Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

1st ARM Powered Mac to Be Released in November


Mon 19 Oct 2020 | 11:47 AM
Ahmed Yasser

Apple will host an ARM Mac event on November 17, 2020, it will launch its 1st Mac powered by the Apple Silicon chip replacing Intel processors.

The new ARM chip will be the 13.3-inch MacBook Pro and the new iMac. According to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple hopes to run all its new macOS products on Apple Silicon by 2021.

On other hand, ARM designs associated with mobile devices because of their greater power efficiency, giving products like the iPad long battery life without the need for active cooling. Apple could save as much as 40-60 per cent, according to Tech news.

1st ARM Powered Mac

Moreover, Apple will start relying upon the USB4 standard that is aimed to unify USB Type-C and Thunderbolt protocols to deliver new computing experiences with faster data transfer speeds.

Earlier, Apple announced that is preparing to launch its 1st device with Mini-LED display will be a new iPad Pro. According to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the Mini-LED display components will be mass-produced in the fourth quarter of this year, though it’s unclear when the new iPad Pro could actually release.

iPad Pro lineup could use the premium new display technology after the announcement of the new 10.9-inch iPad Air last week. With an updated chipset, a USB-C port, and support for the Apple Pencil and Magic Keyboard.

Also, the new iPad offers many of the flagship features of the iPad Pro at a much cheaper price, even if it misses out on the Pro’s 120Hz refresh rate display. A Mini-LED display could help the new iPad Pro stand out from the rest of the iPad lineup until the technology becomes cheap enough for use everywhere, according to the firm report.

In contrast, the firm is updating the collection of subscription services it offers to consumers, According to reportes on Saturday, it started registering the seemingly registered the term “AppleOne” with multiple TLDs ”top level domains” or domain name extensions.