The transition to Apple Silicon chips is in full swing in Cupertino. The Californian company had been planning at least 7 new machines in its 2022 Mac range.
Since the beginning of its transition in 2020, Apple has decided to put an end to Intel and AMD chips in its devices. The company is now able to develop its own Apple Silicon chips from the ground up for its Mac computers. started with Apple M1 in MacBook AirMac mini iMac and MacBook Pro before proceeding with M1 Pro and M1 Max chipsets for the MacBook Pro. The pace won’t slow down in 2023, far from that.
List of new Macs planned for 2022
Bloomberg reporter Mark Gorman has compiled a list of new Macs and MacBooks to be selected for this year. If we follow the latest rumors about Apple, we will be a little surprised by this list, which above all allows us to see how much the company is investing in its line of computers.
- Apple Mac mini M1 Pro
- MacBook Pro 13 M2
- Mac Mini M2
- iMac M2
- MacBook Air M2
- iMac Pro M1 Pro and M1 Max
- Mac Pro Apple Silicon
According to the journalist, the MacBook Pro 13 and Mac minis should be the first to be renewed, as they are the oldest in the range. The iMac Pro should also be a fairly straight forward launch with the M1 Pro and M1 Max chip already in mass production. The MacBook Air M2 was originally scheduled for release between late 2021 and early 2022, and was supposed to be pushed back to the end of the year to maximize its year-end sales.
The Mac Pro is the most ambitious device Apple has planned this year. It should occupy half the size of the current generation Mac Pro, and incorporate a new chip derived from the M1 Max. It will be a chip that multiplies the number of cores by 2 or 4 depending on the configuration: up to 40 CPU cores and 128 graphics cores. When we see what the M1 Max can do in a small MacBook Pro chassis, we can’t wait to see the result in a desktop PC. Perhaps Apple should reveal this device at WWDC, its developer conference. If this event is mainly for new software, then Apple has already revealed powerful machines in the past that are also aimed at developers.
The Apple M2 chip is highly anticipated, but it shouldn’t fundamentally change the architecture of the M1 chip. Mark Gorman believes that it is above all about improving the graphic part by moving from seven or eight cores to nine or ten.
between Happened in MarchWWDC in June and another event in the fall, we haven’t finished hearing about the Mac in 2022.
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