by the recently re-booted AI CEO "Cook-1000"
I wish they had used the
S.uper
T.remendously
E.xceptionally
V.ersatile
E.ntity
instead.
by the recently re-booted AI CEO "Cook-1000"
Who said I think the i5 would trounce the ARM? I am referring mostly to graphics performance for gaming. I am hoping for a AS Mini to be released in November with significantly better gaming performance, and performance in general, than my 2015 iMac. I don't doubt the raw performance of a 2020 ARM over a 2015 i5, but we know little about what they are going to do for graphics in a desktop model.Why do you think the i5 should trounce the ARM? Apple's A14 phone chip contains a high performance ARM core design which benchmarks significantly better than Intel's 2020 cores, which are in turn better than Intel's 2015 cores.
Probably not because it will only have 4 big cores, but I n single core it undoubtedly would. Whatever Apple Silicon chip that will replace the iMac Pro would need ECC memory support and would need to range in core counts from ~8-18 because I doubt they’re having less cores than the previous model. This is why the iMac and Mac Pro will almost certainly come much later. The 5nm process will need to mature to support these large chips. Coming out the gate with huge chips doesn’t seem to make sense strategically or even seem feasible.
That said this thread seems still be under the assumption that Apple is going to just use iPad chips in Macs. This has no basis given what they’ve said which is that there’s going to be a family of Mac chips and no credible rumors/leaks saying they will. The Mac mini will probably reuse MacBook or iMac chips, not iPad chips.
Yes, but Apple’s hardware is superior in this because it’s more important in mobile
as per Geekbench:
’Superior AES performance can translate into improved usability for mobile devices’
I‘ll believe Geekbench when I see RDR 2 running on my iPad Pro better than on my PC, because according to Geekbench it should.
We will see very soon I guess. I would be shocked if the performance differences are truly as large as Geekbench on iOS devices predicts
It is straying off-topic, but people keep bringing it up because you keep bringing it up. I don’t think anyone’s claiming that the crypto perf is what makes the Apple Silicon look good, or that it is actually all that important for day-to-day beyond cutting down on latency in places. But folks are getting the impression that you believe the Geekbench results are inflated by the crypto results.There is a point of diminishing returns. Performance always has been important to me and hence when I was about to make the choice whether to encrypt the internal storage on my portable Macs I did a lot benchmarking before and after. This was done on non T2 equipped Macs and the differences were minor, even on 2012 15" MBP. In case you are wondering, no I didn't just run Blackmagic Speed Test to see how fast my SSD can sequentially read and write massive files and had a beer and called it a day. Day to day browsing and network use is not bottlenecked by HTTPS/SSL or TLS decryption or encryption. Sure, my iPhone can do encryption tasks much faster than my 2012 MBP. Does it matter to an end user? Windows Hello is just as fast on my, according to Geekbench, much slower i7 Windows laptop when compared to face unlock on an iPad Pro from a user point of view. Anyway, this is straying a bit off-topic and may look like an attempt to move the goal posts.
And those sort of games should be fine on Apple Silicon. Apple would pretty much need to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by under-provisioning the cores on their desktop silicon (i.e. too many low-power cores vs performance cores).I am not confusing the GPU and CPU at all, but admitedly it was a flippant remark without much thought in it. Substitute that with a CPU heavy game with a multitude of agents that hardly touches the GPU. Most of the games that I do play in my spare time are in this category.
You did not say that. Someone else expressed their worry that the i5 would trounce the ARM in a reply to you. I replied to that person, not to you. Clear?Who said I think the i5 would trounce the ARM?
I was reply to jazzn1's post:Who said I think the i5 would trounce the ARM? I am referring mostly to graphics performance for gaming. I am hoping for a AS Mini to be released in November with significantly better gaming performance, and performance in general, than my 2015 iMac. I don't doubt the raw performance of a 2020 ARM over a 2015 i5, but we know little about what they are going to do for graphics in a desktop model.
Considering the Mac mini houses the DTK with pretty much the same ports, thunderbolt aside, I would assume we will see a silent refresh to the Mac mini - what we'd normally call a spec bump - that just replaces the CPU from from the 8th Gen Intel chips to the T3 Mac chips (yes... I'm calling it T3. I don't particularly like the name I came up with but I couldn't think of any other I like better). Basically an A14Z with an A14X being in the iPad Pro models. No big fanfare or Haha. Just a press briefing one day out of the blue and the mini is Apple Silicon and way more powerful especially for graphics
Synthetic benchmarks are mostly good for one thing only: to compare which hardware is faster at running that benchmark
Fully agree. All the 'Intel' tabs on the tech specs pages are just waiting for an X variant or something to replace them.With today’s Mac Mini announcement, I am predicting a “pro” mini later on that uses the space grey motif and an M1X chip.
Thoughts?
Possibly yes, but it may be called an M2 chip. The purpose of the M1 Mini is to get Apple Silicon into as many developers hands as possible I think.With today’s Mac Mini announcement, I am predicting a “pro” mini later on that uses the space grey motif and an M1X chip.
Thoughts?
Possibly yes, but it may be called an M2 chip. The purpose of the M1 Mini is to get Apple Silicon into as many developers hands as possible I think.
Or they could wait until the next generation.The M2 will be the next gen of chips. I mean they’ll announce an M1X chip just like they do with the A-series (A12 vs A12x vs A12z as examples).
They could easily have two different minis, one with the M1 chip for the entry level and one with the M1X chip as the top end.
Just how now they have the i3 on the low end and the i7 on the top end. They’re both still part of the same chip gen.
Sure they could but Apple doesn’t want to sell Intel machines for long. Right now their website is a bit awkward because they’re selling both M-Series and Intel together which can be confusing. The sooner than can switch an entire product over to M-series the better.Or they could wait until the next generation.
Apple has said the transition will take two years. I am personally not in a hurry for them to switch the entire product line over. I hope they take their time.Sure they could but Apple doesn’t want to sell Intel machines for long. Right now their website is a bit awkward because they’re selling both M-Series and Intel together which can be confusing. The sooner than can switch an entire product over to M-series the better.
Apple won’t introduce the M2-series until likely a year from now (as it’ll be based off of the A15 chips most likely). That’s why I’m saying if they’re already going to be designing the M1X chip for the 16” MacBook Pro and iMac, why not also use it in their top-tier mini and then get rid of all Intel options for the mini ASAP.
Apple has said the transition will take two years. I am personally not in a hurry for them to switch the entire product line over. I hope they take their time.
Right thats largely because it’ll take two years to get to the Mac Pro level of 28-core processing and Vega II Duo. Not because they want to take two years. They are working their way from bottom to top. So they started with the Air, baseline mini, and baseline MBP. The next step is the top-end MBP, top end mini, and baseline iMac.
On the CPU side I fully expected this, but they're a bit above my GPU expectations. They did a great job.I have to come back here to eat some humble pie. Looks like the M1 is everything and more. I am equally shocked and impressed. I didn't think it would be slow, but I also didn't think it would be like this.
That doesn’t make sense though. The whole point of a higher end pro model I features that the lower end one doesn’t have. If the higher end one gets the M2 what does the lower end one get?Or they could wait until the next generation.