![]() ![]() ![]() Furthermore, as the primary home computing architecture there will always apps that don't get ported to AS/ARM. ![]() Windows and Linux based PCs will continue to run primarily on x86, and even a few years from now there will still be an enormous number of perfectly good x86 Macs. Apple may be moving away from x86, but the uArch itself isn't going anywhere anytime soon. Why does it matter? Simple, as long as Intel Macs are being actively produced and supported by Apple, developers will produce x86 versions of their apps. (Of course refurbished and unsold Macs will remain in the supply chain for 1-2 years after the transition is complete.) I don't think Apple will stop supporting Rosetta 2 until at least 1-2 years after the *transition* to Apple Silicon is complete (that is to say once Apple has released an Apple Silicon replacement for the entire Mac lineup and no longer offers any Intel options for "new" macs). Click to expand.Quite a lot actually, although perhaps I should've been a bit more clear. ![]()
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