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'MacBook Ultra' May Drive Industry Shift to Hybrid OLED Laptop Displays

Apple's upcoming OLED MacBook Pro – aka "MacBook Ultra" – is expected to be the primary driver of a hybrid OLED laptop display market worth $4 billion this year, according to a new Omdia research report ($).

MacBook Pro Low Angle Wide Lens
The report corroborates rumors that Apple's first OLED MacBook will use a hybrid OLED architecture combining oxide TFT (thin-film transistor) and tandem OLED layers. The combination is already used in Apple's iPad Pro models, and offers higher brightness, improved power efficiency, and longer lifespan compared with conventional single-stack OLED panels.

Samsung Display is said to be making the panels, and the supplier has invested heavily in an 8.6-generation OLED production line in South Korea. The line recently reached a key milestone for mass production.

It will be the first time the combination has been used for a laptop in the 14-inch and 16-inch range, and Apple's adoption is expected to pull the rest of the OLED laptop industry in the same direction. Omdia estimates that hybrid OLED panels will account for 12.6% of all OLED laptop shipments in 2026, rising dramatically to 89.5% by 2033.

Omdia says manufacturers are already exploring new patterning methods for large OLED panels. In addition to the established Fine Metal Mask (FMM) process, it says technologies such as inkjet printing (IJP) and fine photolithography mask (FPM) are being developed to improve production efficiency for larger screens.

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Apple's first OLED MacBook Pro will also feature a touchscreen display, according to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. The claim has been corroborated by Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, who also says the laptops will have "thinner and lighter frames." Apple is apparently focusing on delivering the thinnest possible device without compromising on battery life or major new features. That might also mean a higher price point and a new "Ultra" tier for the laptop.

The redesigned 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models are also expected to have a hole-punch camera at the top of the display, and it could potentially be housed in a pill-shaped cutout similar to the iPhone's Dynamic Island, rather than the notch MacBook Pro owners are accustomed to. Gurman says the machines will be powered by M6 chips and are being readied for a late 2026 or early 2027 launch. As things stand, the latter time frame is now looking more likely, owing to the global memory chip shortage.

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Top Rated Comments

DottySr Avatar
4 weeks ago
Yes, a touchscreen on my laptop will make me so happy given the mass of fingerprints on my iPad.

Nope. If I want to touch my screen, it will be on an iPad.
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago
touchscreen and tahoe lmao. cant think of anything possibly more unappealing
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago

As far as touchscreen goes, I'm not a fan. My laptops have OLED touchscreens, and I just don't touch the screen! I'm not sure why some people are so against having it -- don't want it, don't touch it!
I worry mainly that they would further dumb down macOS to accomodate fat finger input on screen -- bigger targets, kludgy UI. The iOSification of macOS has already started, and I’d hate to see it get even worse.

Other than that, I’m like you and would just rarely/never touch the screen if my MacBook had one. But I’d still hate to pay hardware I’m not using, or have it add any thickness to the machine. (If it’s just an option I get to forego when I order it, less of a big deal of course, on this front.)
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago
For me, it comes down to cost. I've worked with (and own) a few Windows laptops with absolutely beautiful 3K 120Hz, bright OLED screens and I love it. Once you've experienced those dark, inky blacks and vibrant colors, it's hard to go back to a traditional screen.

If Apple was able to make this Hybrid OLED panel at a similar cost to their mini-LED panels in current MBP's, that would be a good thing. But if the cost is excessive, requiring to offer it at a substantial price increase or only in a very expensive "Ultra" MBP, that would be too bad, as it would keep too many people from being able to afford it and experience it, keeping OLED out of the hands of most Apple consumers.

We shall see...

As far as touchscreen goes, I'm not a fan. My laptops have OLED touchscreens, and I just don't touch the screen! I'm not sure why some people are so against having it -- don't want it, don't touch it!
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
BSDnostalgia Avatar
4 weeks ago

I want them to make an even larger display. Let's get an 18"!
17" was perfect. Should be 3840x2400. But, no touchscreen. OK, I really don't care about touchscreen. I just hate the dumbed down user interface that always seems to follow touchscreen.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
racerhomie Avatar
4 weeks ago

OLEDs often go 5+ years without burn in now, and that is with 2-3 generation old tech, so likely they are up to 7~ years. Which is also about when Apple stops supporting a device.
And non organic tech like LCD, miniLED and microLED will go decades. My point still stands
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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