Apple hints at new Apple Silicon Mac Pro during its latest keynote
During its March "Peek Performance" event, Apple teased an upcoming refresh of the Mac Pro -- but the iMac Pro may be gone forever.
Apple Mac Pro
Apple unveiled a new Mac Studio device at its event Tuesday, packing its powerful M1 Ultra chip in a smaller and relatively affordable form factor.
At the end of the keynote, Apple senior Vice President of Hardware engineering John Ternus said that the introduction of the Mac Studio leaves just one product yet to make the transition to Apple Silicon -- the Mac Pro.
The Mac Pro is currently the only Mac that Apple still sells with an Intel processor. Ternus confirmed that Apple was working on a successor to that device, but said that a public conversation about it would wait for "another day."
Apple's language here strongly suggests that the Mac Pro refresh will include some type of M-series chip, and probably not Intel chips like some rumors have suggested. Of course, Apple could offer both an Apple Silicon and Intel Mac Pro, but its hint on Tuesday strongly suggests that the former is more likely.
Previous rumors about a Mac Pro chip suggest that it could feature up to 40 processing cores and 128 graphics cores. While the M1 Ultra is the most powerful chip in Apple's current lineup, it tops off at 20 processing cores and 64 graphics cores.
In other words, the Mac Pro will feature an even more powerful M-series chip than any of its other Macs. Realistically, such a powerful Mac would really kill any need to debut a more powerful Intel-based Mac. An Apple Silicon Mac Pro would also cap off the two-year transition to first-party chips.
Apple iMac Pro
Apple's hint that there's only one more Intel machine to make the jump to Apple Silicon doesn't leave much room for the iMac Pro.
Recent rumors indicate that Apple is working on a 27-inch iMac successor with an Apple Silicon chipset. Based on current information, it's likely that the device will be a replacement for both the 27-inch iMac and the iMac Pro, which are both currently discontinued.
However, Ternus's comment that there's only one more Mac in the Apple Silicon transition doesn't rule out a 27-inch iMac refresh. Apple doesn't currently sell any type of iMac in that form factor, so a larger Apple Silicon-equipped iMac will fit in a currently unfulfilled slot in Apple's lineup.
There's debate about whether the device will be more of a successor to the iMac Pro or the 27-inch iMac. Apple could go the iMac route and debut a colorful -- but powerful -- iMac that negates the need for a Pro-focused all-in-one. Or it could use the Pro moniker and ditch the 27-inch iMac as a standalone device.
Either way, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has suggested that the iMac refresh will arrive sometime in 2023.
Read on AppleInsider
Apple Mac Pro
Apple unveiled a new Mac Studio device at its event Tuesday, packing its powerful M1 Ultra chip in a smaller and relatively affordable form factor.
At the end of the keynote, Apple senior Vice President of Hardware engineering John Ternus said that the introduction of the Mac Studio leaves just one product yet to make the transition to Apple Silicon -- the Mac Pro.
The Mac Pro is currently the only Mac that Apple still sells with an Intel processor. Ternus confirmed that Apple was working on a successor to that device, but said that a public conversation about it would wait for "another day."
Apple's language here strongly suggests that the Mac Pro refresh will include some type of M-series chip, and probably not Intel chips like some rumors have suggested. Of course, Apple could offer both an Apple Silicon and Intel Mac Pro, but its hint on Tuesday strongly suggests that the former is more likely.
Previous rumors about a Mac Pro chip suggest that it could feature up to 40 processing cores and 128 graphics cores. While the M1 Ultra is the most powerful chip in Apple's current lineup, it tops off at 20 processing cores and 64 graphics cores.
In other words, the Mac Pro will feature an even more powerful M-series chip than any of its other Macs. Realistically, such a powerful Mac would really kill any need to debut a more powerful Intel-based Mac. An Apple Silicon Mac Pro would also cap off the two-year transition to first-party chips.
What about the iMac Pro?
Apple iMac Pro
Apple's hint that there's only one more Intel machine to make the jump to Apple Silicon doesn't leave much room for the iMac Pro.
Recent rumors indicate that Apple is working on a 27-inch iMac successor with an Apple Silicon chipset. Based on current information, it's likely that the device will be a replacement for both the 27-inch iMac and the iMac Pro, which are both currently discontinued.
However, Ternus's comment that there's only one more Mac in the Apple Silicon transition doesn't rule out a 27-inch iMac refresh. Apple doesn't currently sell any type of iMac in that form factor, so a larger Apple Silicon-equipped iMac will fit in a currently unfulfilled slot in Apple's lineup.
There's debate about whether the device will be more of a successor to the iMac Pro or the 27-inch iMac. Apple could go the iMac route and debut a colorful -- but powerful -- iMac that negates the need for a Pro-focused all-in-one. Or it could use the Pro moniker and ditch the 27-inch iMac as a standalone device.
Either way, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has suggested that the iMac refresh will arrive sometime in 2023.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
I noticed there is no 27" iMac on the Apple website now. (Given how Apple trashed the performance of the current 27" iMac in todays keynote, can't say as I blame them). I'd be curious to see if the M1 iMacs will become available in a ~27" version. The AIO concept is still attractive for a lot of general needs, so maybe a larger monitor iMac version with the same CPU/RAM options as the 24" will show up in the near future. Similar to how the internals of the 14" and 16" MBP are pretty much the same.
1. Latest Mac mini velcro'd to the back of a Studio Display = Standard iMac 27".
2. Mac Studio velcro'd to the back of a Studio Display = iMac Pro 27".
If you have the desk space, omit the velcro.
Gotta believe they will add the larger iMac. Hopefully before 2023. What could possibly take so long?
I ordered an LG UltraFine 5K Display in November 2021 and it didn't arrive until mid-January 2022. Could have been a pandemic-related component shortage … or it could also have been that production capacity was being used for something else — perhaps what we now know as the new Apple Studio Display.
Now that the last Intel-based 27-inch iMac has been discontinued, perhaps that production capacity will be available for a future Apple silicon-based 27-inch iMac.
The biggest reason they cancelled it is because they thought the product had a bleak future in the lineup just like the way they canned the original full-sized HomePod.
Presumably Apple has prototypes of many different M1-powered 27" iMac Pros in their labs and they simply decided against *ALL* of them. It's not like they're going to cancel the Intel model then come back later and say, "Hey, maybe we should consider an Apple Silicon iMac Pro?!?"
When Apple got serious about Apple Silicon development (my guess is 6-7 years ago) they sketched out a product roadmap and put a big *RED* question mark on the 27" iMac Pro.