Fusing the Mac, or slipping a LITTLE ARM inside
What if, regardless of any de-Intel-ification, Apple's continuing to build out the Fusion Mac?
Mark Gurman and Ian King, writing for Bloomberg:
Apple Inc. is designing a new chip for future Mac laptops that would take on more of the functionality currently handled by Intel Corp. processors, according to people familiar with the matter.
The chip, which went into development last year, is similar to one already used in the latest MacBook Pro to power the keyboard's Touch Bar feature, the people said. The updated part, internally codenamed T310, would handle some of the computer's low-power mode functionality, they said. The people asked not to be identified talking about private product development. It's built using ARM Holdings Plc. technology and will work alongside an Intel processor.
And:
The development of a more advanced Apple-designed chipset for use within Mac laptops is another step in the company's long-term exploration of becoming independent of Intel for its Mac processors. Apple has used its own A-Series processors inside iPhones and iPads since 2010, and its chip business has become one of the Cupertino, California-based company's most critical long-term investments.
Now — and I'm just spit-balling here — imagine this is something beyond the whole Intel/ARM question. (Apple has been prototyping ARM-based Macs for years, after all).
Imagine it's an extension of the "fusion" architecture that Apple's been increasingly using across their products and services. Fusion Drive melds high-capacity platters with high-speed solid state. iCloud Libraries do something similar but meld online and local storage. The iPhone 7 Plus camera melds a wide-angle with a telephoto lens.
A better example is the A10 system-on-a-chip, though, which Apple went so far as to brand "Fusion". When Apple made the main A10 cores, they noticed it was so high-performance it actually made lower-performance tasks less efficient. So, to fill the space left beneath it, Apple added a second set of lower-performance, more power efficient cores. The result was Apple's first big.LITTLE chipset.
For several generations now, though, Apple has also been doing sensor fusion hubs by including the M-series co-processors, originally alongside but now integrated, into the A-series. That lets them do things like track motion more power efficiently.
The T1 system-in-package on the MacBook Pro is another example. The Mac controls the majority of the Touch Bar but the T1 SIP handles Touch ID, Apple Pay, and displaying any and all related data.
Power efficiency is Apple's jam. Unless and until they license x86 or swap MacBook to ARM, there's only so much even the tight and belabored integration they do with Intel will deliver them. Offloading low-power, low-level tasks to their own silicon, though? That's absolutely something Apple could and would do. Same as they could and did offload display to their own, custom timing controller when they wanted to bring 5K to the iMac ahead of everyone else in the industry.
I wouldn't be surprised to see Apple take on more and more of the silicon inside all of their devices as time goes on. Perhaps one day even the main processors in some shape or form.
Like I said when Apple's first wireless chip, W1 was introduced...
A10, M10, S2, W1.
— Rene Ritchie 🖇 (@reneritchie) September 9, 2016
Apple's silicon team has 22 letters left.
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