Intel Expecting Apple to Transition to Custom ARM-Based Chips Starting in 2020

Apple is planning to ditch Intel and transition to Mac chips starting in 2020, based on multiple rumors we've heard in the past from Bloomberg. Axios today confirmed Bloomberg's reporting and said that multiple sources have suggested Apple will transition to custom ARM-based chips next year.

According to Axios, developers and Intel officials are expecting Apple to begin using ARM-based chips in 2020.

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The move to ARM-based chips is said to be part of Apple's effort to make Macs, iPhones, and iPads work together and run the same apps. Bloomberg earlier this week said that by 2021, Apple wants developers to be able to create one app that will work on iPhones, iPads, and Macs.

Apple's transition to a single app for all devices has already begun. Last year, Apple ported several of its iOS apps, such as Voice Memos, Stocks, and Home, to macOS. This year, Apple plans to let developers transition iPad apps to macOS, and in 2020, that will include iPhone apps. In 2021, then, developers will be able to make just one app that users can download on any of Apple's platforms.

This transition will greatly increase the number of Mac apps available, and it will cut down on the amount of work developers have to put in to create a Mac app. It will also better unify Apple's operating systems across all of its devices.

There have been rumors about Apple transitioning to ARM-based Macs for years now, and they have ramped up given the many Intel chip delays that have resulted in subsequent delays for Mac products. With its own ARM-based chips, Apple will not be tied to Intel's chip release cycles.

Apple already makes its own A-series chips for the ‌iPhone‌ and the ‌iPad‌, and there are also custom Apple chips in recent Macs -- the T2. The T2 chip, in the iMac Pro and 2018 MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and Mac mini models, integrates several components including the system management controller, image signal processor, SSD controller, and a Secure Enclave with a hardware-based encryption engine. It powers the Touch Bar in the ‌MacBook Pro‌ and the Touch ID feature in the ‌MacBook Pro‌ and ‌MacBook Air‌.

Apple is a major Intel customer, responsible for approximately five percent of Intel's annual revenue, so the transition to ARM-based chips will be a major blow for Intel, but a win for customers in the long run. Apple's modern A-series chips for ‌iPhone‌ and ‌iPad‌ are already more powerful than many Intel chips on the market.

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Top Rated Comments

Reindeer_Games Avatar
91 months ago
Well-I guess that settles it. Apple was nice for decade and a half, but an ARM will never be an i7.
Score: 90 Votes (Like | Disagree)
rpmurray Avatar
91 months ago
This will be a disaster. The virtual machines that I run are going to crawl under any kind of emulator that Apple produces, and I'm not all that sure they'll even throw us that bone. Apple has been giving the Mac short shrift for years now and this puts the final nail in the coffin.
Score: 88 Votes (Like | Disagree)
91 months ago
Ah now the fan boys are out of the way. Those of us who really use our Mac's dread the day we can't have an intel or AMD chip in our machines. The question is this a move to dumb down the Mac line or remove it entirely....
Score: 60 Votes (Like | Disagree)
G5isAlive Avatar
91 months ago
The mention of the T2 chip does not fill me with optimism for this move forward...
Score: 54 Votes (Like | Disagree)
arkitect Avatar
91 months ago
Well if this is true then I dearly hope Apple can pull it off.

I am old and ugly enough to remember the transition to Intel from PPC; now that was a great move. No question.
But, Apple's base was far smaller… and even then it took a lot of heartbreak.

Not really looking forward to the "new" Rosetta as companies suck teeth while deciding if they are porting it all over.

Of course there was BootCamp — which was great — but this time round?

Anyway… deep breaths and let's see if Apple come up with some magic.
Score: 51 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Lozza013 Avatar
91 months ago
My only concern with this is will this change still allow us to run Boot Camp and Parallels Desktop on ARM based Macs?
Score: 38 Votes (Like | Disagree)