Wednesday, February 5th 2025
Apple's Upcoming M5 SoC Enters Mass Production
Apple's M4 SoC was released to overwhelmingly positive reviews, particularly regarding the commendable performance and efficiency benefits it brought to the table. The chip first appeared in the OLED iPad Pro lineup last May, arriving in the company's MacBook Pro lineup only much later, giving Intel's Lunar Lake and AMD's Strix Point a run for their money. Now, it appears that the company is cognizant of the heat brought by AMD's Strix Halo, and has already commenced mass production for the first SoC in the M5 family - the vanilla M5, according to Korean news outlet ET News.
Just like last time, the M5 SoC has been repeatedly rumored to first arrive in the next-generation iPad Pro, scheduled to enter production sometime in the second half of this year. The MacBook Pro will likely be next-in-line for the M5 treatment, followed the rest of the lineup as per tradition. Interestingly, although Apple decided against using TSMC's 2 nm process for this year's chips, the higher-tier variants, including the M5 Pro and M5 Max are expected to utilize TSMC's SoIC-mH technology, allowing for vertical stacking of chips that should ideally benefit thermals, and possibly even allow for better and larger GPUs thanks to the separation of the CPU and GPU portions. Consequently, yields will also improve, which will allow Apple to bring costs down.Since the chips are still well over six months away, there is no concrete information regarding the performance improvements that Apple will manage to squeeze out of the chips, considering the lack of a node shrink. Apple Silicon chips have always boasted exceptional CPU, especially single-threaded performance, although the same can't be said for their onboard GPUs. Thanks to 3D stacking, the M5 generation might bring a massive boost to GPU performance for the Pro, Max, and Ultra variants, which will surely be a welcome upgrade.
Source:
ETNews
Just like last time, the M5 SoC has been repeatedly rumored to first arrive in the next-generation iPad Pro, scheduled to enter production sometime in the second half of this year. The MacBook Pro will likely be next-in-line for the M5 treatment, followed the rest of the lineup as per tradition. Interestingly, although Apple decided against using TSMC's 2 nm process for this year's chips, the higher-tier variants, including the M5 Pro and M5 Max are expected to utilize TSMC's SoIC-mH technology, allowing for vertical stacking of chips that should ideally benefit thermals, and possibly even allow for better and larger GPUs thanks to the separation of the CPU and GPU portions. Consequently, yields will also improve, which will allow Apple to bring costs down.Since the chips are still well over six months away, there is no concrete information regarding the performance improvements that Apple will manage to squeeze out of the chips, considering the lack of a node shrink. Apple Silicon chips have always boasted exceptional CPU, especially single-threaded performance, although the same can't be said for their onboard GPUs. Thanks to 3D stacking, the M5 generation might bring a massive boost to GPU performance for the Pro, Max, and Ultra variants, which will surely be a welcome upgrade.
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