As previously announced by Apple this summer, the company is embarking on a major transition within its Mac product lineup. After almost a decade and a half of relying on Intel’s x86 processors to serve at the heart of every Mac, the company is going to be shifting to relying on its own, in-house designed Arm processors to power their now un-PC computers. At the time Apple set the start of the transition at the end of this year, and right on cue, today Apple announced the first three Apple Silicon-powered Macs: the Late 2020 editions of the MacBook Air, the 13-Inch MacBook Pro, and the Mac Mini.

Three of the lower-end devices within the Mac family, Apple is starting small for their Arm transition. The Mac Mini is of course the smallest and most integrated of Apple’s desktop-style computers. Meanwhile the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro are Apple’s two 13.3-inch laptops, focused on portability and performance respectively. Fittingly, these are also the areas where performance-per-watt is generally the most critical, as Apple is very strongly power-constrained on these platforms, and thus performance-limited as well.

Before diving into the individual Macs, it’s interesting to note just how little is changing on the outside. The new machines are all clearly reusing the designs of their x86-based predecessors, if not parts of the shell in some cases. And unlike the transition to x86 that started in 2006, Apple isn’t even cleaning the slate with product naming – the Arm-based Macs all continue the MacBook/Mac Mini naming rather than being the progenitors of new families of machines. Apple wants to make the transition to Arm Macs as seamless as possible, and this goes right on down to their design and product names. So although guts will be entirely different, these new products are still designed to be Macs in every appreciable way.

Powering all three of these new machines will be Apple’s first Mac-focused Apple Silicon chip, the Apple M1. Our own Andrei Frumusanu has a detailed breakdown on the new M1 chips and what we expect from them based on Apple’s A14 SoC used in the recently-launched iPhone 12 family. But in short, M1 looks a lot like a beefier A14, with four of Apple’s high-performance Firestorm cores – 2 more than on A14 – joined by four high-efficiency Icestorm cores. Meanwhile the GPU design has been bulked up to 8 cores there as well, doubling A14. Finally, joining this are various other functional blocks for the SoC, including a flash storage controller, a secure enclave, Apple’s neural engine (NPU), and a Thunderbolt 3 + USB 4 controller. All of this, in turn, is made on a 5nm process – no double the same TSMC 5nm process that Apple used for the A14.

MacBook Air (Late 2020)

Starting things off, we have the MacBook Air. The most recently (re)introduced member of Apple’s Mac lineup, the Air is the company’s smallest and cheapest laptop. The final Intel revision of the laptop was launched in March, where it shipped with Intel’s Ice Lake-Y processors, topping out with the quad CPU core i7-1060NG7. The newest model picks up where the previous one left off, swapping out Intel’s silicon for Apple’s own M1 processor.

MacBook Air Specifications
Model Late 2020 Mid 2020 Mid 2019 (Base) Late 2018 (Base)
Dimensions Width 30.4 cm
Depth 21.2 cm
Height 0.41 - 1.61 cm 0.41 - 1.61 cm 0.41 - 1.56 cm
Weight 2.8 lbs (1.29 kg) 2.8 lbs (1.29 kg) 2.75 lbs (1.25 kg)
CPU Apple M1
4C/4T Highi-Perf +
4C/4T High-Eff
Core i3-1000NG4
2C/4T
1.10 - 3.20 GHz

Core i5-1030NG7
4C/8T
1.10 - 3.50 GHz

Core i7-1060NG7
4C/8T
1.20 - 3.80 GHz
1.6 GHz (3.60 GHz Turbo)
Core i5
2 CPU Cores
GPU Apple M1 Integrated
(7 or 8 Cores)
Intel Iris Plus Intel UHD Graphics 617
Display 13.3-inch 2560x1600 IPS LCD
P3 with True Tone
13.3-inch 2560x1600 IPS LCD
sRGB with True Tone
13.3-inch 2560x1600 IPS LCD
sRGB
Memory 8 - 16 GB LPDDR4X-4266 8 - 16 GB LPDDR4X-3733 8 GB LPDDR3-2133
SSD 256 GB - 2 TB 256 GB - 2 TB 128 GB PCIe
I/O 2x USB4 Type-C
w/Thunderbolt 3

3.5mm Audio
Touch ID
2x USB 3.1 Type-C
w/Thunderbolt 3

3.5mm Audio
Touch ID
Battery Capacity 49.9 Wh 50.3 Wh
Battery Life 15 - 18 Hours 11 - 12 Hours 12 Hours
Price $999 $999 $1099 $1199

The star of the show is of course Apple’s M1. Because the company has changed so little outside (there are a few things, which we’ll get to), the bulk of Apple’s focus in promoting the new MBA is based on performance and battery life – which is to say performance, power consumption, and performance-per-watt. Among figured quoted by the firm include up to 3x better CPU and 5x better GPU performance than a last-generation Intel-based MBA, and perhaps more directly relevant, enough performance to play back multiple 4K ProRes streams without dropping a frame. In other words, the new MacBook Air should be significantly more powerful than the previous one.

Driving this laptop are two versions of the M1 chip. The more expensive, $1249 model of the MBA gets a fully-enabled 8 CPU core plus 8 GPU core version of the M1. Meanwhile the entry-level $999 model gets a reduced 8 CPU/7 GPU version of the chip. This is apparently where Apple is sending binned/salvaged M1 chips, as TSMC’s 5nm process is no doubt temperamental in its early days. Unfortunately, not published in any Apple documentation are clockspeeds, so we have no idea how the two models will compare to each other in terms of performance beyond the influence of an 8th GPU core.

The MacBook Air is now fanless, harkening back to the retired 12-inch MacBook. It’s not clear whether Apple has set the M1 to a nominally lower TDP than the Intel CPUs (10 Watts), or if they’re simply more confident about the boost and throttle mechanics of their own chip. Either way, this does mean that we expect the MacBook Air to throttle under heavy, sustained workloads, not unlike the iPhones. This is the cost of having a fanless, passively-cooled design.

The benefit to that, of course, being that there are no fans to make noise, break, or get clogged with dust. This kind of reliability was one of the great thinks about the old MacBook and was a notable loss with the previous MacBook Air, so it’s good to see that Apple has brought it back. This also helps to further differentiate the MacBook Air from the similarly-sized 13-inch MacBook Pro, as it means there should be a meaningful performance difference between the devices, and there will definitely be a noise difference.

Like all of the M1-based Macs, Apple is offering two memory configurations and four storage configurations. The base model gets 8GB of LPDDR4X memory and 256GB of flash storage, and this can be dialed up to 16GB of memory and 2TB of flash. It goes without saying that all of this is soldered down – in the case of the RAM, directly on to the M1 package – so there are no end-user upgrade options.

Apple rates the battery life on the MBA at up to 15 hours of web browsing and 18 hours of movie playback, which is 4 and 6 hours longer than their rating on the Intel model. Respectively. The laptop comes with the same capacity 49.9 watt-hour battery as the previous model, so all of these measurements are being done against equivalent batteries. However, as Ian Cutress noted, Apple doesn’t seem to be entirely equalizing for brightness in their testing – setting the two Macs to the same brightness setting rather than ensuring they’re at the same measured brightness in nits – so it’s not clear if that plays a role. In either case, however, Apple is clearly positioning the new MBA to last a lot longer than the previous model.

The switch to M1 also means that the Air’s I/O functionality gets an upgrade. The SoC supports an odd combination of Thunderbolt 3 and the new USB 4 (but not the all-encompassing Thunderbolt 4), so the laptop’s two USB-C ports inherit this functionality. And, as required by USB 4, this includes DisplayPort alt mode functionality. On which note, the laptop also inherits M1’s support for a single external display, up to 6K@60Hz (i.e. Apple’s XDR display). Meanwhile, on the right side of the laptop, Apple continues to provide a 3.5mm combo headset jack.

Meanwhile, Apple has also given the MacBook Air an unexpected display upgrade. The laptop, which previously used a 2560x1600 pixel sRGB-gamut display now offers a 2560x1600 pixel P3-gamut display, the same gamut as offered by the MacBook Pro family. Apple does not publish complete gamut coverage specifications, so it’s not clear how much of the P3 gamut that the new MBA does cover, and how that compares to the MacBook Pros. Apple is normally very good here, but that will be something worth checking out. This also means it’s unclear whether Apple has just upgraded the laptop’s backlighting to drive the wider gamut, or if the panel itself has been updated as well.

Finally, it’s worth noting that in today’s presentation, Apple also brought up the matter of image quality from their integrated, front-facing Facetime camera. According to the company, they’re putting the M1’s superior ISP to good use here in order to offer better noise reduction, a higher dynamic range, and a better white balance. However the hardware spec sheet still lists the laptop as using a 720p Facetime camera, so at a minimum it’s safe to say that Apple’s resolution hasn’t improved; otherwise we’ll have to see if there are any other hardware changes driving the rest of those improvements.

As with all three Apple Silicon-based Macs, the Late 2020 MacBook Air is set to be available next week, on November 17th.

13-Inch MacBook Pro (Late 2020)

Counterpoint to the light and ultraportable MacBook Air is the 13-inch MacBook Pro. Based around an identical-sized 13.3-inch panel as the MBA, the 13-inch MBP is Apple’s more productivity-focused Mac laptop, generally offering better performance and more I/O options than the MBA. With the switch to Apple’s Arm-based M1 processor, this is still the case, though how exactly the laptops differ has changed some.

As with the MacBook Air, the smaller of the Pro laptops is almost entirely an upgrade to the guts of the machine, with no notable external changes. Apple isn’t updating the screen, Apple isn’t changing the size of the laptop, or even changing the battery; this is largely just the M1-ization of the MBP. Of particular note here, the Late 2020 13-inch MacBook Pro is technically only a replacement for the lower-end 13-inch MBP, commonly referred to as the Two Thunderbolt 3 ports model, which relative to everything else in Apple’s lineup was fairly dated. Apple is continuing to sell the higher-end model from earlier this year, which uses more recent Intel chips.

MacBook Pro 13-Inch (2 Port) Specifications
Model Late 2020 Mid 2020 Mid 2019
CPU Apple M1
4C/4T Highi-Perf +
4C/4T High-Eff
1.4 GHz/3.9 GHz
Core i5-8275U
4C/8T
(Coffee Lake)
1.4 GHz/3.9 GHz
Core i5-8275U
4C/8T
(Coffee Lake)
GPU Apple M1 Integrated (8 Cores) Intel Iris Plus Graphics 645
(128MB eDRAM)
Intel Iris Plus Graphics 645
(128MB eDRAM)
Display 13" 2560 x 1600 IPS LCD
P3 Gamut, True Tone, 500 nits
Memory 8 - 16 GB LPDDR4X-4266 8 - 16 GB LPDDR3-2133 8 - 16 GB LPDDR3-2133
SSD 256 GB - 2 TB 256 GB - 2 TB 256 GB - 2 TB
Touch Bar Yes
I/O 2x USB4 Type-C
w/Thunderbolt 3

3.5mm Audio
Touch ID
Wi-Fi 6
2x USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-C
w/Thunderbolt 3

3.5mm Audio
Touch ID
Wi-Fi 5
Battery Capacity 58.2 Wh
Battery Life 17 - 20 hours 10 Hours
Dimensions 1.56 cm x 30.41 cm x 21.24 cm
Weight 3.0 lbs (1.4 kg) 3.1 lbs (1.4 kg) 3.02 lbs (1.37 kg)
Launch Price $1299 $1299 $1299

Since this new MBP is designed to replace the low-end model, the change on the CPU front is especially significant. Apple is going from Intel’s Core 8000 series (Coffee Lake-U) chips to the M1, so the M1 is a leapfrog in both expected CPU performance and graphics performance. In this case it’s 8 CPU cores (4B + 4L) versus Intel’s 4 CPU cores, and Apple’s 8 core GPU design against Intel’s eDRAM-backed Gen9.5 iGPU, which used 48 EUs. These old Intel CPUs were still based on their 14nm process, so going from that to the 5nm-based M1 means that Apple gets both an architectural upgrade and a big manufacturing boost at the same time.

As with the MBA, there are no clockspeeds disclosed, so we have no idea how that compares to the MBA or the new Mac Mini. But the MBP it replaces was nominally a 15 Watt TDP part, and I’d expect the new model to be similarly tuned. On which note, the 13-inch MBP is actively cooled with a fan, so unlike the passively cooled MBA, expect the MBP to do better under sustained loads, as it has the necessary cooling to keep itself from throttling as much under heavy workloads.

There is only one SoC configuration being offered here: a full-fat M1 with 8 CPU cores and 8 GPU cores. So upgrade options are limited to changing out the RAM and storage. Here Apple offers 8GB or 16GB of LPDDR4X RAM (another improvement over the previous MBP), and storage starts at 256GB for the $1299 model, with prices going much, much higher ($2099) for 2TB of flash storage.

Rounding out the package is an identical capacity 58.2 watt-hour battery. So like the MBA, battery life comparisons are reasonable apples-to-apples to the previous generation laptop. In which case Apple is claiming that the M1-based MBP will get up to 17 hours of web browsing and 20 hours of video playback, which is an improvement of 7 and 10(!) hours respectively. At least with M1-based devices, it would seem the bigger the battery, the greater the battery life gains.

Finally, as this model replaces the old two-port MBP, the new MBP also gets two ports. Once again both on the left side, the laptop features two USB-C ports capable of Thunderbolt 3 and USB4, being driven by the M1 SoC. Given that no M1 machine ships with more than this – not even the Pro-focused MBP – it’s reasonable to assume that two ports is a limitation of the M1 SoC. The new MBP is no worse than the old one, but it’s also no better – and it’s easy to see why Apple is keeping the higher-end Intel model around for now.

As for the display, unlike the MBP it doesn’t appear that Apple has made any changes here. The Late 2020 MBP is listed as offering the same 2560x1600 P3 display as the previous model, both with a maximum brightness of 500 nits. External display users will want to make note, however, that unlike the Intel MBPs, this new one can only support a single external display. The good news is that it can go up to 6K@60Hz, but if you were accustomed to driving a pair of displays off of a MBP, then the new M1-based model won’t quite measure up.

The Late 2020 13-inch MacBook is set to be available next week, on November 17th. Prices start at $1299 for the 8GB/256GB model, and $1499 for the 8GB/512GB model.

Mac Mini (Late 2020)

Last but certainly not least among the new Arm-based Macs is the sole desktop of the group, the Mac Mini. Apple used a modified Mini as the basis for the Developer Transition Kits (DTKs), so it’s only fitting that the Mini is also one of the first retail systems to ship with an M1 SoC. Besides being Apple’s cheapest Mac, the Mini sits in an interesting place in Apple’s lineup as the only true stand-alone desktop other than the pricey Mac Pro, so it has developed an eclectic following of users, ranging from desktop users to server admins. This also means that despite being little more than a body for the parts inside, it sees some of the most significant changes of any of the Macs in getting its M1 SoC upgrade.

Apple Mac Mini Specifications
  Late 2020 Late 2018
CPU Apple M1
4C/4T Highi-Perf +
4C/4T High-Eff
Core i3-8100B
4C/4T
3.6 GHz

Core i5-8500B
6C/6T
3.0 - 4.1 GHz

Core i7-8700B
6C/12T
3.2 - 4.6 GHz
Graphics Apple M1 Integrated (8 Cores) Intel UHD Graphics 630
Memory 8 - 16 GB LPDDR4X-4266 8 GB DDR4-2666 (SO-DIMMs)
Configurable to 16 GB, 32 GB or 64 GB DDR4-2666
Storage 256 GB - 2 TB 128 GB PCIe SSD
Configuratble to 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB, or 2 TB SSD
Ethernet 1 GbE 1 GbE or 10 GbE
I/O 2x USB4 Type-C
w/Thunderbolt 3

2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A
(5 Gbps)
3.5mm Audio
Wi-Fi 6
4 × USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) Type-C
w/ Thunderbolt 3

2 × USB 3.0 Type-A (5 Gbps)
HDMI 2.0
3.5mm Audio
Wi-Fi 5
Dimensions Width 19.7 cm 19.7 cm
Height 3.6 cm 3.6 cm
Depth 19.7 cm 19.7 cm
PSU ~ 150 W (internal) ~ 150 W (internal)

Prior to today, the Mini was another system running relatively old Intel hardware. The system hadn’t been updated since 2018, at which point it received Intel’s eighth-generation Coffee Lake CPUs. While the chip options here included four and six CPU cores, the graphics side was notably weaker than the more powerful options found in the 13-inch MBP, never mind discrete graphics. So the M1 stands to be a significant upgrade over those earlier offerings, especially when it comes to graphics. And while I have no doubts the M1 can surpass the older Intel chips here, it will be interesting to see whether only 4 high-performance cores is enough to go up against the 6 cores offered by the higher-end Intel configuration.

On which note, Apple is continuing to sell the 6 core Intel model. The other, cheaper models have been retired with the introduction of the Late 2020 Mac Mini, however there is still one final Intel configuration to last for now. And while Apple doesn’t comment on otherwise trivial matters such as these, given the hardware differences, I strongly suspect the Intel model is being kept around (for now) for customers that have extensive RAM or I/O needs.

For the M1-based Mac Mini then, the RAM and storage options are the same as the other M1-based Macs. This means just 8 or 16GB of memory, and anywhere between 256GB and 2TB of flash storage. The base configuration starts out at 8/256 for $699, while the higher-end SKU gets 8/512 for $899. And because this is the M1, this is all once again soldered down.

The lack of more thorough expandability options is a notable departure from the earlier Mac Mini. That Mac used SO-DIMMs for memory, not only allowing users to install their own memory upgrades, but to install greater amounts of memory altogether – up to 64GB. But the use of soldered, on-package memory with the M1 means that expandable memory is no longer an option. Not that you can get LPDDR4X in SO-DiMM form, either.

The Late 2020 Mac Mini’s I/O options aren’t quite as robust, either. Whereas the 2018 model offered three USB-C supports, all supporting Thunderbolt 3 and USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10Gbps), the newer model has two ports sporting Thunderbolt 3 and USB4. USB4 itself is a welcome upgrade, but it won’t help if you need more USB-C ports. Otherwise, the rest of the port collection remains unchanged, with an HDMI 2.0 port, two USB Type-A ports, and a 1Gbps Ethernet jack. Ultimately, we’re seeing what I suspect are the limitations of the M1; Apple kept things simple by only relying on the ports the SoC could directly drive, and it can only directly drive two such high-speed ports.

Between all of those ports, in turn, the Mac Mini can drive two displays. One can be a DisplayPort/Thunderbolt-type display hooked up to the USB-C ports, and the other needs to be an HDMI display hooked up to the aforementioned port. Like the MBP, this is a step forward in regards to the best display supported (now up to 6K@60Hz), but a step backwards in the total number of displays supported, since the older Mac Mini could drive a total of three displays.

Other than this, however, the Mac Mini may just end up being the best performing of the new M1-based Macs. With the same chassis as the previous 65W TDP model, including a fan for active cooling, the new Mac Mini has plenty of cooling headroom to work with for the M1 SoC. So with both power and cooling properly provided for, this is the Mac that has the best chance of sustaining the M1’s highest clockspeeds under a full load.

But as always, the we’ll have to see if real-world results can live up to Apple’s claims. The Mac Mini ships alongside the rest of the Macs on November 17th, so we shouldn’t be waiting too long to see what the new Mini and the rest of the new Apple Silicon-based Macs are capable of.

Source: Apple

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  • nyoungman - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Here's an article comparing the "Other Accessories":
    https://www.macrumors.com/2020/11/10/m1-macs-not-c...
  • ingwe - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    Thanks for sharing the link. That is a big disappointment.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    Makes sense. They'd have to get an entirely new driver stack written, and eGPU on Mac is a niche within a niche.
  • lilkwarrior - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    USB4 support. That's HUGE. They're the first to market & will push the rest of the PC market forward w/ the USB 3.0 nonsense this year & last.

    USB4 has Thunderbolt 3 integrated except for mobile. Since Thunderbolt 4 has the same bandwidth as Thunderbolt 3. It's a no-brainer. It helps w/ the longeviity of these devices significantly.

    USB4 support is imminent in similar 5nm chips in *ALL* roadmaps publicly revealed by AMD & Intel
  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    "This thunderbolt implementation in the new m1 seems like a downgrade as compared to old intel implementation." - It now has a superset of those capabilities. The only downside is regarding multiple external displays.

    "Also curious is why Apple eschewed thunderbolt4 support" - because they'd have to buy it from Intel, and who knows what fresh hell the integration process for that would be. I'm not sure there are any genuine advantages they'd get from implementing Thunderbolt 4.
  • kninez - Friday, November 13, 2020 - link

    Apple didn't downgrade their thunderbolt implementation on purpose. The fact is that it takes a while in the design phase to implement new standards. This is one of the first and only ARM CPUs on a mainstream computer, and they managed to implement thunderbolt on it without intel thunderbolt controllers. That is a feat in itself.

    Apple probably started designing/implementing the M1 chip long before the new thunderbolt 4/usb 4 spec was announced. This is their first gen, lower powered chip, It doesn't have enough pcie lanes for 4 thunderbolt ports, it can't drive enough displays, this is first gen. It's to be expected.

    Intel developed thunderbolt 4, and they are the ones who built it first into their 11th gen chips and simply supplied it to OEMs, it's why it was implemented so fast, if it was optional and OEMs had to do it themselves, buying their own controllers etc....Then thunderbolt 4 wouldn't have been implemented so quick with windows PCs.

    The highlight this year is the transition, performance, optimization, Webcam ISP improvement, Neural engine, power efficiency, battery life etc.

    They stated, they are building a "Family of Chips". So the one to watch out for is the M2 or M3 for the Macbook Pro 16. That will most definitely have 4 x thunderbolt 4/USB 4 ports....support more displays, have a more powerful GPU.

    The M1 has 8 GPU Cores and 2.6 Tflops at 10W......Imagine a 40W Variant with 4 times the GPU cores.....32 cores at 10.4 Tflops.....PS5 level performance in a 40W SOC. It might not scale perfectly linearly, but we know for a fact that a 5nm Apple Silicon 40-60W Macbook Pro 16 Chip will definitely be a beast that will outclass most high end gaming laptops and next (current) gen consoles.

    I'm definitely excited for the future of apple soc's and arm in general for more power efficient computing for all major platforms.
  • Pinn - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    What is the strategy for more powerful GPU for game/compute people? They dropped nVidia for AMD over the past few years. Maybe they go back since AMD seems tied to x64 now? Or maybe even Intel?
  • darkswordsman17 - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    You think Apple is going to adopt Nvidia in their datacenter because of ARM? They'll just do their own chips if that's what they're wanting to do. I don't think datacenter needs to be ARM based, so they'll likely just go with similar-ish hardware there for now. But if they're really going to be converting their entire lineup to their own chips (including Mac Pro), then that would seem to indicate they're gonna have their own chips for that. Which, my guess is they'll maybe move back to a rack like layout where if you want more CPU cores, they'll slot in extra boards that contain a SoC, and then for various tasks they'll have dedicated boards (like their Afterburner card) and one for AI. I don't think they care about graphics that much, but they could do a larger GPU if needed. But for most of the tasks Apple is concerned with I expect that they'll be able to scale up. I could see them introduce probably a couple of more higher core count chips (I'd expect a 16 to go in the iMacs and higher end MBP, and then maybe one higher than that - I'd guess 24-32, but perhaps they'd go big just for Mac Pro and their own servers).
  • lilkwarrior - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    It's expected the Mac Pro will still support external GPUs for the sake of common sense expandability. No need to lock down the GPU at all. Most Pro users don't rely on integrated graphics.

    They may have a M1 variant that doesn't have GPU cores at all unless a buyer wants that as an option.
  • lilkwarrior - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    It'd be interesting if Apple started created their own discrete GPUs. That would certainly get AMD & Nvidia's attention

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