This looks like nothing… But this is super outstanding amazing reverse engineering. And quite sure most of it thanks to the extremely talented very young Alyssa Rosenzweig.
If the M1 gets GFX acceleration on Linux, and it looks just like that… Apple hardware will be completely free (besides the money).

#Linux #AppleM1Chip #AsahiLinux #ReverseEngineering

https://bird.trom.tf/AsahiLinux/status/1532035506539995136#m

Asahi Linux (@AsahiLinux)

First triangle ever rendered on an M1 Mac with a fully open source driver! 🎉🎉🎉🎉

Nitter
Apple Mac Studio with M1 Ultra Review: Insane Power for the Price

The amount of power for the size and cost of the Mac Studio is unlike anything else on the market.

PetaPixel
Mac Studio, M1 Ultra and the End of Hardware - Erik Engheim - Medium

Back when the M1 chip got released there was a lot of skeptics, who said Apple performance numbers could not be right. Then third-party tests confirmed that Apple was not exaggerating. In…

Medium

Apple’s Next-Gen ‘M2’ Processor is in Production: Report

The M1 Chip successor from Apple, which is currently being called M2, is looking more likely to arrive in MacBook computers by the end of the year. A new report states that the processor has already gone into mass production and could start shipping as early as July.

This timeline seems to confirm a report from earlier this month that stated the M2 processor would begin production and would therefore arrive in finished Macbook machines by the fall. If production has indeed started, Apple is sticking to that schedule despite the massive silicon shortage that has plagued most computing manufacturers since last year.

According to a recent report from Nikkei and noted by Engadget, the new chips are being produced by a key Apple supplier called Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which is one of the world's largest chipmakers using a semiconductor production technology called "5-nanometer plus," or "N5P." It currently takes about three months to create this advanced chipset, meaning the rumor of the first batch of devices arriving in July of 2021 lines up well with mass production timelines. The rumors are that the first devices that will feature the new chip in that timeline may be new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros.

Given that the M1 chipsets already in use offer CPU performance of up to 85% faster and graphics performance of nearly twice as fast than a similar device using an Intel chipset, the introduction of the chips in the rest of the Apple line up will be a boon for Apple fans. Especially since according to research company IDC, the shift to stay-at-home working due to the global pandemic sparked a jump in Mac sales and shipments of over 29% in 2020. The trend continued even further in the first quarter of this year with Mac sales and deliveries up 111% year over year.

The Apple Silicon lineup is a so-called "system-on-a-chip" that integrates the central processing unit (CPU), graphic processing units (GPU), and artificial intelligence accelerators (AI), all on one chip. The goal of Apple is to eventually use this chipset across all their devices, not just the MacBook, Mac Mini, and iMac's. According to Nikkei , Apple is aiming to completely replace Intel's chip offerings over the next two years with its own in an effort to further differentiate its products from the competition.

#news #technology #apple #applem1 #applem1chip #applem2chip #chipset #imac #ipad #iphone #laptop #laptops #m1 #m2 #mac #macbook #macbookpro #macmini #massproduction #report #rumor

Apple's Next-Gen 'M2' Processor is in Production: Report

The M1 Chip successor from Apple, which most refer to as M2, is on pace to arrive in MacBook computers by the last half of 2021.

Apple: Was gibt es Neues von der heutigen Keynote?

Bei der Apple Keynote April 2021 stellte Tim Cook, der CEO des Unternehmens, neue Produkte vor. Vor allem ging es dabei um neues Zubehör.

Tarnkappe.info

It is Technically Possible to Upgrade an M1 Mac’s Memory and Storage

Apple's M1 MacBooks are impressive, but they come with what many PC users would define as an unforgivable caveat: they cannot be upgraded with more RAM or storage capacity. That was the belief, but it might actually no longer be the case if you're willing to void your warranty.

As reported by MacRumors, a set of technicians from Guangzhou, China have actually found a way to do it without destroying the machine. They were able to detach the RAM and SSD chips and replace them with higher capacity parts and the computer does actually (currently) recognize them as official and compatible.

You'll just have to void your warranty to do it.

Chinese maintenance engineers can already expand the capacity of the Apple M1. The 8GB memory has been expanded to 16GB, and the 256GB hard drive has been expanded to 1TB. pic.twitter.com/2Fyf8AZfJR

-- DuanRui (@duanrui1205) April 4, 2021

In the tweet above, the multiple attached images show the process.

As expected with something like this, the process is not straightforward and full of pitfalls. Not only will you have to properly source parts that are compatible with the system, but you will also have to remove the RAM and SSD chips that are soldered-on -- not something most people would recommend. That said, if the parts are successfully sourced, the previous parts correctly removed, and the new ones properly added, the technicians showed that they successfully expanded the computer from 8GM of memory to 16GB, and the 256GB storage drive was expanded to 1TB.

This isn't the first example of experts tinkering with Apple's very specific and un-upgradeable design. Earlier this year, Linus Tech Tips showed that the M1 MacBook Air actually can match -- or even beat -- the M1 MacBook Pro's performance with a thermal pad upgrade. In that case, the modification also would void the MacBook's warranty and for non-experts, even making slight adjustments like that are beyond the comfort levels of the average MacBook owner.

As Engadget says, it's nice to see that an M1 MacBook is technically more upgradeable than Apple wants you to believe, but given how restrictive the company has been around repair, this seems like a situation it would consider an exploit and if it becomes popular enough, something it could patch out via software or make infeasible due to restricting part availability. In actuality, however, it is unlikely this method will become popular because of the level of skill it takes to successfully pull off mixed with the risk. It is very easy to destroy the MacBook in this process, and that's a financial coin flip most who enjoy MacBooks just won't take.

#equipment #news #apple #applem1 #applem1chip #applem1macbookpro #applemacbookair #applemacbookpro #m1 #m1macbookair #m1macbookpro #macbookair #macbookpro #modification

It is Technically Possible to Upgrade an M1 Mac's Memory and Storage

Technically possible -- The best kind of possible!

New MacBooks Powered by Apple’s M2 Chip Coming This Year: Report

While Apple's latest M1 MacBook Pro is less than six months old, the company is apparently working on the next generation of the laptop powered by the M2 chip, according to a new report.

Tom 's Guide cites a new report from DigiTimes that looks specifically at Apple's booking of production for its new in-house chips that will "very likely" power the next generation of Macs. It is speculated that this will be the M2 chip.

This new chip will reportedly be manufactured by Taiwanese firm TSMC, and based on a 4-nanometer fabrication process node. The current M1 chip is built on a 5-nanometer process technology and is packed with 16 billion transistors, which is the most that Apple has ever put into a chip. Packing more transistors into a slice of silicon would mean adding more power, so dropping from the 5-nanometer process to a 4-nanometer process should result in a notable performance increase. According to DigiTimes , the production of the 4-nanometer process chip is ahead of schedule, as it was previously set for a 2022 time frame.

Improving the M1's performance would be great, especially since the M1 in both the current MacBook Pro and the MacBook Air absolutely blew the doors off expectations and the competition. Linus Tech Tips and PetaPixel 's own internal testing have shown that both the M1 MacBook Air and MacBook Pro absolutely shred the competition, taking into consideration both previous Apple devices as well as current Windows laptops. Even the Mac Mini, which isn't supposed to be a powerhouse device, performed extremely well.

Unfortunately, the M2 probably won't be in the upcoming redesigned iMacs that are expected this spring. Instead, it's expected that the new iMacs will use a desktop-focused version of the M1 chip that is expected to outperform both of the M1 MacBooks as well as the Mac Mini. In February, a leak suggested that not only will the new iMacs sport a new design, they will also come in five colors.

Those new iMacs are expected to be announced in an April event (which at the time of publication was still just a rumor), but don't expect to see the M2 chip or new Macbooks there. You'll probably have to wait until Apple's fall event -- the same time period that it announced the M1 chip in 2020 -- to see it.

#equipment #news #apple #applem1 #applem1chip #applem2chip #imac #laptop #laptops #m1 #m2 #macbook #macbookpro #report #rumor

New MacBooks Powered by Apple's M2 Chip Coming This Year: Report | PetaPixel

Production of the M2 chip is ahead of schedule.