Apple M1 Pro

The Apple M1 Pro is an ARM-based (SoC) designed by Apple. Developed for the Mac line of computers, the M1 Pro and the larger M1 Max were introduced by Apple during a special event on October 18, 2021 for the 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros.

Specifications
The M1 Pro is manufactured by TSMC to Apple's design specifications. The 245 mm2 contains 33.7 billion transistors that are fabricated through a. Dynamic RAM (DRAM) is built onto the package and is shared with memory bandwidth of up to 200GB/s through Apple's unified memory architecture (UMA) to eliminate the need to copy data from the CPU to GPU, which are both part of the package.

The 10-core CPU (same as in the M1 Max) contains eight high-performance cores and two high-efficiency cores, similiar to the architecture used by mobile devices for power efficiency. The GPU contains 16 cores for graphics. However, in some entry-level configurations, two of the high-performance cores and two of the GPU cores are deactivated, indicating the practice of. The Neural Engine contains 16 cores for machine learning performance. The Media Engine accelerates codec processing at low power with added support for ProRes. A Thunderbolt 4 and USB4 controller is included on the chip. It also includes its own Secure Enclave.

Performance and compatibility
Apple advertises up to 70% faster CPU performance than the preceding M1 and double the GPU performance. Compatibility with Intel software is provided through Rosetta 2 emulation, with a reported performance hit of about 21-22%, but still exceeding the speed of Apple's Intel-based models. The first operating system from Apple to support the M1 Pro and M1 Max is macOS Monterey, which can also natively run iPadOS applications on the M1 processor family.

Limitations
DRAM must be ordered in advance in 16 or 32 GB configurations as they are part of the M1 Pro's SoC package.

Articles

 * What’s the Difference Between Apple’s M1, M1 Pro, and M1 Max? by Benj Edwards at How-To Geek (2021-10-18)
 * M1 Pro and M1 Max: Apple silicon is kicking Intel out of the Mac computer by Stephen Shankland at CNET (2021-10-18)