And depending on what you're trying to use it for, you need to map it to a string like "MacBookAir10,1" or "A2337" or "Macbook Air Late 2022".
Oh also the Macbook Air (2020) is a different processor architecture than Macbook Air (2020).
If you need to be technical, System Information says Mac13,1 and these identifiers have been extremely consistent for about 30 years.
Your product number encodes much more information than that, and about the only time when it is actually required is to see whether it is eligible for a recall.
> Oh also the Macbook Air (2020) is a different processor architecture than Macbook Air (2020).
Right, except that one is MacBook Air (retina, 2020), Macbookair9,1, and the other is MacBook Air (M1, 2020), MacBookAir10,1. It happens occasionally, but the fact that you had to go back 5 years to a period in which the lineup underwent a double transition speaks volume.
What about the iBook? That wasn’t tidy. Ebooks or laptops?
Or the iPhone 9? That didn’t exist.
Or MacOS? Versioning got a bit weird after 10.9, due the X thing.
They do mess around with model numbers and have just done it again with the change to year numbers. I don’t particularly care but they aren’t all clean and pure.
https://daringfireball.net/linked/2025/05/28/gurman-version-...
Back then, there were iBooks (entry-level) and PowerBooks (professional, high performance and expensive). There had been PowerBooks since way back in 1991, well before any ebook reader. I am not sure what your gripe is.
> Or the iPhone 9? That didn’t exist.
There’s a hole in the series. In what way is it a problem, and how on earth is it similar to the situation described in the parent?
> Or MacOS? Versioning got a bit weird after 10.9, due the X thing.
It never got weird. After 10.9.5 came 10.10.0. Version numbers are not decimals.
Seriously, do you have a point apart from "Apple bad"?
And what was unclear iBook VS PowerBook?
If you really want to complain, you can go back to the first unibody MacBook, which did not fit that pattern, or the interim period when high-DPI displays were being rolled out progressively, but let’s be serious. The fact is that even at the worst of times their range could be described in 2 sentences. Now, try to do that for any other computer brand. To my knowledge, he only other with an understandable lineup was Microsoft, before they lost interest.
Looks like it was Notebook in 1982 and Dynabook after that.