Tim Cook: Popular Mac mini and Mac Studio will be constrained for “several months”
Apple may have missed out on the first wave of generative AI when it comes to software, but its hardware is another story.
The current OpenClaw craze — where users run their own AI agents on a dedicated computer in their homes, and chat with it via messaging apps — has made the once sleepy Mac mini and pro-level Mac Studio an unlikely hit.
Reports of shortages are not lost on Apple.
During this week’s earnings call, outgoing CEO Tim Cook acknowledged the supply constraint of the popular desktops:
“On the Mac mini and the Mac Studio, both of these are amazing platforms for AI and agentic tools, and the customer recognition of that is happening faster than what we had predicted. And so we saw higher-than-expected demand.”
Cook noted that the Mac mini was the top-selling desktop computer in China last quarter, where the DIY agentic AI boom is especially popular. In addition to strong customer demand, Cook cited supply chain constraints adding to the problem, which “may take several months to reach supply/demand balance.”
The Mac mini is one of the products that Apple will be making in the US starting later this year.
Reports of shortages are not lost on Apple.
During this week’s earnings call, outgoing CEO Tim Cook acknowledged the supply constraint of the popular desktops:
“On the Mac mini and the Mac Studio, both of these are amazing platforms for AI and agentic tools, and the customer recognition of that is happening faster than what we had predicted. And so we saw higher-than-expected demand.”
Cook noted that the Mac mini was the top-selling desktop computer in China last quarter, where the DIY agentic AI boom is especially popular. In addition to strong customer demand, Cook cited supply chain constraints adding to the problem, which “may take several months to reach supply/demand balance.”
The Mac mini is one of the products that Apple will be making in the US starting later this year.