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The answer to the first question has always been "it depends, but generally yes." And this year, we have a definitive answer ...
But as hopeful as developers and users were last June, more than a few probably wondered just how smooth Apple’s transition to Intel processors would go. A year later, they have their answer ...
A new report claims that Apple will make a significant announcement at WWDC a couple weeks from now: a transition in Mac hardware away from Intel’s x86 processors and toward its own custom ...
The Register on MSN8d
Apple-Intel divorce to be final next yearAfter twenty years, it's Intel outside Apple's macOS operating system will drop support for Intel chips next year, marking ...
Apple finally dropped its long-awaited bombshell: Apple’s Macs are switching to its own internally-developed ARM silicon, and the transition will begin before the end of the year. Apple made the ...
Following its WWDC keynote on Monday, Apple updated a developer document to indicate that Rosetta 2 will remain available ...
Apple is also planning changes to Rosetta 2, the Intel-to-Arm app translation technology created to ease the transition ...
When will Apple drop support for Intel Macs? The answer: macOS Tahoe will be the last to support Intel chips. Here's why it ...
Intel-based Macs compatible with macOS Tahoe, such as the 16-inch MacBook Pro released in 2019, will continue to receive ...
Apple’s first Intel-based Macs, iMac and MacBook Pro, were born into a position of advantage. OS X Tiger, a loyal base of customers and developers, firm ownership of high-margin specialty ...
On Intel Macs, you can run Windows in one of ... but no Windows on Macs with Apple silicon (for now at least). Tim Cook says the transition to Apple silicon will take two years.
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