Unlike the company’s traditional keynote-style launches streamed from Apple Park, this appears to be a smaller, more curated gathering for select members of the media. The invite itself offers little detail, featuring a 3D Apple logo composed of yellow, green, and blue discs, but no clear indication of what will be unveiled.
The timing is interesting. Apple is widely expected to refresh multiple product categories in the coming weeks. The anticipated lineup includes the iPhone 17e, MacBook Pro models powered by next-generation M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, the eighth-generation iPad Air, and the 12th-generation iPad. There is also speculation around a refreshed Studio Display, a new lower-cost MacBook running on the A18 chip, and potential updates to Apple TV and HomePod mini.
If even part of that portfolio is ready, March 4 could mark the beginning of a broader product cycle.
The multi-city format suggests something more strategic than a routine press briefing. Instead of centering the moment exclusively in California, Apple appears to be creating simultaneous touchpoints across key global markets. It signals a company that increasingly sees product storytelling as a distributed experience rather than a single stage performance.
Whether this becomes the new launch template or remains a one-off format experiment remains to be seen.
On March 4 at 9:00am ET, we will find out what Apple really means by “experience.”


