Apple yesterday announced its new M3 chipset. The announcement came only 15 months after the announcement of its previous chip family, the M2, in June 2022.
That's four months faster than the M2 announcement, which came 19 months after the M1 was announced in November 2020.
Also: Everything Apple announced at its October 'Scary Fast' event (and what wasn't unveiled)
Breaking with tradition, Apple also announced an entire chip family, consisting of the M3, M3 Pro, and M3 Max. The high-end double-chip Ultra model has only been announced for the M1.
To help you visualize the differences between the chip families, we've produced this single chart. Note the relative family performance differences.
That's data from Apple and does not call out which chips perform against which chip, but it would seem that they're measuring overall family performance -- with the exception of the M1 Ultra.
David Gewirtz/has continuing coverage of the M3, as well as the new MacBook Pro and iMac models based on it. Here are some great articles to get you started:
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