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Apple’s M-series chip gamble 5 years later: How ditching Intel revolutionized computing — and what’s next
Saying that Apple’s M-series processor shook up the computing industry would be an understatement. Five years after Tim Cook announced that the company was ditching Intel for its own silicon for Macs, M-series chips from the original M1 to the current M5 ...
In case you didn’t know, Intel has been having a rough time. But they’re taking steps in the right direction. Most recently, they made a major announcement at CES 2026, revealing their new Panther Lake chip for laptops.
It has been five years since Apple and Intel parted ways after their long collaboration, but a new rumor suggests that they are set to reignite this partnership, and it would still be for the Mac computers. Apple, Intel Set to Partner Up Again For the Mac ...
Intel's Core Ultra X9 388H has beaten Apple's M5 in multi-core benchmarks, but the lead may last only days before Apple's M5 Pro and M5 Max chips arrive.
In 2020, Apple made a switch in the company supplying the processors for its Mac computers, from Intel to Apple itself. The rise of homegrown silicon for Apple had begun more than a decade before with the iPhone 4. With the M1 chip, the silicon in its Macs ...
Apple may partner with Intel to manufacture future iPhone and Mac chips, signaling a strategic move to reduce reliance on TSMC by 2027–2028.
I’ve tested two new laptops powered by Panther Lake—pitting them head-to-head against laptops with Apple Silicon—and Intel has finally scored a much-needed win with the Core Ultra Series 3.