After endless rumors and movie sex scenesspeculation, Apple has finallyannounced it's switching from Intel processors to its own silicon at this year's Worldwide Developers Conference. The first Mac to include Apple's new in-house chip is expected to ship before the end of the year, with a full transition slated for sometime within the next two years.
Using its own processor, Apple assures the Mac will have a "whole new level of performance" with lower power consumption and better battery life. Essentially, the company will be building its own family of chipsets similar to what's already available for its iPhone and iPad. With the iPhone 11 lineup, the company built its Bionic A13 chip while the iPad Pro (2020) features the A12Z chipset.
The processor switch will establish what Apple calls "a common architecture across all Apple products," which will make it easier for developers to create and optimize apps for all of the company's products, including the iPhone and iPad.
In addition to higher performance, lower power consumption, and optimized battery life, Apple's own chipset will also provide higher performance GPUs. That way, developers can create more powerful apps and video games with better graphical performance.
The news comes the same day that Apple also unveiled macOS Big Sur, its operating system for Mac. With the updated OS, developers will be able to convert existing apps that currently run on Intel chips to run on Apple's own silicon.
The first Mac to include Apple's new silicon is set to ship before the end of 2020. But Apple will still continue to support its Intel-based Macs for "years to come," and even has some new Intel-based models currently in development. Just how many years that support will last, however, is unclear at the moment.
Unfortunately, Apple didn't announce any new upcoming hardware (i.e. a rumored, redesigned iMac) at WWDC, but that could very well be the "Intel-based Mac" it was hinting at throughout the conference.
Topics Apple
Don't Be So Sure by Sadie SteinA Reading Rainbow, and Other News by Sadie Stein3 Stories of God: 5, 6, and 7 by Joy WilliamsWhat We Wish We Were: On BiopicWhat We’re Loving: Boar Hearts, Panic, and Shirley Jackson by The Paris ReviewStory Stamps, and Other News by Sadie SteinGarry Winogrand and the Art of the Opening by Richard B. WoodwardLast Chance for Our Special Tote Bag Offer! by Sadie SteinHappy Birthday, Angela Carter by Sadie SteinMy Day in Istanbul: A TearLay Your Sleeping Head, My Love by Christina ThompsonPlimpton! Pitches by Sadie SteinTatiana Salem Levy, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Matteo PericoliSome Sort of Alchemy by Albert MobilioLydia Davis Wins Booker Prize by Lorin SteinJoyce Carol Oates Gives Questionable Advice, and Other News by Sadie SteinWhat We Wish We Were: On BiopicR.I.P. Mr. Merker, and Other News by Sadie SteinR.I.P. Mr. Merker, and Other News by Sadie SteinLast Chance for Our Special Tote Bag Offer! by Sadie Stein WeChat integrates AI Search with DeepSeek, seeks to allay concerns over user privacy · TechNode Samsung Unpacked 2024: Sydney Sweeney, Tomorrow X Together, and more make cameos Baidu’s ERNIE Bot to offer free access to latest features starting April 1 · TechNode Boston Dynamics tests robots from Unitree Robotics: report · TechNode TuSimple closes Guangzhou gaming division and faces legal claims from employees · TechNode Samsung gives your doodles the AI treatment with 'sketch Webb telescope just snapped image of huge black hole gobbling material JD.com to expand full benefits to food delivery riders · TechNode Bumble adds option to report AI photos and videos Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 vs. Apple Watch Series 9: What are the differences? Where to pre En route to an asteroid, spacecraft snaps ghostly views of Earth Target Circle deal: $200 Westinghouse Smart Roku TV Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6 preorders: Where to get Samsung's latest mobile devices Webb telescope zooms in on solar system object shooting jets into space Tencent and 2K team up to launch mobile game NBA 2K All Star on March 25 · TechNode Apple to restore TikTok on US App Store after Attorney General letter · TechNode An object struck a satellite in Earth's orbit, leaving a hole Scientists discover where the huge dinosaur A colossal asteroid once boiled the oceans. It also did the unexpected.
1.6115s , 8200.8828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【movie sex scenes】,Feast Information Network