Macworld

Apple details impressive transition to Macs with its own processors

Macs that use Apple’s own processors are coming this year. Here’s how the transition will work.

- Jason Cross reports

The rumours are true – Apple is beginning its next major Mac transforma­tion, kicking Intel processors to the curb in favour of its own silicon. At the WWDC virtual conference, Apple announced the start of its

two-year transition to produce all new Macs with its own Apple silicon rather than CPUS provided by Intel and GPUS provided by AMD.

What does that mean for you? Here’s a look at the timeline and technologi­es Apple announced.

Why Apple is doing this

Apple began its announceme­nt by trumpeting its prowess in making its own silicon, including ten years of iphone chips (with a total 100-fold increase in CPU power) and specialize­d versions for the ipad Pro (with a 1,000-fold increase in graphics power). Apple even went smaller, customizin­g its processors for the unique demands of the Apple Watch.

All told, Apple has shipped over 2 billion of its own processors over the years. With the

Mac, the intention is to bring its industry-leading

performanc­e per watt to the Mac. The goal is to produce faster, more powerful Macs that use less power.

But it’s not all about performanc­e-per-watt. Apple has built lots of specialize­d functional units in its processors, from powerful image and video processing engines, to the Neural Engine that runs machine-learning and AI code. Apple intends for the Mac to make full use of this specialize­d hardware, developing products, software and silicon together in harmony as it does with the iphone, ipad and Apple Watch.

This will enable the firm to build Macs with capabiliti­es and form factors it simply can’t today.

Apple did not announce its first Mac processors, though. The developmen­t kits will use the A12Z processor found in the Mac Pro, but the first consumer products will likely use something else.

Native apps will lead the way

The first Macs to ship with Apple’s own silicon will run the just-announced macos Big Sur, which we noticed carries the OS version 11.0 rather than 10.16 on Apple’s developmen­t system.

When you buy a Mac that has one of Apple’s own processors, you can be sure that it will run native versions of all of Apple’s own apps, specifical­ly optimized for its processors. That includes pro apps like Final Cut Pro and Logic.

But third-party developers will be able to make new apps that are optimized for the architectu­re as well. ‘Universal2’ apps give you a single binary that

can run on both Intel or Apple’s own Arm-based processors. According to Apple, developers can download the new version of Xcode, recompile, and have most apps up and running in a cross-platform manner in just a few days.

Apple specifical­ly called out two of the big developers users are likely most worried about: Microsoft and Adobe. The company demonstrat­ed native versions of Office on Apple silicon, including the same versions of Word, Excel and Powerpoint that we use on Macs today. Everything was fast, responsive, and fluid. From Adobe, Apple showed Lightroom and Photoshop, each processing rather heavy tasks on very big sets of data. Notably, Premiere was not demonstrat­ed.

Apple appears to be doing a great job of making a case for profession­al apps on its own silicon. Using a developmen­t kit with an A12Z, the company showed editing in Final Cut Pro with three 4K Prores videos playing at once, and applying effects like titles and lens flare in real time during playback.

And how’s this for native apps? Macs with

Apple silicon will be able to run ipad and iphone apps natively, without a single change from the developer. You’ll just find them right in the App Store, and be able to download them at will. Apple demonstrat­ed this with three apps running at once in separate windows: Monument Valley, Fender Play and Calm. None of those apps are available for Mac, though they all do have ipad versions.

Rosetta2 for non-native apps

For apps that aren’t remade for Apple’s silicon, there’s an updated version of the Rosetta software Apple introduced during its Powerpc to Intel transition. Rosetta2 will take apps made for Intel processors and translate them to run on Apple’s own Arm-based processors.

The new Rosetta translates most apps when they are installed, but can also run dynamic real-time translatio­n for things like Javascript that can’t be translated ahead of time. Apple promises better performanc­e and compatibil­ity than the original Rosetta (which was rather impressive), and even demonstrat­ed two difficult cases: 3D modelling and animation software

Maya, and the game Shadow of the Tomb Raider

(running at 1080p on an A12Z processor with good performanc­e and detail).

Virtualiza­tion will be supported as well; Apple showed a Parallels VM session running Linux to create an Apache web server.

The transition timeline

So when does this all happen? How does it impact you as a user? Apple detailed the timeline, though was vague about many specifics.

Developers will be able to sign up to buy a Developer Transition Kit. It includes a Mac mini enclosure outfitted with an A12Z processor,

16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD and all the software

necessary to start building Mac apps for Apple’s own processors. Apple began shipping those out during the week of WWDC.

Perhaps the biggest surprise was Tim Cook’s promise that consumers will be able to buy the first Mac to use Apple’s own silicon before the end of this year. It will take some time before all Macs include Apple’s own processor – Cook said it is expected to take two years.

Intel isn’t just going to be dropped, however. Cook promised that Apple still has great Intelbased Macs on the way, and that macos will continue to be built for Intel processors and supported for years to come.

This is similar to Apple’s prior transition from Powerpc to Intel. We should note that Apple completed its product transition ahead of schedule that time, and continued to make Mac OS X with support for Powerpc chips for an addition three years after the transition was complete. Whether the timeline will work out that way again is anyone’s guess.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Apple has been in the silicon game for a decade, and has produced some of the most impressive mobile silicon in the world
Apple has been in the silicon game for a decade, and has produced some of the most impressive mobile silicon in the world
 ??  ?? How’s this for native apps? ipad apps running on Mac, with no modificati­on from the developer
How’s this for native apps? ipad apps running on Mac, with no modificati­on from the developer
 ??  ?? To help allay the fears of profession­al users, Apple showed Maya running quite well using Rosetta emulation
To help allay the fears of profession­al users, Apple showed Maya running quite well using Rosetta emulation
 ??  ?? Shadow of the Tomb Raider also ran well under emulation, and even used a game controller
Shadow of the Tomb Raider also ran well under emulation, and even used a game controller
 ??  ?? The Developer Transition Kit is not what consumer will buy later this year
The Developer Transition Kit is not what consumer will buy later this year

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