All Apple’s M2 Pro and M2 Max news in pictures
Apple’s slides give us good insight into what’s new and great about its new chips and souped-up Macs, all of which are available here.
Great tips and insight
by Jonny Evans · Published January 17, 2023
Apple’s slides give us good insight into what’s new and great about its new chips and souped-up Macs, all of which are available here.
by Jonny Evans · Published November 30, 2022
The latest rumour suggests the next major Mac introduction will deliver higher end machines with even better performance per watt than Apple’s PCs have today.
by Jonny Evans · Published October 31, 2022
Apple will now introduce new model MacBook Pro M2 Pro and M Pro Mac mini computers in 2023, probably around March, speculates Bloomberg’s Gurman.
by Jonny Evans · Published September 13, 2022
Digitimes tells us new MacBook Pros are rolling off the production line, and that Apple is the only PC maker still “pulling in orders” as PC demand declines.
by Jonny Evans · Published July 6, 2022
Apple has published a swift statement to send a shiver of fear through the hearts of computing notebook makers – MacBook Air will be in the wild from July 15.
by Jonny Evans · Published June 16, 2022
Claimed benchmarks suggest 18% processor performance boost and a much larger increase in graphics performance than Apple even said at the M2 launch.
by Jonny Evans · Published June 8, 2022
A bubble of speculation claiming Apple may put more clear, blue Apple silicon water between its pro and less pro products emerged in recent weeks.
by Jonny Evans · Published June 7, 2022
M2 delivers a faster CPU, GPU, Neural Engine, higher memory bandwidth and new capabilities, M2 maintains the pace of innovation in Apple silicon for Mac
by Jonny Evans · Published February 28, 2022
What’s a computer manufacturer to do once it has invented an exceedingly powerful processor family capable of excellent performance a low power and heat?
by Jonny Evans · Published July 26, 2021
Apple’s processor development is now so far advanced the company can choose when it wants to introduce new iterations of the chips it has.
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