
This includes the iPhone SE 3, iPhone 14, Apple Watch Series 8, as well as new iPad Pro and iPad Air models.

The MacBook Air, 24-inch iMac and entry-level Mac Mini could also see a revamp this year.Īside from Macs, Apple is expected to unveil a wide collection of new products in 2022. Gurman also suggests the MacBook Pro may be one of four Macs to get an upgrade in 2022. The technology allows for a refresh rate up to 120Hz. According to a Sunday newsletter by Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, reported on by 9to5Mac, Apple's 2022 MacBook Pro models may feature an M2 chip, but no ProMotion or mini-LED display.īoth ProMotion and mini-LEDs were featured on the display of Apple's 2021 MacBook Pros with the company's M1 Pro and M1 Max processors. New versions of Apple's entry-level MacBook Pro are reportedly in the works. But we can't wait to see what's waiting inside when it finally arrives.Apple's 2021 16-inch MacBook Pro is shown above. Still, we don't know anything for certain until Apple finally lifts the veil from its next iMac. However, this chip only has a TDP (Thermal Design Point) up to 45W, which suggests a more powerful processor that can keep up with a 95W Intel desktop chip might be needed for a high-end MacBook. That's not quite as exciting as a 32-core chip, but that's still plenty of horsepower to work through something like video editing. Gizmodo also spotted some leaked benchmarks (opens in new tab), that show a pre-sample version of the Apple M1X with 12 cores and a frequency of 3.35GHz. That might be a bit more than we can actually hope for though. We even heard that the MacBook Pro 16 could have a 32-core version of the M1X, which would definitely be worthy of including in a workstation-class iMac. We've started to hear more rumors that something like that is coming. When we tested the M1 in both the MacBook Pro and Mac mini against other processors in its class, Apple's silicon pulls ahead, especially compared to offerings from Intel.



We're sure that there are a lot of creative professionals that would love an updated 27-inch iMac with a more powerful version of the M1.īecause Apple has proven what it can do in an ultra-portable form factor with the Apple M1. That's not old by any stretch of the imagination, but it's still more than a year old at this point. The latest iMac 27 is still rocking an Intel 10th-generation Comet Lake processor.
