I can't read anything on AnandTech (like https://t.co/9ObW1w0ERs) without seeing this video add that always makes me rage a bit about the illegibility of floating text in games. pic.twitter.com/ViSB8gFoqO
— John Carmack (@ID_AA_Carmack) November 10, 2020
This Apple event is quite different from 2005, when the switch was needed just to keep up with the industry. This M1 class of chips looks like it’s going to run laps around Intel.
— Charles Arthur (@charlesarthur) November 10, 2020
"M1" for "low power systems or small size and power efficiency"
— Patrick Moorhead (@PatrickMoorhead) November 10, 2020
-UMA and memory sharing
-5nm
-16B transistors (Apple won't answer how these are counted)
-"world's fastest CPU core" (no substantiation)
-4 cores
-2X PPW (no substantiation)#AppleEvent pic.twitter.com/JsnYB15dU6
Oh man they neutered the Mini. 16GB of RAM, no 10GbE, only 2 T ports. I’m sure its fine as a test machine, but ugh.
— Paul Haddad (@tapbot_paul) November 10, 2020
Disappointed that Apple didn't visually differentiate silicon macs from their intel predecessors... It could have been a small thing like some colors on the logo for example... https://t.co/OwzogxfShr
— Mustapha Hamoui (@Beirutspring) November 10, 2020
The MacBook Air camera continues to be a paltry 720P sensor — during the keynote, Apple said it is better due to the M1 chip, but danced around discussing any actual hardware improvements to the camera itself. Now we know why. https://t.co/7KLyEvQSnO
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) November 10, 2020
For those who hoped that Apple was going to use the Apple Silicon transition to course correct on issues such as ports, Touch Bar and perhaps introduce a new design language or new iOS features such as FaceID, tonight was a bitter disappointment.
— Frank Reiff (@frankreiff) November 10, 2020
Mac Mini is $1099 for the mostly usable model, with 16/512.
— Paul Haddad (@tapbot_paul) November 10, 2020
The M1 chip really is just an architecture change. Fundamentally, M1 Macs are the same computer designs from a decade or more ago, at the same price, with expected performance and battery life gains.
— dustin curtis (@dcurtis) November 10, 2020
I was hoping for a Mac designed with the iPhone 12/iPad Pro design language.
Ignoring everything else, Apple still makes you choose between a machine with meh cooling and one with the damned Touch Bar.
— Paul Haddad (@tapbot_paul) November 11, 2020
The new MacBook Air is not only a win for @Apple. It is also a win for Arm, as more mobile computing platforms leverage the Arm architecture and instruction set. https://t.co/HRnk63eFtd
— Jim McGregor (@TekStrategist) November 10, 2020
Surprise: Apple is still selling Intel versions of the 13-inch MacBook Pro and Mac mini. That doesn’t show the ultimate confidence in the new chips and software compatibility — but I am sure there are other reasons to keep them around. No more Intel MacBook Air however.
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) November 10, 2020
New Mac mini, MacBook Pro 13, and MacBook Air — as expected, same designs, similar chips to the iPad Air and iPhone 12. No AirTags. 16-inch MacBook Pro coming later.
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) November 10, 2020
Apple versus Intel. https://t.co/WowYWvHUYs pic.twitter.com/e5bZgFg7Ei
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) November 11, 2020
"The fact that the A14 currently competes with the very best top-performance designs that the x86 vendors have on the market today is just an astonishing feat."
— Ben Bajarin (@BenBajarin) November 10, 2020
Solid article from AnandTech on M1 possibilities. Whose founder works at Apple :) https://t.co/zJnJoODIMH
Apple's M1 chip is textbook bottom-up disruption.
— James Wang (@jwangARK) November 10, 2020
M1 should be ~30% faster than A14.https://t.co/LVF4htTol6 pic.twitter.com/fkNQjBygnm
The new Apple M1 Mac chip will have 8 CPU cores, 8 GPU cores, and Apple's silicon chief Johny Srouji claims it will have twice the performance of an unspecified laptop chip (cough, Intel) while using a quarter of the power. Story will have updates: https://t.co/0cP9uCHDhH
— Stephen Nellis (@StephenNellis) November 10, 2020
The old Mac Minis cap out at 64GB of RAM. The new Mac Minis are limited to 16GB.
— HydroxyCoreyQuinn (@QuinnyPig) November 10, 2020
You have to wonder if PC manufacturers will follow Apple’s lead and not make single mention of clock cycle speed for their products.
— Craig Hockenberry (@chockenberry) November 10, 2020
If so, good luck.
subtle flex that macOS is getting Among Us now that iOS apps will work there too pic.twitter.com/PVppTPttXV
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
Let's call this chart "Moore's Flaw" https://t.co/JZGwIwxkEj
— Chris motherfucking Messina (@chrismessina) November 11, 2020
Intel 13" MBP still for sale, LOL
— Marco Arment (@marcoarment) November 10, 2020
A viable Mac mini w/ an M1 inside, bumped RAM and 1TB SSD is now €1,465, which is about half of what I needed before to price up a competitive model to replace my iMac. 16GB of RAM is a bummer, but with the increased I/O I'm not as worried. Apple should have perf per $ charts ?
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) November 10, 2020
This is by far the most frustrating aspect of today's #AppleEvent. Very happy for the engineering team on the M1 chip but they couldn't have beefed up the cameras for these computers — at all? Once again feels like Apple trying to save money instead of making the best product. https://t.co/XuVBVPw52P
— Dave Smith (@redletterdave) November 10, 2020
“Whilst in the past 5 years Intel has managed to increase their best single-thread performance by about 28%, Apple has managed to improve their designs by 198%” ??? https://t.co/NIAD0ZkEx4
— Adam Nash (@adamnash) November 10, 2020
Seeing all the ports on the Mac Mini just renews my outrage at the lack of ports on MacBooks.
— Heather Kelly (@heatherkelly) November 10, 2020
The best part of Apple keynotes (at least for me) is the nerdy chip stuff. I really am excited about the long term changes M1 brings. For now, here are some notes I made about the "M1 launch" event today. https://t.co/pojlYL0r8k pic.twitter.com/7dB3nH5WWM
— OM (@om) November 11, 2020
The unified memory inside the SoC package is also neat. Shared memory with GPU, less need to copy stuff over from RAM, should save on power and improve performance.
— Liberty (@LibertyRPF) November 10, 2020
#AppleEvent summary on the new Mac mini with M1 Chip pic.twitter.com/Tblok5RUOS
— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) November 10, 2020
may I please see some numbers pic.twitter.com/6uJIuzT2ek
— Steve Streza ? (@SteveStreza) November 10, 2020
Apple dropping Pc guy at the end of their #AppleEvent is a touch of pure class, plus the chime is back! That new M1 chip looks phenomenal, be interesting to see the benchmarks later in the year and to see if Intel based MB can cope with Big Sur. Roll on Thursday! pic.twitter.com/48fcsX1dmP
— Baemien ? (@callmebaemien) November 10, 2020
13inch MBP will cost $1299 to start (same as before) and $1199 for education pic.twitter.com/averV65axO
— Ian Sherr (@iansherr) November 10, 2020
macOS Big Sur will be available this Thursday.
— Rosemary Orchard (@RosemaryOrchard) November 10, 2020
Apple: Hey developers, twice as much notice as with iOS, that cool?
1.5 times faster running javascript
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) November 10, 2020
2x “more responsive”
sure whatever pic.twitter.com/yVuO0kcxWL
— drew olanoff (@yoda) November 10, 2020
The first MacBook Air running M1 has:
— Dave Smith (@redletterdave) November 10, 2020
- No fan
- 6 more hours of battery life vs. the last MacBook Air
- 15 hours of battery life on the web
- 18 hours of battery life on video
- Touch ID
It costs $999. Apple's going to sell a lot of these. #AppleEvent
1/ Apple's upcoming ARM MacBooks isn't just going to save them some money and run a bit faster. It marks the beginning of the end of the x86 era and Intel's four decade empire.
— James Wang (@jwangARK) April 15, 2020
Thread⬇️
I can’t wait to see benchmarks of this new Air against the best 16-inch MacBook Pro you can buy today.
— John Siracusa (@siracusa) November 10, 2020
MacOS Big Sur: A bold new design*
— Kelly Vaughn ? (@kvlly) November 10, 2020
*an increased border radius
#AppleEvent So, clarity on '5x GPU performance' number. It's not FPS for gaming.
— ??. ??? ??????? (@IanCutress) November 10, 2020
>MBP13+M1 vs MBP13+i7+Iris645, both 16GB/2TB
>Final Cut Pro 10.5, 10sec project with Apple ProRes 422 video at 4K30
So, a 10 second project. Very representative of the content creator use case. /s
All the details on M1
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) November 10, 2020
Now just waiting for details on the first Mac pic.twitter.com/YZtOKcBrKU
Cool performance bump for the MacBook Pro, but today's PC laptops have fantastic screens with tiny bezels. Face unlock. Touchscreens and pencils. 4G modems. Tons of awesome features. This looks like a faster MacBook Pro from 2015 with a tiny touchbar nobody wants.
— Sebastiaan de With (@sdw) November 10, 2020
Apple missed out a chance to put insane HD webcams into their new laptops!
— Andrew Chen (@andrewchen) November 10, 2020
I assume the specs were already decided pre-COVID, but still
New M1 Macs:
— nicole nguyen (@nicnguyen) November 10, 2020
-MacBook Air starts at $999
-Pro starts at $1,299
-Mini starts at $699
Available next week.
Sorry to everyone who bought a Mac during the pandemic ?
Apple is burying Intel right now. Yes, for the world outside tech ‘Macs are now much faster and more power-efficient’ doesn’t actually matter much, but it’s still kind of a big deal pic.twitter.com/kvSWu0VaZW
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) November 10, 2020
The previous-generation Mac Mini supported up to 64GB RAM.
— Matthew Hughes (@matthewhughes) November 10, 2020
The new one maxes out at 16GB.
So, forget about running virtual machines. Or Slack and Chrome at the same time.
No touchscreens, thank jeebus.
— John Gruber (@gruber) November 10, 2020
Intel's Moore's law vs Apple's Moore's Lawhttps://t.co/DpdGwldY4l pic.twitter.com/WfH8i5EC5u
— José Luis Ricón Fernández de la Puente (@ArtirKel) November 10, 2020
Can’t wait to try editing 4K footage on the new MacBook Pro.
— Aaron Zollo (@zollotech) November 11, 2020
So differences now between the MacBook Air and Pro: Pro has 2 hours better battery life, Touch Bar, 100 nits brighter screen, speakers have HDR, and better mics. Air is obviously lighter/thinner. Feels like one of these will have to go — unless Apple creates speed differences.
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) November 10, 2020
There doesn't seem to be a speed difference between the Mac Mini, Air or Pro. I'm confused. #AppleEvent pic.twitter.com/ueilF8Ea8e
— Roger Cheng (@RogerWCheng) November 10, 2020
11 trillion ops per sec. is for the Neural Engine.
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) November 10, 2020
Apple switching to ARM is gonna be a big deal – the first gen features an 'M1' chip. But they're hedging hard with lots of "first step" and "multi-year" transition so far... pic.twitter.com/ncySJrENcV
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
AMD carrying the x86 mantle alone currently: https://t.co/TQrcOkVOCE
— Longhorn (@never_released) November 10, 2020
The next-gen Mac chips will be very interesting. (and maybe the M1 too? depends on clocks)
Apple calls out the ISP on the M1 -- so where are the cameras that can use it??
— Matthew Panzarino (@panzer) November 10, 2020
— Paul Haddad (@tapbot_paul) November 10, 2020
as a 2018 Mac mini owner, dropping from four Thunderbolt ports to two succcckkkssss pic.twitter.com/UAmjEweInS
— dan seifert (@dcseifert) November 10, 2020
we must find the Joker pic.twitter.com/YTgqb3q4pI
— Mike Murphy (@mcwm) November 10, 2020
After the whole "iOS 14 is shipping *tomorrow*" thing, macOS developers get a whole extra day! #AppleEvent
— Rich Siegel (@siegel) November 10, 2020
Everyone: „One day notice for the iOS 14 release isn‘t enough!“
— Alexander Repty (@arepty) November 10, 2020
Apple: „Ok, have two days for the Big Sur release!“
Now the key to my first theory -- iPhone and iPad apps run on Macs.
— Ian Sherr (@iansherr) November 10, 2020
Apple talking about how developers who used its dev kits, and talking about how easy it was to port their apps and how much quicker Apple silicon was
#AppleEvent
— ??. ??? ??????? (@IanCutress) November 10, 2020
MacBook Air
➡ 400 nits brightness
➡ 49.9 Wh Battery
➡ 30W Type-C charger
MacBook Pro
➡ 500 nits brightness
➡ 58.2 Wh Battery
➡ 61W Type-C charger
Both
➡ 2560x1600
➡ 720p webcam
➡ Thunderbolt 3
➡ Only one external display: up to 6K60
apple: we made the webcam in the next-gen macbook better
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
also apple: WEBCAM IS STILL 720P!!!!?!? pic.twitter.com/Hrs9wt1d2s
Love charts without X and Y axis numbers
— Geoffrey A. Fowler (@geoffreyfowler) November 10, 2020
Cc: @ShiraOvide pic.twitter.com/u8MEERJNE1
All the elements that make up the Apple M1 chip… pic.twitter.com/yRC6eRnKkX
— Dark Mode Dave (@davemark) November 10, 2020
M1 is an 8-core chip, 4 high performance cores (they're calling it the "world's fastest CPU") and 4 high efficiency cores. Apple claims it delivers far better performance per watt, so a 10W MacBook Air is 2x as fast compared to the Intel chip
— Devindra Hardawar (@Devindra) November 10, 2020
Is this a real setup? Are there real people actually use a Mac mini with a Pro Display XDR? pic.twitter.com/dzwDAItwVn
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) November 10, 2020
Apple marketing genius: "You know what? I say we embrace the fact that nerds are horny for one of our software executives" https://t.co/BT8b8eVlqq
— Kyle Russell (@kylebrussell) November 10, 2020
A14 is clocked lower and has a much smaller thermal envelop than M1, so it should be really interesting.
— Rene Ritchie (@reneritchie) November 11, 2020
Like A7 motivated the mobile silicon industry, I’m guessing A14 (along with AMD) will motivate PC silicon for a few generations to come. https://t.co/pWeviOMppu
#AppleEvent Note that the total 11 TOPs is like Qualcomm saying 7 TOPS for the S855. Not all of that is used at the same time - it's a theoretical peak at the worst perf/watt point.
— ??. ??? ??????? (@IanCutress) November 10, 2020
"It's so easy to port apps!" --@cabel
— HydroxyCoreyQuinn (@QuinnyPig) November 10, 2020
"We'll have Photoshop ready at some point next year." --@adobe
For anyone who wanted to see numbers from the M1 event today, AnandTech has some independent A14 (same IP generation) estimates for you to stew on :)https://t.co/P0hJPtOgPB https://t.co/PAzvuGDr1C
— Rene Ritchie (@reneritchie) November 10, 2020
Reminder of how bad MacBook webcams are https://t.co/YJSIV1X6ii
— Joanna Stern (@JoannaStern) November 10, 2020
At 10W M1 is 2x CPU performance
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) November 10, 2020
17 HOUR BATTERY LIFE. That’s one way to sell it! ?? #AppleEvent
— M.G. Siegler (@mgsiegler) November 10, 2020
Apple claiming massive performance jumps and 1.5-2x better battery life in a Macbook Air with its own chips. And no fan. Yes, the stage is mobile, but Apple takes a big bite out of the top half of the PC market pic.twitter.com/uLVEfwfjpM
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) November 10, 2020
I love that @Apple brought back John Hodgman as “PC Guy” from the old Mac vs PC TV ads to complain about Apple’s new much faster, much quieter, much more power efficient new homemade processor in several new Macs. He appeared at the very end. https://t.co/m5Fi0OKbiu via @YouTube
— Walt Mossberg (@waltmossberg) November 10, 2020
Quiet performance and better battery life. No surprises here. ARM gets you all this.
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) November 10, 2020
Intel: "Shit."
— Marco Arment (@marcoarment) November 10, 2020
The longest MacBook Air battery life I ever got in my tests was 12 hours, in 2013 when Intel intro’d the Haswell chip and Apple was very quick to use it. Apple claimed 10 hours, but I got 12. Battery was at 10 or less in succeeding years. https://t.co/Qw5RDSGE1l
— Walt Mossberg (@waltmossberg) November 10, 2020
One more thing: 1080p MacBook webcams.
— Joanna Stern (@JoannaStern) November 10, 2020
While looking at the M1 SoC, there are a lot of disappointing things to me. They basically took an A14, amped it up and threw it into a laptop.
— Max Weinbach (@MaxWinebach) November 10, 2020
I'm waiting for the *actual* SoCs designed specifically for Mac Products. SoCs with 8+ cores and dedicated Apple GPUs and more RAM.
The M1 has CPU perf that could easily be competitive in the higher-end MBPs or iMacs, but Apple's gonna need a much bigger boost in GPU to match the AMD graphics in their existing lineup. It's a shame that wasn't ready for today — they could have transitioned their entire range
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) November 10, 2020
anyone who is disappointed by the apple event today needs to lay off the crack pipe
— Quinn Nelson (@SnazzyQ) November 11, 2020
YOU GUYS, WE ARE GETTING ANYWHERE FROM A 3.5-5X INCREASE IN PERFORMANCE FROM THE PRIOR GENERATION. USUALLY WE ARE LUCKY TO GET 0.3X.
Saw the article from Anandtech and their annotation now:https://t.co/sQiu3vwudn
— Locuza (@Locuza_) November 10, 2020
This makes more sense, at first I also looked around the 4MB Cache, since that would fit but the irregular structures and colorization of the structures made me think it could be for something else. https://t.co/FJqiMQ4bpG pic.twitter.com/shOuJwvwyM
craig federighi always looks like he's congratulating you on a new baby
— John Paczkowski (@JohnPaczkowski) November 10, 2020
"M1" graphics:
— Patrick Moorhead (@PatrickMoorhead) November 10, 2020
-8 cores
-"2X PPW" (zero substantiation)
-"fastest integrated graphics" (zero substantiation)
-"best in-class security" (zero substantiation"
Apple is spanking Intel really bad, and intel top management is not equipped intellectually to compete with that. Apple is extremely aggressive on pricing, the PC is going to be losing market share to the Mac, the question is how many? 10% 20% 50%? I would not be surprised by 50 pic.twitter.com/nMeRdVpNCY
— ????François Piednoël???? (@FPiednoel) November 10, 2020
The whole industry needed turning on its head. Everyone ought to have 18 hours of battery and no fan by now. These are obvious innovations. This is the iPhone moment for a long stagnant industry that will wonder how they got taken by surprise
— Jon Masters ?☠️ (@jonmasters) November 10, 2020
Anandtech’s analysis of the M1 and full-review of the A14 is insightful to just how powerful Apple Silicon Macs will be. https://t.co/4ZCmQnK6RM
— Quinn Nelson (@SnazzyQ) November 10, 2020
And that’s with a 5W iPad chip. The M1 has 35% more density and runs at a projected 18W. pic.twitter.com/uwGJuoXwdI
kept waiting to hear "and now, with custom LED lights on the base" #AppleEvent https://t.co/DtTVXRVksf
— Chris Lavigne (@crlvideo) November 10, 2020
i wanna know who’s buying a $6,000 monitor for their $600 comptuer pic.twitter.com/NRhFq69lW4
— Mike Murphy (@mcwm) November 10, 2020
these new macs are gonna be all about battery, all the time, and tbh i'm here for it pic.twitter.com/MWOEfutjgB
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
The new Macbook Pros cap out at 16GB of RAM. The old Intel Macbook Pros cap out at 32GB of RAM.
— HydroxyCoreyQuinn (@QuinnyPig) November 10, 2020
Uh... what?
.@Apple, as expected, is touting how the tight integration of its software and hardware gives it an advantage and sets it apart from its rivals. Others have tried to replicate that strategy, but few have succeeded #AppleEvent
— Shara Tibken (@sharatibken) November 10, 2020
We’re obviously just going off of what Apple is touting, but if this all holds up, with performance and battery of just the MacBook Air, there’s no way any Windows laptop can compete with this. Microsoft will need to start making their own chips for Surface? #AppleEvent
— M.G. Siegler (@mgsiegler) November 10, 2020
Now Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software engineering is talking about Big Sur. He's noting how the Mac "instantly" wakes from sleep -- and Apple's laptops are pretty quick anyway.
— Ian Sherr (@iansherr) November 10, 2020
The new M1 MacBook Air has 7 and 8 GPU versions, but fanless. So same single core perf, lower multi/sustained. Pick your priority!
— Rene Ritchie (@reneritchie) November 11, 2020
Here are my live reactions and thoughts from the #AppleEventhttps://t.co/DDO3DOohpZ pic.twitter.com/XXwWZPDfkw
Re: Macbook Webcam, the bottleneck has mostly been the thin-ness of the lid.
— Seth Weintraub (@llsethj) November 10, 2020
Also I’ve seen 480 and 720P webcams that do much better than Apple’s current offering.
That said, for marketing purposes, 1080P is the MINIMUM https://t.co/UURPcftvjY
apple leads the world in charts with no y-axis or numbers pic.twitter.com/bak3KTJQcV
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
Looks like I’m buying 3 new computers today
— Jon Masters ?☠️ (@jonmasters) November 10, 2020
M1 has an integrated 8-core GPU that Apple says is the most advanced graphics processor it has created. 2x more graphics performance than a PC chip. World’s fastest integrated graphics. pic.twitter.com/iI4JqBu5SP
— MacRumorsLive (@macrumorslive) November 10, 2020
disappointed by the apple announcements today. a 13" computer with 16GB of RAM max should not be allowed to be called a macbook pro. that's a regular ass macbook apple, y'all aren't fooling anyone.
— EricaJoy (@EricaJoy) November 10, 2020
The cost benefit to the customer of Apple having incredibly powerful chips like the M1 in even the cheapest Macs can not be emphasized enough
— Steve Troughton-Smith (@stroughtonsmith) November 10, 2020
"Whilst in the past 5 years Intel has managed to increase their best single-thread performance by about 28%, Apple has managed to improve their designs by 198%, or 2.98x (let’s call it 3x) the performance of the Apple A9 of late 2015."https://t.co/zJnJoODIMH pic.twitter.com/Nwyh42cge8
— Ben Bajarin (@BenBajarin) November 10, 2020
I can't help but note that Apple's A series processors for iPhones and now M series for Macs have a lot of transistors devoted to the neural engine (aka AI workloads), which can be very useful for processing video and photos. https://t.co/uLyx8F20BW
— Stephen Shankland (@stshank) November 11, 2020
Confirmed: The new Mac Mini w/ M1 chip *will not* have user upgradable RAM, unlike the previous Intel-based Mac Mini. Like iPhones and iPads, the RAM in the M1 is integrated w/ the processor on the SoC. CC @kwiens
— Stephen Nellis (@StephenNellis) November 10, 2020
Guess they weren't ready for touch?
— Steven Sinofsky (@stevesi) November 10, 2020
Damn it, Touch Bar is still here.
— Marco Arment (@marcoarment) November 10, 2020
I wish Apple hadn’t used Bezos numbers on its charts today. Show more numbers, identify more things. pic.twitter.com/jnY3gxQON5
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) November 10, 2020
It’s easy to forget that the Mac mini, not the MacBook Air, is the entry level Mac. Now $699.
— Neil Cybart (@neilcybart) November 10, 2020
Mac mini! while not widely rumored, Apple had used a modified Mac mini to give developers a preview of how their apps would run on Apple silicon.
— Ina Fried (@inafried) November 10, 2020
i'm sorry the pro macbook tops out at 16gb of memory? lmao c'mon pic.twitter.com/kimoTkAURa
— Owen Williams ⚡?? (@ow) November 10, 2020
what the fuck pic.twitter.com/lcTqTV2u7E
— mehedi (@mehedih_) November 10, 2020
As I was saying yesterday...
— Olivier Blanchard (@OABlanchard) November 11, 2020
Particularly in a "post-truth" world, a company like @apple shouldn't be embracing the cynicism of false claims, undermining consumer trust, and contributing to the erosion of public confidence in US companies. https://t.co/qDuk38L4LV
We're not back to this crap again are we Apple? https://t.co/D7gXJf6cev
— Fake Gordon Mah Ung (@Gordonung) November 10, 2020
No, the new MacBook Air is not faster than 98% of PC laptops https://t.co/5JsKdg8WdO via @pcworld
— yummy candy (@yummy_as_candy) November 11, 2020
Apple fans would do well to read this article from Gordon before they get too excited...https://t.co/Ahs8n4IugA
— Glenn Berry (@GlennAlanBerry) November 11, 2020
I agree with @Gordonung , some of the performance claims are totally bogus , they wanted to match the grandiose performance claims of Core 2 Duo, a 5.2X , so, they have to smoke some joins to get at 3X on the CPU side https://t.co/3wt9bSJ8CB
— ????François Piednoël???? (@FPiednoel) November 10, 2020
Apple's M1 chip launch raised more questions than it answered https://t.co/TuQNeJNLzh by @the_pc_doc
— ZDNet (@ZDNet) November 11, 2020
TechCrunch の記事は、今の所、個別で裏を取ったようには見えない。https://t.co/j6xqIZovMA
— dekkie (@dekkie2020) November 11, 2020
アップルのM1は外付けGPUをサポートしないのか。さらにmehだな。https://t.co/v4uqseMZdd
— akiatoji (@akiatoji) November 10, 2020
No, the new MacBook Air is not faster than 98% of PC laptops https://t.co/kzi42ZLkPw おお、またAppleのマーケティングの根拠レスの嘘が…。そういえばトランプが出てきて嘘を言いまくるのものすごいデジャヴ感があったのですが、それまさにAppleの宣伝そのものですよね…
— Yuta Kashino (@yutakashino) November 11, 2020
I don't think anyone is fooled. https://t.co/9NnM72R9Va
— LinuxGameCast (@VennStone) November 12, 2020
"No, the new #MacBook Air is not faster than 98% of PC laptops"https://t.co/nwzR6RDa1h
— Lup Yuen Lee 李立源 (@MisterTechBlog) November 12, 2020
No, the new MacBook Air is not faster than 98% of PC laptops https://t.co/odukzM6Fip
— yomoyomo (@yomoyomo) November 11, 2020
新しいMBAが98%のノートPCよりも高速というのは嘘でたらめ