So, just how much as Apple changed in the new M1-powered MacBook Air and MacBook Pro compared to their Intel-powered predecessors? The good folks at iFixit[1] reveal all in their latest teardown.
Based on what I've been reading, many have been expecting some big internal changes to accommodate the new M1 chip, with perhaps the Mac's and iPad's internal architecture converging. Given Apple's predisposition to keep things as simple and as easy as possible, I was expecting minimal changes.
Turns out I was right.
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Apple Silicon M1 chip -- in pictures[4] SEE FULL GALLERY[5]
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NEXT [6] PREV [7]iFixit's teardowns of the M1-powered MacBook Air and MacBook Pro reveal familiar designs.
"While Apple touts its M1-powered Macs as nothing short of a revolution, internally, they could hardly be any more similar to their predecessors," writes iFixit's[8] Sam Goldheart.
Inside the MacBook Air, the changes all revolve around the mainboard and the cooling. The M1-powered Air no longer has a fan, instead using an aluminum heat-spreader to dissipate the heat generated by the M1.
Apple M1 questions[10] SEE FULL GALLERY[11]
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NEXT [12] PREV [13]The M1-powered Pro has a heatsink and fan setup that's similar to the one found on the Intel-powered MacBook Pros.
Again, Apple has kept the designs as simple and as unchanged as possible.
Then there's the mainboard with the M1 silicon. Along with the M1 processor,