That might be their plan but it is completely dependent on TSMC delivering node improvements on time.
Better chance than intel, who delayed 10nm by at least 5 years and then didn’t ship it in volume for another 3, and it was still garbage.
That might be their plan but it is completely dependent on TSMC delivering node improvements on time.
Some of us were arguing from the start that yearly updates were always the goal.
Some of us were arguing from the start that yearly updates were always the goal. Implementing such a roadmap is an enterprise of enormous complexity and some delays and setbacks are almost expected.
In fact, I believe that the initial plan was to have 3nm ready in 2023 and that both the A16 and the M2 Mac Pro are last minute plan B placeholder products.
so what? How does that make a gap of 15 months or so into 12? There's simply no point to facile debates like this that have no grounding in facts.Until now. Apple is rumored to launch MacBook Pro updates and an iMac upgrade on next week.
so what? How does that make a gap of 15 months or so into 12? There's simply no point to facile debates like this that have no grounding in facts.
This is a rumour site where we are playing around with ideas and possibilities. If you are not interested in exploring possibilities then I suggest that this site is not for you. This is not a facile debate simply because everything is not fully set in concrete.so what? How does that make a gap of 15 months or so into 12? There's simply no point to facile debates like this that have no grounding in facts.
I am a little puzzled by your apology as I think this is an interesting topic to ponder
Your speculation is good and I’ll still never understand why people show up to a rumour site and act like speculation is an affront to their existences.Thank you, sir! You know, I don’t want to get people upset or aggressive over such a hypothetical subject.
I don’t want to argue with anyone, that’s not my intention… So I just apologize 😄
Your italicized part is the part that doesn’t make sense.M1 and M2 had a two frame launching because the base M chip came before the advanced M variants.
This time we may see the M3, M3 Pro and M3 Max at the same time, suggesting that it’s not a two frame launching anymore: it’s an unified synchronized development for all the variants.
Because of that, it’s hard to believe that Apple will stretch the M3 upgrades though 16 to 20 months after already releasing both the base and the pro chips at day one.
I just wanted to hypothesize this subject…
I think OP is talking about:M1: November 10, 2020
(19 months)
M2: June 24, 2022
(16 months)
M3: October 30, 2023 (maybe)
It isn't yearly.
Your italicized part is the part that doesn’t make sense.
1. There will be more Mac’s and probably the ultra later in the year. Still two part launch.
2. Even if that wasn’t the case, there is no reason to believe they would release the new suite sooner. None. Apple has other products that are 16-18 month cycles which is what these chips have already been. I don’t see a benefit to pushing these chips that fast for a slower upgrade cycle.
Money wasted. I doubt it. What may happen is having all Mac’s upgraded in unison. That would be cool. But also not necessary.
I think OP is talking about:
M1 Pro/Max - Oct 2021
M2 Pro/Max - (Rumoured to have slipped from Oct 2022)
M3 Pro/Max - Oct 2023
If the rumour about the M2 generation of MBPs being a few months late is true, it does indeed seem Apple wants to update the high end MacBook Pros yearly, at this time of year.
I think OP is talking about:
M1 Pro/Max - Oct 2021
M2 Pro/Max - (Rumoured to have slipped from Oct 2022)
M3 Pro/Max - Oct 2023
If the rumour about the M2 generation of MBPs being a few months late is true, it does indeed seem Apple wants to update the high end MacBook Pros yearly, at this time of year.
The first sentence in the first post of this thread is:
“Given the recent rumors on Apple releasing the M3 chip at the same time as M3 Pro and M3 Max, I believe this indicates that Apple is going to upgrade the M-series chips on a yearly basis from now on.”
Bloomberg: 13-Inch MacBook Pro With M3 Chip Unlikely to Be Announced at 'Scary Fast' Event
A new version of the 13-inch MacBook Pro featuring the M3 chip is unlikely to appear at Apple's "Scary Fast" Mac event next week,...www.macrumors.com
And therefore?The first sentence in the first post of this thread is:
“Given the recent rumors on Apple releasing the M3 chip at the same time as M3 Pro and M3 Max, I believe this indicates that Apple is going to upgrade the M-series chips on a yearly basis from now on.”
Bloomberg: 13-Inch MacBook Pro With M3 Chip Unlikely to Be Announced at 'Scary Fast' Event
A new version of the 13-inch MacBook Pro featuring the M3 chip is unlikely to appear at Apple's "Scary Fast" Mac event next week,...www.macrumors.com
When I wrote “the M-series”, I meant both the base and the pro chips. We didn’t had that with M1 and M2, which leaded to a wide releasing frame.
I think OP is talking about:
M1 Pro/Max - Oct 2021
M2 Pro/Max - (Rumoured to have slipped from Oct 2022)
M3 Pro/Max - Oct 2023
If the rumour about the M2 generation of MBPs being a few months late is true, it does indeed seem Apple wants to update the high end MacBook Pros yearly, at this time of year.
If the M3 will be announced, it will make the Vision Pro look odd with the promised M2 chip… you’d expect the latest and greatest for their new flagship product next year. Or maybe it will get the M3 after all?
The base M-series hasn’t been updated annually. @IG88’s post already provides the exact launch dates. So you can’t expect someone to read the first sentence in the first post of your thread to take you seriously when it’s clearly incorrect.
If you want to talk about Pro/Max chips, that’s fine, but make it clear in your first post.
Hopefully yearly cycles in most pop tech either stop or fade from obsessive consumerist minds