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Apple's A16 chip is still rumored to use TSMC's 5nm, and the M2 chip is changed to 3nm

05/30/2022 Apple A16 chip, TSMC, M2 chip, A15 chip, A16 chip, iPhone 13

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(Pictures from the Internet)

  Apple's new-generation iPhone's A16 chip is rumored to use the same TSMC 5-nanometer process as the iPhone 13's A15 chip, but Apple's M2 chip for the new generation of Macs will skip 4-nanometer and directly use 3-nanometer process. ShrimpApplePro alleges that Apple is developing the final version of the M1 chip.


  The whistleblower ShrimpApplePro posted on Twitter, sharing a fairly reliable source, revealing that Apple plans to launch the A16 chip and M2 chip, as well as the final version of the M1 chip, but ShrimpApplePro is not sure about the final name of the final version of the A16, M2 and M1 chips.


  ShrimpApplePro said that the A16 chip will still maintain TSMC's 5nm process, just like the A14 chip, A15 chip and M1 chip, but it will be a more advanced N5P process, which means that CPU, GPU and memory performance will be slightly improved, as for N4P. It is an enhanced third-generation version of the A16 chip.


  According to a report by Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, ShrimpApplePro pointed out that the A16 chip will be specially paired with the LPDDR 5 memory specification, and compared with the LPDDR 4X paired with the A15 chip in the iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro, LPDDR 5 is up to 1.5 times faster, and Power consumption can be reduced by up to 30%.


  On the other hand, Apple's M2 chip is rumored to directly skip 4 nanometers and use TSMC's 3-nanometer process chip, and is regarded as Apple's first processor chip using the ARMv9 architecture.


  As for the last chip of Apple's M1 series, it is rumored to be used by the new generation of Mac pro. Compared with Apple's most powerful M1 Ultra chip, it should be a double version of the M1 Max. It has a 20-core CPU and a 64-core GPU. Think Apple is working on a more powerful chip than the M1 Ultra.


  Other sources claim that the A16 chip will only debut in the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max, while the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Max will continue to use the iPhone 13's A15 chip, and the M2 chip is mostly rumored to be a redesigned MacBook Air use, or the next-generation Mac and next-generation iPad Pro.


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