The Moore’s Law:
Moore’s Law is a prediction made by Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Intel, in 1965 that the number of transistors on a microchip would double approximately every 18-24 months, this period is approximately 2 years. This prediction has been observed to hold truth over the years, leading to a rapid increase in the power and efficiency of computer processors. In real life, this same law is seen in the formation of a baby. In 9 months two small cells combine to form billions of complex cells to form a human baby, they keep doubling each month as the baby grows. Evolution.
6x faster than the Intel-based Macbook
Apple has recently released its latest MacBook, an epic next-generation creation featuring 96 Gigs of RAM. Normally computers with this high capability are not available to the public as they are super expensive. They were only used for memory-intensive tasks like video editing, 3D rendering, and scientific simulations: you can now experience this type of high-end “desktop” on your lap. And with power comes 22 hours of battery life, the longest a Mac has ever seen.
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From $166.58/mo. for 12 mo. or $1999
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14.2-inch or 16.2-inch
Liquid Retina XDR display -
Apple M2 Pro
or Apple M2 Max chip -
16GB to 96GB unified memory
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512GB to 8TB storage
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Up to 22 hours of battery life
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Touch ID
M2 Pro | M2 Max
M2 Pro: Performance like never before.
Packed with more than 40 billion transistors on a fingertip.
- 12-core CPU
- 19-core GPU
- 32GB unified memory
- 200GB/s Memory bandwidth
M2 Max: Go even further.
Twice the memory bandwidth of the M2 and over 67 billion transistors.
- 12-core CPU
- 38-core GPU
- 400GB/s Memory bandwidth