particularly calls out the Mac mini and Mac Studio as “amazing platforms for AI in general and especially for these emerging agentic tools … [that] tap into the strengths of Apple silicon and unified memory in a very power-efficient way.”
All of this is true, of course. Earlier this year, the Mac mini became the AI agent desktop of choice, leading to a supply crunch that forced Apple to drop several models from its lineup, including the cheapest Mac mini. That model actually returned in late June, but unfortunately came with a $200 price increase—and you still can’t get one until next month.
But it’s this bit that’s particularly eye-rolling: “Increasingly they’re delivering compelling price-performance as well.” That may have been true in early June, but it’s no longer the case, as Apple has raised base prices across the board and hiked RAM and storage prices as well. The M3 Ultra Mac Studio, which cost $3,999 at the time of this interview, now costs $5,299. That’s hardly compelling value—and besides, it won’t be in stock till October.
Of course, none of this is Brooks’ fault specifically. Had the interview run on June 10, for example, it would have made a lot more sense. But it’s hard to believe he didn’t know Mac prices were about to blow up less than a month later.



