The National - News

Apple cooks up its own chips to power next generation Mac range

- THE NATIONAL

Apple has introduced three new laptops, powered by the first microproce­ssor developed for Mac computers, called the M1, which will tie Macs and iPhones closer together.

The announceme­nt was made at a “One More Thing” online event to launch MacBooks with their own chips, which will improve performanc­e and battery life, the company said. The main announceme­nts include:

A new MacBook Air notebook, which will start at $999, the same price as its predecesso­r, and have up to twice the battery life. It will cost Dh4,199 in the UAE for the general public and Dh3,946.95 for students.

The M1 will power a new 13inch MacBook Pro notebook, which starts at $ 1,299. It is available for Dh5,399 in the UAE for the general public and Dh5,074.65 for students.

The new chip will also power the new $699 Mac Mini computer (a $100 price drop), which comes without a monitor. Mac Mini is available in the UAE for Dh2,999 for general users and Dh2,819.25 for students. The new chip means the Mac Mini will be 5 times faster than the best-selling Windows desktop within the same price range, Apple claims.

The new products will be available from next week, executives said. All new Macs come with Big Sur, which is the latest version of the desktop operating system.

With Big Sur and M1, Mac users can run a greater range of apps. iPhone and iPad apps can also now run directly on the Mac. “The introducti­on of three new Macs featuring Apple’s breakthrou­gh M1 chip represents a bold change that was years in the making, and marks a truly historic day for the Mac and for Apple,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive.

The change of chips is a move away from Intel technology that has powered Mac computers for nearly 15 years.

It will be a boon for Apple computers, the sales of which are overshadow­ed by its iPhone but still make tens of billions of dollars a year.

Apple hopes developers will create families of apps that work on computers and phones.

The company said the new chip will enable far improved power efficiency for better battery life on laptops, faster graphics and applicatio­n speeds, quicker processing for machine learning tasks and better security.

Apple said the new MacBook Air’s battery will last up to 18 hours, while the MacBook Pro will last as long as 20 hours.

Apple first said in June that it would begin outfitting Macs with its own chips, building on its decade-long history of designing processors for its iPhones, iPads and Apple Watches. At the online event, Mr Cook said that the M1 was by far the most powerful chip his company has created.

“It makes these Macs dramatical­ly faster, provides all-new capabiliti­es with extraordin­ary battery life and enables the Mac to run more software than ever,” he said.

“This is exactly why we are transition­ing the Mac to Apple silicon.”

Apple’s phone chips use computing architectu­re technology from Arm and are made by outside partners such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing. The partnershi­p between Apple and Intel began in 2005, when late co- founder Steve Jobs outlined a move away from PowerPC processors.

Intel helped Apple to catch up to Windows computers, some of which were more powerful at the time.

Apple said the new MacBook Air’s battery will last up to 18 hours, while the MacBook Pro will last as long as 20 hours

 ?? EPA ?? Apple’s senior vice president of software engineerin­g Craig Federighi explains at the online event how its Big Sur software is optimised for the new M1 chip
EPA Apple’s senior vice president of software engineerin­g Craig Federighi explains at the online event how its Big Sur software is optimised for the new M1 chip

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