A profile of Apple's chip division, including interviews with its head Johny Srouji and Apple's hardware engineering chief John Ternus
https://www.cnbc.com/... X: Ben Bajarin / @benbajarin : An extremely well-done segment by @KatieTarasov continues her Chip Giants series on @CNBC. A great inside look at the Apple Silicon journey, and...
A look at Apple's yearslong effort to design its own silicon to replace Intel chips in Macs, including an interview with Hardware Technologies SVP Johny Srouji
A look at Apple's yearslong effort to design its own silicon to replace Intel chips in Macs, including an interview with Hardware Technologies SVP Johny Srouji
Apple's risky, yearslong effort to design its own silicon paid off when supply-chain disruptions left competitors scrambling
A look at Apple's yearslong effort to develop its own silicon to power the Mac lineup and replace Intel chips, including an interview with Johny Srouji
Apple's risky, yearslong effort to design its own silicon paid off when supply-chain disruptions left competitors scrambling — Apple Inc. had a problem.
Sources: SVP of hardware tech Johny Srouji told staff that Apple has started working on its own cellular modem for future devices, to replace Qualcomm chips
- Component would eventually replace mobile chips from Qualcomm — Srouji describes in-house design efforts in town hall meeting
Craig Federighi, Johny Srouji, and Greg Joswiak on how Apple designed M1, the importance of UMA, non-linear increase in performance at higher power levels, more
but there's a catch Jim Salter / Ars Technica : Benchmarking M1-native version of Google's Chrome browser Joe Wituschek / iMore : Apple executives talk the advent of the M1 chip and what it means for ...
Craig Federighi, Johny Srouji, and Greg Joswiak on how Apple designed M1, the importance of UMA, non-linear increase in performance at higher power levels, more
Craig Federighi, Johny Srouji, and Greg Joswiak tell us the Apple Silicon story. — Some time ago, in an Apple campus building, a group of engineers got together.
Apple announces M1, the first Apple silicon SoC for Macs, with 5nm process, 16B transistors, 8-core CPU, up to 8-core GPU, and a 16-core neural engine
unless Apple creates speed differences. Mustapha Hamoui / @beirutspring : Disappointed that Apple didn't visually differentiate silicon macs from their intel predecessors... It could have been a small...