Apple was surprised by AI-driven demand for Macs
4 billion in the second quarter ended March 28 — a notable beat for a non-core segment of the tech giant’s business.
Instead, Mac sales were up 6% on an annual basis, the company told investors.
The company’s total revenue was $111.
2 billion, a 17% increase from the same period last year. Apple chalked up some of the Mac growth to recent product launches, including the well-received MacBook Neo.
Realistically, most units shipped mid- to late March, and some demand may have been pushed into April as certain models sold out.
He also noted that Apple set a record in the quarter for customers new to the Mac, partly due to the Neo. Cook attributed the Mac sales growth to the use of the platform for running local AI models, like OpenClaw — something that took Apple somewhat by surprise as Mac mini and Mac Studio devices sold out in recent weeks.
“We’re not at the point where we’re saying this [constraint] is going to end anytime soon. And it’s not because of a problem, per se, other than we just under-called the demand,” Cook explained.
Enterprise demand for the Mac was also at play.
Apple pointed to a couple of larger companies, including Perplexity, that had turned to Mac as their preferred platform for building enterprise-grade AI assistants. He also said Apple was “supply constrained on the MacBook Neo,” and has even seen school systems, like Kansas City Public Schools, dropping Chromebooks for the Neo
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