I love all the possible benefits of ARM architecture in Macs as they are excellent computers for general use but...
For some professional software like CAD/CAM (CATIA, Solidworks), electrical engineering (Altium Designer, Proteus), CFD analysis (Ansys, etc...) everything is mostly Windows and in scientific computing Linux. Since backwards compatibility is not the strong suit of MacOS, I understand the reluctance of companies to produce Mac versions of their products. In the era of Intel Macs, Bootcamp was the workaround but currently virtualization is the only option and it is reported to be buggy. Even for a computer company like Apple, Windows is the sole option during chip design and production process (analysis, machining, design, factory production). Despite year by year growing sales of Macs, It is a shame that such a great quality product has not gained a broader ground like their sale graphic as iPhone vs Android phones.
1) Is there a possibility that the ARM be the dominant architecture, and finally we will be able to use native MacOs versions of professional software or via Windows or Linux through Bootcamp? I mean, not only in graphic design or music production, but also in broader areas like mechanical engineering, factories, science, robotics, or some proprietary software for some specific area. Will Apple Silicon Mac Pro encourage the developers to do so?
OR
2) Will most of the products be on cloud and finally the computer or chip architecture be irrelevant?
For some professional software like CAD/CAM (CATIA, Solidworks), electrical engineering (Altium Designer, Proteus), CFD analysis (Ansys, etc...) everything is mostly Windows and in scientific computing Linux. Since backwards compatibility is not the strong suit of MacOS, I understand the reluctance of companies to produce Mac versions of their products. In the era of Intel Macs, Bootcamp was the workaround but currently virtualization is the only option and it is reported to be buggy. Even for a computer company like Apple, Windows is the sole option during chip design and production process (analysis, machining, design, factory production). Despite year by year growing sales of Macs, It is a shame that such a great quality product has not gained a broader ground like their sale graphic as iPhone vs Android phones.
1) Is there a possibility that the ARM be the dominant architecture, and finally we will be able to use native MacOs versions of professional software or via Windows or Linux through Bootcamp? I mean, not only in graphic design or music production, but also in broader areas like mechanical engineering, factories, science, robotics, or some proprietary software for some specific area. Will Apple Silicon Mac Pro encourage the developers to do so?
OR
2) Will most of the products be on cloud and finally the computer or chip architecture be irrelevant?