Skip to main content

Future MacBooks could get a big performance boost if new Apple patent pans out

Your next MacBook Pro powered by a future version of Apple’s in-house-designed M1 processor could be even faster and last longer on a charge if Apple’s new hybrid memory patent, which combines high-density, low-bandwidth memory with low-density, high-bandwidth memory, becomes a reality. Rather than share memory between the CPU and GPU on Apple’s current system on a chip (SoC) design — which has its own set of limitations — Apple proposes in its patent, filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, that the use of a hybrid system would be more efficient and deliver additional performance.

Recommended Videos

“Providing a memory system with two types of DRAM (e.g., one high-density and one low-latency, high-bandwidth) may permit a highly energy-efficient operation, which may make the memory system suitable for portable devices and other devices where energy efficiency and performance per unit of energy expended are key attributes,” the company said in its filing.

This would differ from the unified memory architecture, or UMA, that Apple currently employs on its ARM-based processors, as the CPU and GPU would also need to share memory capacity and bandwidth. This in turn could have a material effect on performance, according to Tom’s Hardware.

Conversely, using a hybrid approach, as Apple is proposing, would mitigate the need to use large amounts of costly high bandwidth memory. Apple’s patent combines DDR memory with HBM memory. Apple’s design was likely envisioned for portables, like the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro, as the company detailed that the DRAMs are to be soldered onto the logic board.

“With two types of DRAM forming the memory system, one of which may be optimized for bandwidth and the other of which may be optimized for capacity, the goals of bandwidth increase and capacity increase may both be realized, in some embodiments,” Apple elaborated. “Additionally, energy efficiency may be managed in the high-bandwidth portion of the memory. The portion of the memory that is optimized for capacity may have a lower-bandwidth goal and a relaxed (longer) latency goal, since these goals may be served by the portion that is optimized for bandwidth. Similarly, the portion of the memory that is optimized for bandwidth may have lower area efficiency goals, but latency and energy efficiency improvements may be made.”

The company added that high-bandwidth, low-latency, energy-efficient, and high-memory systems could be achieved in a more cost-effective manner through this hybrid memory architecture. “Particularly, implementing the high-density portion and the high-bandwidth, low-latency portion in separate chips that together form the main memory system may allow for each memory to implement energy-efficiency improvements, which may provide a highly energy-efficient memory solution that is also high performance and high bandwidth,” the company said.

Apple isn’t the only company to work on a hybrid memory architecture. Intel’s Xeon processor use both DDR4 memory and Optane memory to support a hybrid approach, and the next-generation Xeon chipsets are said to support HBM. It’s unclear if or when Apple’s hybrid memory architecture will debut on some future version of the M1 chip — technology companies like Apple often file patents that don’t make it to a final product.

Apple has also been rumored to be working on a future M1 processor version with more cores and enhanced graphics capabilities. Such a chip could find its way into a new Mac Pro.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Apple announces new MacBook Pro with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips
A person sitting in a vehicle using a MacBook Pro on their lap.

Apple has unveiled new versions of the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro, ending months of speculation surrounding the devices. New features include the latest M2 Pro and M2 Max chips -- but not much else.

Almost everything else remains the same as what we saw in the M1 Pro and M1 Max versions of the MacBook Pro: the same flat-edged design, the same mini-LED display, and the same port arrangement. That’s not particularly surprising, as the M1 versions of these laptops themselves featured a major design overhaul. Another big change so soon was not really in the cards.

Read more
Why Apple’s foldable MacBook could be the Mac’s iPhone X moment
A concept visual of a foldable screen MacBook Folio.

These days, it seems every company and their dog is developing a folding device and trying to convince people it will be the next big thing. Now, Apple is apparently jumping on the bandwagon and is poised to unveil a MacBook with a 20-inch folding display in 2026 or 2027. If it goes well, this could be an even more seismic shift for the Mac than the transition to Apple silicon chips.

In fact, I’m thinking that a laptop with a folding screen could be the Mac’s iPhone X moment -- a product that completely resets an entire product lineup, not just for Apple, but for the entire industry. That means there’s a huge amount at stake.

Read more
The MacBook Air and iPad Pro could soon get a major upgrade
The screen of the MacBook Air M2.

Apple is planning to add OLED panels to a range of popular devices, including the MacBook Air, the 11-inch iPad Pro, and the 12.9-inch iPad Pro. That’s according to display industry expert Ross Young, who has a strong record of accurate leaks when it comes to Apple.

In a message shared with his paying subscribers on Twitter, Young stated that the new panels were likely to debut in the aforementioned devices in 2024. That would mark the first time both the MacBook Air and the iPad Pro come with OLED displays -- currently only the iPhone and the Apple Watch use OLED technology.

Read more