Skip to main content

A former Apple engineer reveals the secret 10-year plan behind the M1 chip

Rumors of Apple’s switch away from Intel processors existed for years before Apple announced the move to the world in June 2020. But according to a former Apple engineer, the company was making moves in this area long before most people realized it.

In a detailed Twitter thread, Shac Ron, who worked as a Senior Kernel Engineer at Apple from 2007 to 2017, shed light on the history of the M1 chip and Apple’s efforts to develop their own alternative to Intel processors. The thread came about in response to a tweet from machine learning expert David Kanter that claimed M1’s performance is much more to do with its cache than its architecture.

https://twitter.com/stuntpants/status/1346470705446092811

In reply, Ron explained that Apple began its work on what would become the M1 10 years ago in 2010, when it contacted ARM about making a custom 64-bit instruction set architecture (ISA). At this point, according to Ron, ARM had not even finished designing its own core chip design that it would license out to third parties.

Ron went on to say that when Apple launched this 64-bit chip — the Apple A7 in 2013’s iPhone 5S — rivals Samsung and Qualcomm were caught completely unaware by its performance. The A7 was the first 64-bit system-on-a-chip (SoC) to launch in a consumer smartphone, and Apple claimed at the time that it was twice as fast and offered twice the graphics performance as its predecessor, the A6.

https://twitter.com/stuntpants/status/1346474911397646337

Ron added more detail, asserting that Apple’s insistence on a highly efficient “OoO” (out-of-order) architecture with low clocks and the potential for adding more and more cores to the chips gave the company an edge. Indeed, Ron then claims that “M1 performance is not so because of the ARM ISA, the ARM ISA is so because of Apple core performance plans a decade ago.”

The thread is illuminating because it shows just how far ahead Apple was organizing its processor switch. Apple often plans major moves years in advance — the iPad was being worked on in 2004 at the latest, six years before it launched — and is quite happy to wait until the technology is ready before releasing a product. Given the M1’s stellar performance in the latest MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models, we would say the wait was worth it.

Editors' Recommendations

Alex Blake
In ancient times, people like Alex would have been shunned for their nerdy ways and strange opinions on cheese. Today, he…
I’m still waiting for Apple to fix the Mac Mini’s major problem
The M1-powered Mac Mini.

As a desktop machine, my M1 Mac Mini is absolutely great. It’s small enough to pop into a backpack, but capable enough to handle my workloads with ease. Yet there’s one problem nagging at me that makes me worried for the future of the Mac Mini line -- and it likely won’t be fixed any time soon.

That’s because, while the Mac Mini is ideal for most of my work, there are times when I wish it had a bit more power. That doesn’t come up often -- it’s mainly when I’m playing and reviewing Mac games. I’ll often have to turn the settings down lower than I’d like, which is perhaps unsurprising given that the M1’s integrated graphics were part of Apple’s first stab at its own desktop chip.

Read more
Apple’s M2 Max chip may bring next-level performance to the MacBook Pro
An Apple M2 chip on a stylized gradient background.

Apple's M2 Max chip is not out yet, but some benchmarks of it already are. One such test was leaked today, showing off the performance of the new processor.

According to these scores, we might see a decent performance boost in the future MacBook Pros that will likely come with the M2 Max chip. Of course, things can still improve.

Read more
MacBook Pro 14 vs. MacBook Pro 13: M2 for battery, 14-inch for performance
A MacBook Pro M2 sits on a wooden table with a nice bokeh background.

The 13-inch M2 MacBook Pro and 14-inch M1 Pro MacBook Pro are two of the most desirable, impressive laptops you can buy in 2022, but how do you pick between them? One might have a newer CPU, but they both have excellent battery life, top-notch build quality, and beautiful designs.

Here's what you need to know about the two MacBook Pro models before you buy.

Read more