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At WWDC25, Apple announced that Rosetta 2’s support is coming to an end. “Rosetta was designed to make the transition to Apple silicon easier, and we plan to make it available for the next two ...
Job’s Mob continues its Intel purge The Fruity Cargo Cult Apple has signalled it's nearly done with Intel Macs by slashing support for all but four of them in its upcoming macOS 26 release ...
Back to Intel Macs: Only Macs built in 2019 (specifically, the Mac Pro and the 16-inch MacBook Pro) and 2020 (the 27-inch iMac and the 13-inch MacBook Pro) will support macOS Tahoe, according to ...
The average Intel Mac receives about seven years of macOS updates and another two years of security-only updates. So far, all Intel Macs released since 2016 have come in under this average.
And the last one is Apple supports all Intel Macs with macOS 15 and ends support with macOS 16. Out of all these cases, the first one is most likely, considering Apple’s past behavior.
When Apple announced it was going to drop Intel processors back in 2020, the company also stated that it would support Intel Macs for several years, though a specific timeframe has never been ...
Apple still sells the M1 in the $999 13-inch MacBook Air and if you consider Apple’s support pattern, this laptop ends up being a worse deal than its price, performance, and features indicate.
Apple's decision to make macOS Tahoe the last version to support Intel Macs is going to cause enormous problems for OpenCore and Hackintosh users. The communities are taking the news quite well.
When Apple announced it was going to drop Intel processors back in 2020, the company also stated that it would support Intel Macs for several years, though a specific timeframe has never been ...
If I were to guess, the list of existing Intel Macs we have right now is probably pretty similar to what they’ll support with macOS 16. They might drop a couple, like the 2019 iMac or 2018 Mac mini.
The mac intel market is only shrinking at least as fast as the Apple Silicon one is growing.. Opposite track 10's of millions of systems piling up on the 'obsolete' classification stack every year.
Thanks! I'm not sure how Apple intends to leave it to support games and not other apps, but I would guess that only a subset of calls from Intel code into system frameworks will be bridged (e.g ...
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