OffsetStorefront
Well-known member
MacOS and Apple hardware clearly has a prevalent place in our industry. Historical reasons made it the go-to platform to use and its use and adoption still remains strong to this day - many shops, if not all Mac, at least have some Macs running something important.
Announced yesterday is the news that in two years all Macs sold will be running custom Apple ARM processors instead of Intel ones. This fundamental change in processor architecture will, eventually, require software developers to port their apps over to run on the new ARM architecture or else have them languish in some kind of performance-costing emulation mode until Apple decides to drop the feature down the line, like they did with supporting version 9 apps on version 10. And for a good long while Macs with Intel chips and Macs with Apple ARM chips will co-exist and both clamor for good software. Apple, of course, sought to ease developer's fears by promising lots of tools to help them convert their software to work on both versions.
Wonder if any of the big or small players in providing software to our industry have any thoughts on this? Do your apps already have ARM-compatible versions? Would it be hard to port over if you don't? Are you worried about performance differences between the two? Are you going to begin work early or wait until the public release to begin?
Historically some prepress and workflow software vendors have lagged behind supporting the latest operating systems from Apple on launch day, going months after public release before releasing their own compatible updates. Are we in for this same situation in the future but even worse?
Announced yesterday is the news that in two years all Macs sold will be running custom Apple ARM processors instead of Intel ones. This fundamental change in processor architecture will, eventually, require software developers to port their apps over to run on the new ARM architecture or else have them languish in some kind of performance-costing emulation mode until Apple decides to drop the feature down the line, like they did with supporting version 9 apps on version 10. And for a good long while Macs with Intel chips and Macs with Apple ARM chips will co-exist and both clamor for good software. Apple, of course, sought to ease developer's fears by promising lots of tools to help them convert their software to work on both versions.
Wonder if any of the big or small players in providing software to our industry have any thoughts on this? Do your apps already have ARM-compatible versions? Would it be hard to port over if you don't? Are you worried about performance differences between the two? Are you going to begin work early or wait until the public release to begin?
Historically some prepress and workflow software vendors have lagged behind supporting the latest operating systems from Apple on launch day, going months after public release before releasing their own compatible updates. Are we in for this same situation in the future but even worse?