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The end of Intel Mac support should also make you excited because it means Apple only needs to think about its own chips going forward. The macOS experience will now be focused on maximum ...
Intel owners should consider upgrading to a more modern Mac to continue receiving full operating system updates. Apple will likely continue to support macOS 26 with security patches for some years ...
The Fruity Cargo Cult Apple has signalled it's nearly done with Intel Macs by slashing support for all but four of them in its upcoming macOS 26 release, codenamed Tahoe.
Back to Intel Macs: Only Macs built in 2019 (specifically, the Mac Pro and the 16-inch MacBook Pro) and 2020 (the 27-inch iMac and the 13-inch MacBook Pro) will support macOS Tahoe, according to ...
However, a reliable source is now reporting that one additional Intel Mac will no longer support macOS 26 – which is now rumored to be named after California’s Lake Tahoe. New rumor ...
Intel-powered Macs that will support Tahoe include the 2019 16-inch MacBook Pro, the 2020 13-inch MacBook Pro, the 2020 27-inch iMac and the 2019 Mac Pro.
When Apple drops support for your Intel Mac, these Linux distributions can give it a fresh lease on life. Written by Jack Wallen, Contributing Writer June 11, 2025 at 8:26 a.m. PT ...
Maybe it's frugality, nostalgia, or a reluctance to switch from Intel's familiar architecture that has you holding onto your old Mac. But if you were looking for a sign that the end is nigh, Apple ...
When you say what Apple will do, what 80% of developers did in the past is irrelevant. And killing Rosetta 2 means that pure Intel code will not run on a Mac with MacOS 26.
I'm not sure how Apple intends to leave it to support games and not other apps, but I would guess that only a subset of calls from Intel code into system frameworks will be bridged (e.g. OpenGL ...