Apple Gave Developers Color Instead
Why is this Apple meme funny?
Level 1: Wrong Present
This is like asking for a stronger backpack for school because your books are heavy, and someone gives you a beautiful colorful desk instead. The desk may be nice, but it is not what you needed. The funny part is the frustration of watching a company proudly reveal something polished while the people waiting for a different tool feel ignored.
Level 2: Launch-Day Mismatch
Apple Silicon is Apple's family of custom chips for Macs, starting with the M1 generation. The shift mattered to developers because it changed performance, battery life, compatibility, and the future of Mac hardware after years of Intel-based machines.
The post mentions a 16-inch MacBook Pro with M1X. In plain terms, that means people wanted a bigger, more powerful professional laptop using a stronger Apple Silicon chip. Developers often care about those machines because they run compilers, local servers, virtual machines, design tools, IDEs, and browsers full of debugging tabs.
The visible image, however, shows colorful iMacs. An iMac is an all-in-one desktop computer: the screen and computer are built into one unit. It can be excellent for many users, but it is not the same product category as a portable pro laptop.
That mismatch is the joke. The audience wanted one kind of upgrade, and Apple presented another kind of upgrade. The colors make the contrast sharper: the image looks cheerful and consumer-friendly, while the caption sounds like a tired developer waiting for a serious work machine.
Level 3: Pantone Over Performance
The image itself is clean Apple product theater: several ultra-thin desktop backs stacked in blue, purple, red, orange, yellow, and teal, with partial Apple logos visible on the nearer machines. There is no visible meme text, which makes the post caption do the satirical work:
Did you want a good 16inch MacBook pro with M1X or something like this? Well, fuck you! Apple have some new iMacs for you
The timing matters here because the post is from April 20, 2021, the same day Apple announced the colorful 24-inch M1 iMac. Developers and power users were deep into Apple Silicon expectation management: the first M1 Macs had already shown that Apple's ARM transition was serious, so many people were waiting for the professional laptop shoe to drop. "M1X" was not an official shipping product name at that moment; it was the rumor-culture placeholder for "the stronger chip we hope Apple puts in the high-end MacBook Pro."
That is the gap the meme exploits. The image shows a consumer-friendly, lifestyle-forward product line: bright colors, thin enclosures, polished surfaces, a design callback to the era when iMacs were furniture as much as computers. The caption speaks from the developer corner of the room: cores, thermals, memory ceilings, ports, external display support, build times, virtualization, battery life under load, and the eternal hope that the next laptop will finally stop turning a compile into a space heater impression.
The deeper industry joke is Apple's segmentation discipline. Apple often satisfies different markets in different cycles, and developer impatience turns that into comedy. A colorful iMac is not "wrong"; it is just orthogonal to what a pro laptop buyer wanted that week. The company announced something visually joyful and commercially coherent, while the power-user crowd heard, "Here are seven colors of not the machine you were waiting for."
There is also a classic developer expectations vs reality pattern here. Engineers tend to evaluate hardware by bottlenecks: CPU, RAM, displays, ports, storage, repairability, and how many Docker containers can be running before the fans start negotiating. Product launches evaluate hardware by story: simplicity, design, ecosystem, and who the device is for. The meme is funny because both sides are speaking clearly, just not to each other.
Description
The image is a clean Apple product shot showing the backs of several thin, colorful desktop computers stacked in depth: blue, purple, red, orange, yellow, and teal panels, with partial Apple logos visible on some units. There is no visible text in the image itself. In context, it references Apple's April 2021 M1 iMac reveal, where some developers and power users wanted a higher-end 16-inch MacBook Pro with a stronger Apple Silicon chip but instead saw a consumer-focused lineup of colorful iMacs. The humor comes from the mismatch between pro-developer performance expectations and Apple's polished product-segmentation theater.
Comments
17Comment deleted
Developers asked for more cores, and Apple answered with Pantone coverage.
Oh, I hope it is not loosing memory Comment deleted
No, <personal_opinion>I hate Apple</personal_opinion> Comment deleted
care to explain? Comment deleted
Hah Comment deleted
Damn they look sexy Comment deleted
why is author so angry? Comment deleted
Idk probably because he's a sensible person? Just guessing though lol. Comment deleted
It's just kinda style of Apple updates review Comment deleted
hope ur good, we’ll get m1x later in fall Comment deleted
and I got my pentium sitting right here. Look, we don't want this discussion again. We've very thoroughly discussed the M1 situation with a different person. I think it was hackintosh5? not sure. Also, I'm not the guy who posted that. I'm just a moderator, the posts are exclusively made by the admin. Comment deleted
not me Comment deleted
hottest thing are coming usually october/november Comment deleted
Well, I have been waiting for this release, so this is great news for me. Comment deleted
Just get a Windows laptop Comment deleted
just get a System76 laptop Comment deleted
Apple sucks dick Comment deleted