Today’s Apple Mac keynote has been very eventful, with the company announcing a new line-up of MacBook Pro devices, powered by two different new SoCs in Apple’s Silicon line-up: the new M1 Pro and the M1 Max.

The M1 Pro and Max both follow-up on last year’s M1, Apple’s first generation Mac silicon that ushered in the beginning of Apple’s journey to replace x86 based chips with their own in-house designs. The M1 had been widely successful for Apple, showcasing fantastic performance at never-before-seen power efficiency in the laptop market. Although the M1 was fast, it was still a somewhat smaller SoC – still powering devices such as the iPad Pro line-up, and a corresponding lower TDP, naturally still losing out to larger more power-hungry chips from the competition.

Today’s two new chips look to change that situation, with Apple going all-out for performance, with more CPU cores, more GPU cores, much more silicon investment, and Apple now also increasing their power budget far past anything they’ve ever done in the smartphone or tablet space.

The M1 Pro: 10-core CPU, 16-core GPU, 33.7bn Transistors in 245mm²

The first of the two chips which were announced was the so-called M1 Pro – laying the ground-work for what Apple calls no-compromise laptop SoCs.

Apple started off the presentation with a showcase of the packaging, there the M1 Pro is shown to continue to feature very custom packaging, including the still unique characteristic that Apple is packaging the SoC die along with the memory dies on a single organic PCB, which comes in contrast to other traditional chips such as from AMD or Intel which feature the DRAM dies either in DIMM slots, or soldered onto the motherboard. Apple’s approach here likely improves power efficiency by a notable amount.

The company divulges that they’ve doubled up on the memory bus for the M1 Pro compared to the M1, moving from a 128-bit LPDDR4X interface to a new much wider and faster 256-bit LPDDR5 interface, promising system bandwidth of up to 200GB/s. We don’t know if that figure is exact or rounded, but an LPDDR5-6400 interface of that width would achieve 204.8GB/s.

In a much-appreciated presentation move, Apple actually showcased the die shots of both the M1 Pro and M1 Max, so we can have an immediate look at the chip’s block layout, and how things are partitioned. Let’s start off with the memory interfaces, which are now more consolidated onto two corners of the SoC, rather than spread out along two edges like on the M1. Because of the increased interface width, we’re seeing quite a larger portion of the SoC being taken up by the memory controllers. However, what’s even more interesting, is the fact that Apple now apparently employs two system level cache (SLC) blocks directly behind the memory controllers.

Apple’s system level cache blocks have been notable as they serve the whole SoC, able to amplify bandwidth, reduce latency, or simply just save power by avoiding memory transactions going off-chip, greatly improving power efficiency. This new generation SLC block looks quite a bit different to what we’ve seen on the M1. The SRAM cell areas look to be larger than that of the M1, so while we can’t exactly confirm this right now, it could signify that each SLC block has 16MB of cache in it – for the M1 Pro that would mean 32MB of total SLC cache.

On the CPU side of things, Apple has shrunk the number of efficiency cores from 4 to 2. We don’t know if these cores would be similar to that of the M1 generation efficiency cores, or if Apple adopted the newer generation IP from the A15 SoC – we had noted that the new iPhone SoC had some larger microarchitectural changes in that regard.

On the performance core side, Apple has doubled things up to 8 cores now. Apple’s performance cores were extremely impressive on the M1, however were lagging behind other 8-core SoCs in terms of multi-threaded performance. This doubling up of the cores should showcase immense MT performance boosts.

On the die shot, we’re seeing that Apple is seemingly mirroring two 4-core blocks, with the L2 caches also being mirrored. Although Apple quotes 24MB of L2 here, I think it’s rather a 2x12MB setup, with an AMD core-complex-like setup being used. This would mean that the coherency of the two performance clusters is going over the fabric and SLC instead. Naturally, this is speculation for now, but it’s what makes most sense given the presented layout.

In terms of CPU performance metrics, Apple made some comparisons to the competition – in particular the SKUs being compared here were Intel’s Core i7-1185G7, and the Core i7-11800H, 4-core and 8-core variants of Intel’s latest Tiger Lake 10nm 'SuperFin' CPUs.

Apple here claims, that in multi-threaded performance, the new chips both vastly outperform anything Intel has to offer, at vastly lower power consumption. The presented performance/power curves showcase that at equal power usage of 30W, the new M1 Pro and Max are 1.7x faster in CPU throughput than the 11800H, whose power curve is extremely steep. Whereas at an equal performance levels – in this case using the 11800H's peak performance – Apple says that the new M1 Pro/Max achieves the same performance with 70% lower power consumption. Both figures are just massive discrepancies and leap ahead of what Intel is currently achieving.

Alongside the powerful CPU complexes, Apple is also supersizing their custom GPU architecture. The M1 Pro now features a 16-core GPU, with an advertised compute throughput performance of 5.2 TFLOPs. What’s interesting here, is that this new much larger GPU would be supported by the much wider memory bus, as well as the presumably 32MB of SLC – this latter essentially acting similarly to what AMD is now achieving with their GPU Infinity Cache.

Apple’s GPU performance is claimed to vastly outclass any previous generation competitor integrated graphics performance, so the company opted to make direct comparisons to medium-end discrete laptop graphics. In this case, pitting the M1 Pro against a GeForce RTX 3050 Ti 4GB, with the Apple chip achieving similar performance at 70% less power. The power levels here are showcased as being at around 30W – it’s not clear if this is total SoC or system power or Apple just comparing the GPU block itself.

Alongside the GPU and CPUs, Apple also noted their much-improved media engine, which can now handle hardware accelerated decoding and encoding of ProRes and ProRes RAW, something that’s going to be extremely interesting to content creators and professional videographers. Apple Macs have generally held a good reputation for video editing, but hardware accelerated engines for RAW formats would be a killer feature that would be an immediate selling point for this audience, and something I’m sure we’ll hear many people talk about.

The M1 Max: A 32-Core GPU Monstrosity at 57bn Transistors & 432mm²

Alongside the M1 Pro, Apple also announced a bigger brother – the M1 Max. While the M1 Pro catches up and outpaces the laptop competition in terms of performance, the M1 Max is aiming at delivering something never-before seen: supercharging the GPU to a total of 32 cores. Essentially it’s no longer an SoC with an integrated GPU, rather it’s a GPU with an SoC around it.

The packaging for the M1 Max changes slightly in that it’s bigger – the most obvious change is the increase of DRAM chips from 2 to 4, which also corresponds to the increase in memory interface width from 256-bit to 512-bit. Apple is advertising a massive 400GB/s of bandwidth, which if it’s LPDDR5-6400, would possibly be more exact at 409.6GB/s. This kind of bandwidth is unheard of in an SoC, but quite the norm in very high-end GPUs.

On the die shot of the M1 Max, things look quite peculiar – first of all, the whole top part of the chip above the GPU essentially looks identical to the M1 Pro, pointing out that Apple is reusing most of the design, and that the Max variant simply grows downwards in the block layout.

The additional two 128-bit LPDDR5 blocks are evident, and again it’s interesting to see here that they’re also increasing the number of SLC blocks along with them. If indeed at 16MB per block, this would represent 64MB of on-chip generic cache for the whole SoC to make use of. Beyond the obvious GPU uses, I do wonder what the CPUs are able to achieve with such gigantic memory bandwidth resources.

The M1 Max is truly immense – Apple disclosed the M1 Pro transistor count to be at 33.7 billion, while the M1 Max bloats that up to 57 billion transistors. AMD advertises 26.8bn transistors for the Navi 21 GPU design at 520mm² on TSMC's 7nm process; Apple here has over double the transistors at a lower die size thanks to their use of TSMC's leading-edge 5nm process. Even compared to NVIDIA's biggest 7nm chip, the 54 billion transistor server-focused GA100, the M1 Max still has the greater transistor count.

In terms of die sizes, Apple presented a slide of the M1, M1 Pro and M1 Max alongside each other, and they do seem to be 1:1 in scale. In which case, the M1 we already know to be 120mm², which would make the M1 Pro 245mm², and the M1 Max about 432mm².

Most of the die size is taken up by the 32-core GPU, which Apple advertises as reaching 10.4TFLOPs. Going back at the die shot, it looks like Apple here has basically mirrored their 16-core GPU layout. The first thing that came to mind here was the idea that these would be 2 GPUs working in unison, but there does appear to be some shared logic between the two halves of the GPU. We might get more clarity on this once we see software behavior of the system.

In terms of performance, Apple is battling it out with the very best available in the market, comparing the performance of the M1 Max to that of a mobile GeForce RTX 3080, at 100W less power (60W vs 160W). Apple also includes a 100W TDP variant of the RTX 3080 for comparison, here, outperforming the NVIDIA discrete GPU, while still using 40% less power.

Today's reveal of the new generation Apple Silicon has been something we’ve been expecting for over a year now, and I think Apple has managed to not only meet those expectations, but also vastly surpass them. Both the M1 Pro and M1 Max look like incredibly differentiated designs, much different than anything we’ve ever seen in the laptop space. If the M1 was any indication of Apple’s success in their silicon endeavors, then the two new chips should also have no issues in laying incredible foundations for Apple’s Mac products, going far beyond what we’ve seen from any competitor.

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  • scottrichardson - Tuesday, October 19, 2021 - link

    What software do you use?
  • Farfolomew - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    We may yet be getting these soon in the form of Qualcomm chips. Whether they can run the software we love to use, well that will be up to Microsoft. If Apple's chips are fast enough to translate x86, can Qualcomm's as well? That's my hope. More and more, I see the future of Microsoft Windows living in the ARM world with x86 translation support. And then I see the personal computing landscape mirror that somewhat of the iOS/Android, but with more a more organized front (Windows) competing against Apple's offering.
  • KPOM - Thursday, October 21, 2021 - link

    Agreed. Qualcomm, Microsoft et al should work on Rosetta-like solutions so we can move on from aging architectures without losing software compatibility.
  • andynormancx - Thursday, October 21, 2021 - link

    Microsoft already have a Rosetta-like solution for their ARM version of Windows.

    It seems to be a bit of a work-in-progress so far https://www.techrepublic.com/article/windows-on-ar...

    Hard to know whether it performs as well as Rosetta or not though, given that it is typically running on much less performant non Apple ARM SoCs.
  • GeoffreyA - Thursday, October 21, 2021 - link

    In fact, the WOW subsystem which provides this support, at least for 16-bit x86 applications, predates Rosetta.
  • GeoffreyA - Tuesday, October 19, 2021 - link

    It appears that folk are putting down this SoC because of an aversion to Apple, and won't acknowledge, in the spirit of good sportsmanship, that this is an impressive piece of tech. They just can't admit this silly company from Cupertino coming close to, equalling, or beating the fellows they're fond of. As a result, we've got the remarks criticising price, soldering, MacOS, lack of AV1, as a way to say, "This thing is rubbish. Don't bother."

    We're all supposed to be lovers of computers here, and this article is discussing an SoC. What does price, or even soldering, have to do with that? We can't own a Space Shuttle, but isn't it nice to discuss it and say, "Certainly, I'm no fan of NASA, but this is pretty good stuff."

    My personal favourite is the AV1 attack, a tactic used to throw stones at this giant. Surely, anyone who's doing editing, will not encode to AV1 in the middle stages? AV1, if used, will be saved for the final step, using software encoding and libaom. Decoding would've been nice; but Apple could add it easily, and the sort done in software isn't that bad.

    I can't stomach Apple, their status connotation, or their products. Quite frankly, they put me off. But that won't stop me from admitting the merit of these SoCs. And Apple worshippers, the same applies to you, when you're putting down Windows, Intel, and AMD as if they're from the bin. It's that spirit of superiority which grates on x86, Windows people, causing them to make fun of Apple. Nobody likes when someone acts as if they're better than everybody else.
  • ddps - Tuesday, October 19, 2021 - link

    @GeoffreyA - great post. One thing I always like to say, though, is we should never love something that can't love us back! Cheers!
  • GeoffreyA - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    Absolutely, ddps. Great saying!
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, October 19, 2021 - link

    Corporate fanboyism is just as biased.

    Your space shuttle example is flawed, at least in terms of the long history made prior to for-profit space travel. Shuttles were about enriching humanity more than lining the pockets of yacht buyers. Yes, some of it was nationalism, which was about the latter. But, the main idea, at least on the surface, was not profiteering.

    These companies have too much money and make terrible decisions, like the shattering panel on the 13" M1 and using security patches to fill landfills.

    We may love tech but we also love getting a good deal. Apple could have made another chip that's even bigger. It left some die area on the table. With corporations, as profiteering comes first, 'just enough' is the goal — not 'let's max-out the possibility'. A bigger chip would have meant a lower price for this 'Max'. Instead of using its advantage to push humanity foward, it's content to do 'just enough' to maximize margin.

    While it can be argued that that's the best strategy for keeping a corporation alive, putting it into the position where it can create innovative products, 'sell less for more' is the overarching mantra of the corporation. That relies upon marketing, which is about inculcating delusion.

    It's also a fact that all that money is used to keep innovation down. IP serfdom. It's great for the wealthy powerful few. It's a huge impediment for creative invention for those who aren't. Look at how long copyright lasts now. It's a vampiric parasitic neo-serfdom apparatus — like the corporation.
  • GeoffreyA - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    I agree, Oxford Guy, with all my heart. These rotters are only out to make money, and will say anything to fill their coffers. Sustainability and yoga in vogue today? Well, play into that and your product will sell. "Here at Pineapple, we care about sustainability, and that's why we're using ethically-sourced green materials." Add a bit of emotional music and it's a hit.

    I'd go so far to say that today's tech companies---Facebook, Google, Apple, and co.---are wielding a species of soft totalitarianism, wrapped up in marketing that plays into consumers' desires and vanities. Sprinkle with "empower" here and "empower" there, and you've got them. You're not buying a phone: you're buying empowerment and liberation. Nor is one buying a chemical concoction called make-up that probably ruins the skin, but a ticket to youth, attractiveness, and success in courtship. Further tips: add the idea that everyone's doing it ("try the app that's been downloaded by most Americans"), lip-service to choice, and correct alignment with current politics.

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