Apple wants to Bring iPhone Processors to the Mac

Apple wants to bring the ARM processors from the iPhone to its future Mac models, with the company having advanced plans for their development and integration.

Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC), wants to bring the processors from iPhone in Mac, the American company currently developing ARM chips for laptops and computers. Apple wants to substantially reduce its dependence on Intel and Qualcomm, and apart from processors, the company also wants to develop its own GSM modems in the not too distant future, and its ambitions will be realized.

Apple wants to develop a chip that integrates functions for touch screens, fingerprint reading and display drivers, now buying these components from different manufacturers. Apple's interest in these chips is related to the development of screens for its products, this component allowing it to control much more precisely how the screens display information for its customers.

Apple wants to bring iPhone processors to the Mac

Apple has been producing the processors that are integrated in the iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, AirPods, Apple Watch, Apple TV, HomePod for several years and wants to do the same for the Mac. Basically, the Macs are the last products of the Apple company that do not have a processor introduced in a proprietary form of those from Cupertino, but that will change in a not very long time, the plans already being set in motion.

By manufacturing the processors for iPhone and iPad, the Apple company can offer the best performance for phones and tablets, far, far above what the competition offers. In the case of Macs, it is unlikely that Apple will be able to surpass Intel processors in terms of performance, but it can optimize its processors so much that it can offer exceptional autonomy for the products it will launch on the market.

"By designing its own chips, Apple can better differentiate itself from others. Furthermore, depending too much on other chip suppliers in the age of artificial intelligence will deter its development. We believe that more system houses will design their own chips. The purposes are to develop and protect their proprietary technology information, to make more efficient chips for their unique need, to lower [costs] and to do inventory control better and keep all logistic operation confidential.”

Apple iPhone Mac Processors