KEY POINTS
  • Apple is finally putting function over form. Some of its newest gadgets are thicker than previous models, but you get better keyboards and longer battery life.
  • Under Jony Ive, Apple seemed obsessed with creating really thin devices but, at least if you consider the previous butterfly keyboards, at the cost of function.
  • Apple's new MacBook Pro has a better keyboard and longer battery life, but it's 2% bigger and slightly thicker than the 15-inch model it replaces.
Apple CEO Tim Cook pose next to an image of the new iPhone 11.

Apple has started to make its products thicker in an effort to give people what they want: functionality over form. This is a good thing. There are two recent examples: this year's iPhones and the new 16-inch MacBook Pro.

This is a theory, but it seems this may be that there are some design changes being made after the departure of Apple's former chief design officer Jony Ive. Ive was known for creating gorgeous products but, sometimes as we've seen with the older MacBook keyboard, perhaps at the cost of functionality. Form over function, as they say. (Here's a good example: according to Bloomberg, the abundance of glass at Apple's new HQ, designed by Ive, was causing people to reportedly walk into windows.)