Tuesday, November 6th 2012
Apple May Ditch Intel for CPUs in Macs, But It's Not Over to AMD
In the coming years, Apple could end its partnership with Intel for supply of CPUs, according to a Bloomberg report, citing Gartner research. The company plans to make a transition from x86 to ARM for its Mac product line, which includes MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, iMac, and Mac Mini. Such a transition would be similar to the one Apple took from PowerPC to x86 machine architecture, across 2005-06. According to the report, Apple's engineers are confident of designing an ARM-based chip of their own that's powerful enough for mainstream personal computing on Mac products. Apple's engineers foresee a convergence of technologies between mobile devices (such as the iPhone and iPad), and Macs. Currently, Apple designs its own processors for iOS devices, which are ARM-based.
Source:
Bloomberg
74 Comments on Apple May Ditch Intel for CPUs in Macs, But It's Not Over to AMD
ok, I admit - that was terrible.
Here are some other ideas:
Mackinroid
Appleroid
Droidtosh
To tell you the truth, these dumbass companies aren't going to care if they get a significant decrease in processing speed.
Processing speed doesn't sell. a PC that you can fit in your purse does.
This makes me worry about the enthusiast market just a bit.
Run Sunspider benchmark in your browser now and compare to ARM below: www.webkit.org/perf/sunspider-0.9.1/sunspider-0.9.1/driver.html
On the other hand, with Moore's Law taken into account, Apple could make an ARM processor that's about a third the performance, at higher price, and people will still buy it -> more money for Apple
So the fact that can tightly control the hardware and software like nobody's business makes this an interesting idea. But I honestly can't see Arm chips replacing Intel chips anytime soon. The performance just isn't there to compete with a a higher TDP intel quad core Ivy Bridge, not even on the graphics front.
I could see them releasing a Air inspired competitor to Google's ChromeBook though. Perhaps focusing tightly on iCloud integration and some evolution of iOS that would be scaled to fit iPhones and iPads.
But their investment in x86 was no small thing, rewriting much of their OS and drawing in some industry software leaders. Hell today Apple is a viable gaming platform, something you couldn't say since the days of Oregon Trail. TF2 & steam, the new Guild Wars 2, lots of the Call of Duty franchise. Between all the tier 1 software vendors and the now budding games library, to make a drastic change to their entire line up would be absurd.
Atom is a viable alternative to current generation ARM chips and holds significant power savings compared to Ivy Bridge, but Apple already said a cut back x86 isn't going to make for competitive products, and you saw that with their willingness to ignore the whole netbook craze. But there is no denying they are now a CPU design house. They will find ways to leverage and expand on that.
A new iOS and a new sub-Air like the ChromeBook I can see, but an ARM powered 27' iMac I just don't see it. So I'd agree, just rumors right now. Ever since the intel switch there have been rumors of going back to the PowerPC chips, or Cell, and recently these Arm rumors.
I think I need a faster machine :o
iPhone 4S = ~620
Pentium 3 @ 1.4ghz = ~740 (+19%)
Intel Atom D525 @ 1.80ghz = ~1750 (+182%)
I5 2500k @4.5ghz = ~10,400 (+1577%)
So basically a top end smartphone today is about as fast as a low end Pentium 3 in its heyday. The next quadcores should be as fast as or faster than the Atom.