Apple CEO Tim Cook is stepping down as Apple's chief executive officer, and hardware engineering chief John Ternus is set to take over, Apple announced today. Cook will continue on as Apple CEO through the summer, with Ternus set to join Apple's Board of Directors and take over as CEO on September 1, 2026. Cook is going to transition to executive chairman, and he will "assist with certain aspects of the company, including engaging with policymakers around the world".
Their M-Series SoCs are also popular enough that they’re the face of AI outside of GPUs and datacentres, and they were pretty big for the whole computing industry, especially given the whole reputation Macbooks had of being slow and prone to heating, and ARM being seen as slow/exclusively for mobile. Apple wasn’t the first to make a ARM computer, but from memory, a lot of them were relegated to either Chromebooks or Single-board computers. You’d be silly to put an ARM-based CPU in your laptop, if you were planning to do any serious work.
The whole agentic AI trend of late basically has people flocking to go for an M-Series Mac, even when the setup is mostly routed through an external provider, and could run with minute resources.
It’s equally as weird to think that your Macbook runs on an iPad/iPhone chip, but there we are. If you went back 10 - 20 years, and told people that Apple were making Macbooks run on old iPhone chips, they’d think you were joking about how bad they were.
When I update my M1 Pro, I’ll definitely be getting another MacBook with enough ram to run some decent models. The way they keep improving the memory bandwidth each generation is pretty great and by the time I do get one, it’ll be a pretty wonderful inference machine for local AI.
Also, aside from my development workflows hitting the 16gb ram limit before AI today, it still runs amazingly, so i imagine a high ram laptop would be fine for a very very very long time minus wanting to run even bigger AI models.
Their M-Series SoCs are also popular enough that they’re the face of AI outside of GPUs and datacentres, and they were pretty big for the whole computing industry, especially given the whole reputation Macbooks had of being slow and prone to heating, and ARM being seen as slow/exclusively for mobile. Apple wasn’t the first to make a ARM computer, but from memory, a lot of them were relegated to either Chromebooks or Single-board computers. You’d be silly to put an ARM-based CPU in your laptop, if you were planning to do any serious work.
The whole agentic AI trend of late basically has people flocking to go for an M-Series Mac, even when the setup is mostly routed through an external provider, and could run with minute resources.
It’s equally as weird to think that your Macbook runs on an iPad/iPhone chip, but there we are. If you went back 10 - 20 years, and told people that Apple were making Macbooks run on old iPhone chips, they’d think you were joking about how bad they were.
When I update my M1 Pro, I’ll definitely be getting another MacBook with enough ram to run some decent models. The way they keep improving the memory bandwidth each generation is pretty great and by the time I do get one, it’ll be a pretty wonderful inference machine for local AI.
Also, aside from my development workflows hitting the 16gb ram limit before AI today, it still runs amazingly, so i imagine a high ram laptop would be fine for a very very very long time minus wanting to run even bigger AI models.