Saw this is now live on the Apple Store. A bit of misinformation around, maybe people here might be able to clear up a couple of things?
Is the new M1 a system-on-a-chip e.g. CPU, GPU and RAM are all integrated? Does this mean a final death knell for any user-upgrades - even now you can upgrade the RAM I think on x64 MacMini et al?
Does this mean new Macs are going to be unable to host Windows Guest OS in tools like Parallels? I read a blog piece but was left unsure if, how and more importantly when this will be possible.
I am chugging on my old MacMini 2012, which is due an upgrade. I've grown to like the Mac for home and hobby use but work is 100% Intel Windows code. If I do not have a definitive path to good Windows performance it seems I might be advised to snap up a modern Intel Mac Mini while I still can - or have I missed a trick?
Is the new M1 a system-on-a-chip e.g. CPU, GPU and RAM are all integrated? Does this mean a final death knell for any user-upgrades - even now you can upgrade the RAM I think on x64 MacMini et al?
Does this mean new Macs are going to be unable to host Windows Guest OS in tools like Parallels? I read a blog piece but was left unsure if, how and more importantly when this will be possible.
I am chugging on my old MacMini 2012, which is due an upgrade. I've grown to like the Mac for home and hobby use but work is 100% Intel Windows code. If I do not have a definitive path to good Windows performance it seems I might be advised to snap up a modern Intel Mac Mini while I still can - or have I missed a trick?
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