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Two mystery Macs appear in Steam's hardware survey

An M2 chip and a MacBook model

Last updated

A pair of unreleased Macs have seemingly appeared in game storefront Steam's hardware survey, listings that could be new inbound M2 Mac models.

Valve's Steam often compiles a hardware survey, where its users allow their hardware configurations to be sent in anonymously, to see what kind of computers its customers use. In one recent survey, it seems that some unannounced Mac have appeared on the list.

The November 2022 survey's "OS X Hardware Model Summary" includes a list of identifiers for typical models across the range, but with the inclusion of two outliers. With a percentage of users too low for Valve to report, there are listings for a "Mac14,6" and "Mac15,4."

The listings, as spotted by MacRumors, could potentially be new Mac models on the horizon, and for one of them, not the first time it has surfaced. A reference to the "Mac14,6" was spotted in Apple's code in July, along with the "Mac14,5" and "Mac14,8."

Steam's hardware survey for November 2022 with two mystery Mac listings. Steam's hardware survey for November 2022 with two mystery Mac listings.

In November, a Geekbench result for a device identified as "Mac14,6" surfaced, with the configuration apparently featuring 96GB of RAM. It was also running the "Apple M2 Max," which had a 12-core CPU running at 3.54GHz.

It is entirely possible that the Steam survey listings are genuine, as it's plausible for Apple's engineers to be using the storefront for testing purposes. However, there's also a chance that the listing is fabricated, curated by someone wanting to put the rumored hardware in the list.

Apple is expected to be preparing more M2-based Mac models. A launch is expected in the opening months of 2023 at the earliest.

The influx are widely expected to be M2-equipped models, possibly running on an M2 "Max" or M2 "Pro," with refreshes to the Mac mini, 16-inch MacBook Pro, and 14-inch MacBook Pro firm favorites for launch.

One long-awaited model is a New Mac Pro, the last in the catalog that does not have an Apple Silicon variant available, but it's more likely that the Steam listings are for one of the other more mainstream models.

Other Mac-specific details from the Steam hardware survey include an almost even split in usage of Apple Silicon and Intel chips, 8GB of memory is the most popular configuration, and that at least 26% of Steam users run macOS Ventura on their Mac.



4 Comments

tenthousandthings 17 Years · 1060 comments

Probably also worth noting that the M2 MacBook Air has the model identifier Mac14,2 and the 13" M2 MacBook Pro has the model identifier Mac14,7

The specs in the November leak indicate Mac14,6 is likely to be the M2 MacBook Pro 16"

So it appears that Apple may be moving away from using the specific model names in the identifiers and just calling them all Mac — I believe (without actually checking to be sure) this is what they already do for iPhone and iPad identifiers. So they’re just making it consistent across all their product lines. If it runs macOS, the model identifier starts with Mac, if it runs iOS it’s an iPhone, if it runs iPadOS it’s an iPad.

It’s maybe also useful to remember, as far as I know, that these model identifiers only exist as references in software. They appear in About This Mac, but they aren’t printed or engraved anywhere on the device or the packaging. 

Iwasthe1 2 Years · 4 comments

"it appears that Apple may be moving away from using the specific model names in the identifiers and just calling them all Mac"

Yes. You got it right.

mainyehc 17 Years · 145 comments

Probably also worth noting that the M2 MacBook Air has the model identifier Mac14,2 and the 13" M2 MacBook Pro has the model identifier Mac14,7

The specs in the November leak indicate Mac14,6 is likely to be the M2 MacBook Pro 16"

So it appears that Apple may be moving away from using the specific model names in the identifiers and just calling them all Mac — I believe (without actually checking to be sure) this is what they already do for iPhone and iPad identifiers. So they’re just making it consistent across all their product lines. If it runs macOS, the model identifier starts with Mac, if it runs iOS it’s an iPhone, if it runs iPadOS it’s an iPad.

It’s maybe also useful to remember, as far as I know, that these model identifiers only exist as references in software. They appear in About This Mac, but they aren’t printed or engraved anywhere on the device or the packaging. 

Interestingly, there seems to be a pattern to Apple’s cut-off point as far as the old models go. Initially I thought it might be case redesigns (such as the new MacBook Pros and MacBook Airs) and new products altogether (such as the Mac Studio, the first Mac to ever feature such an identifier), but then I realized the M1 iMac is a brand new design and it’s still called iMac21,1 and iMac21,2, so it must be something else. That something else is “any product line with a processor better than the OG M1”; both the Studio and the new MacBook Pros come with at least an M1 Max and an M1 Pro respectively, and the new MacBook Air comes with an M2.

Considering how old M1 Macs already are, and how likely it is that any new versions will feature at least an M2, I reckon all new Mac models from now on will indeed feature “Macx,x” identifiers. I can’t say I’m a fan of that change, as it makes things needlessly confusing, but oh well.

beowulfschmidt 12 Years · 2361 comments

Also interesting, to me anyway, is the fact that I've always been asked by Steam to participate in the survey, they've never done it without asking.  If that's true (and I've never found a setting to participate automatically without notice), and these are, in fact, new Mac models, that means the user chose to reveal that they were using a new model.
If it's not a new model, and just a different designation for an existing one, then I'll be quite.