Now that the iPhone 13 with an A15 chip has been announced, do you think the Macbook Pro slated for later this year will be based on the one year old A14 or the current A15?
But the name "M1X" is totally made up....Since mini LED likely delayed the introduction of MacBook Pro along with the rumors of it being called M1X, it's likely the cores are A14 based.
Gurman seems to suggest M1X is the actual marketing name.But the name "M1X" is totally made up....
In general, you also don't take a leading edge design (A15) and expand on it with more cores and controllers, due to the risk involved.
Yup.Hard to say.
It is interesting to note that the A15 is available in 4-core (iPhone 13) and 5-core (iPhone 13 Pro + iPad mini 6) GPU configurations.
This means that the A15 is a 5-core GPU design (the 4-core variant is the same but one of the cores is disabled to increase yield).
We also know from the rumors that the M2 SOC going in the 2022 MacBook Air is going to have a 10-core GPU...
Do you see a pattern?
The M1 was an A14 with double the count of high performance cores and double the count of GPU cores.
The M2 will be an A15 with double the count of high performance cores (still 4) and double the count of GPU cores (10).
So where does the M1X fit in?
The rumors say the M1X will come in 16-core and 32-core GPU configurations. If I had to see a pattern here, I'd say that 16 and 32 are multiples of 4, so.... I'm thinking the M1X will be an evolution of the A14 design rather than the A15 design.
There's nothing preventing Apple from building some kind of hybrid, but if you want to see a pattern here, it's definitely this one.
Hard to say.
It is interesting to note that the A15 is available in 4-core (iPhone 13) and 5-core (iPhone 13 Pro + iPad mini 6) GPU configurations.
This means that the A15 is a 5-core GPU design (the 4-core variant is the same but one of the cores is disabled to increase yield).
We also know from the rumors that the M2 SOC going in the 2022 MacBook Air is going to have a 10-core GPU...
Do you see a pattern?
The M1 was an A14 with double the count of high performance cores and double the count of GPU cores.
The M2 will be an A15 with double the count of high performance cores (still 4) and double the count of GPU cores (10).
So where does the M1X fit in?
The rumors say the M1X will come in 16-core and 32-core GPU configurations. If I had to see a pattern here, I'd say that 16 and 32 are multiples of 4, so.... I'm thinking the M1X will be an evolution of the A14 design rather than the A15 design.
It is pretty easy for the memory controller to support both LPDDR4 and LPDDR5. Tiger Lake does support both for example. On the other hand, the next Mac ASi SoC is going to be a different design than the A15 so maybe they'll just substitute a LPDDR5 controller for the LPDDR4 in the A15.Yup.
Not that it necessarily means much in terms of CPU performance. The numbers given by Apple for the iPad mini suggested that CPU and GPU performance was roughly equal to the A14. The overall device had improved power efficiency however, possibly partly due to the SoC.
They did mention that the last level cache had doubled in size, but then that was always likely to change with the bigger laptop chip. Unfortunately there was no hint in the presentation that the SoC used LPDDR5.
Either option could well be. We'll see. Given the graphics performance seems largely unchanged from the A14, I think it's a pretty safe bet that the announced devices do not use LPDDR5, but we'll probably get a teardown from iFixit within a couple of weeks that settles the matter, if we don't get memory tests from Anandtech first.It is pretty easy for the memory controller to support both LPDDR4 and LPDDR5. Tiger Lake does support both for example. On the other hand, the next Mac ASi SoC is going to be a different design than the A15 so maybe they'll just substitute a LPDDR5 controller for the LPDDR4 in the A15.
This question should be posed as "Firestorm/Icestorm"-based vs "Avalanche/Blizzard"-based.
I have a hard time thinking that Apple will release new pro chips based on Firestorm/Icestorm. Maybe they made a few for the first year as an experiment, but now they've got another year's of experience with TSMC.
Anandtech predicts that the A15 GPU performance is up about 28% over the A14.Either option could well be. We'll see. Given the graphics performance seems largely unchanged from the A14, I think it's a pretty safe bet that the announced devices do not use LPDDR5, but we'll probably get a teardown from iFixit within a couple of weeks that settles the matter, if we don't get memory tests from Anandtech first.
The faster 5-core A15 is advertised as being +50% faster than the competition, this would actually be a more sizeable +28% performance improvement over the A14 and would be more in line with Apple’s generational gains over the last few years.
Yes but that is from the extra graphics core, not architectural enhancements (unless you count the doubled LLC as such). And it doesn’t apply to all A15 chips, unfortunately, some only have four GPU ”cores” active.Anandtech predicts that the A15 GPU performance is up about 28% over the A14.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/16934/apple-announces-iphone-13-series
Absolutely, and I think you have it figured out. We will be seeing an M1X as described above, although I'd be thrilled if we get an M2X MBP next month.Do you see a pattern?
The M1 was an A14 with double the count of high performance cores and double the count of GPU cores.
The M2 will be an A15 with double the count of high performance cores (still 4) and double the count of GPU cores (10).
So where does the M1X fit in?
The rumors say the M1X will come in 16-core and 32-core GPU configurations. If I had to see a pattern here, I'd say that 16 and 32 are multiples of 4, so.... I'm thinking the M1X will be an evolution of the A14 design rather than the A15 design.
Maybe. On the other hand it is more than 25% predicted by the 5th core and presumably at the same or less power as the A14 GPU. Seems like that could architectural though some of that is because of the enhanced TSMC N5P process.Yes but that is from the extra graphics core, not architectural enhancements (unless you count the doubled LLC as such).
By and large, and judging from very little data indeed, the main enhancements to the A15 seems to be boosted neural engine performance, added GPU core and doubled LLC cache (and new hardware codec support). Longer battery life may or may not have much to do with the SoC itself, and even then may be more about better management rather than lower operational power draw per se.Maybe. On the other hand it is more than 25% predicted by the 5th core and presumably at the same or less power as the A14 GPU. Seems like that could architectural though some of that is because of the enhanced TSMC N5P process.
A14 is a fine tuned A13 as well.Same same. From the presentation I have the impression that the A15 CPU cores are more a fine tuning off a14 rather than a complete new design. So it may be A15 but not because there is much performance improvements same frequencies, but they might contain other improvements needed for SOCs with more cores. Maybe a bit more power efficiency and/or higher top frequencies.
Not quite the same lithography. Apple is using the next TSMC tweaked 5nm process, N5P. TSMC has claimed that N5P gives either a 7% performance improvement or a 15% reduction in power over N5 using the same design rules.To me, this seems rather sensible when you use basically the same lithography and operate within the same thermal and power limits.
Also, it is not a given that what goes for the A15 will also be valid for the new Mac SoC.
What this means for the Mac chips is opaque, and the OPs speculation kind of makes sense. But it’s almost a year since the M1, and a simple scaling of the number of M1 functional units seems a little simplistic/unambitious.
The assumption (and it is a safe assumption, IMO) is that "M2" will be the A15 with two more performance cores (so 4P+4E) and three more GPU cores (8) plus the Mac-specific features an M-series SoC has.
It's a tried and true process not just for Apple (AX and AZ series), but the industry as a whole. So I see no reason for Apple to not follow the same with "M1X" vis-a-vis M1.