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The Most Powerful chip From Apple M1 Ultra

 

Apple's M1 processor, the first "Apple Silicon" technology, revolutionised the computing industry by transforming the Mac-Book Air, Mac Mini, and other PCs into portable powerhouses. Last year, the business released the M1 Pro and M1 Max, which gave the 14-inch and 16-inch Mac-Book Pros even more performance. Apple is now introducing a new member to the M1 Ultra family.

 The M1 Ultra is effectively two M1 Max chips combined, making it even more suitable for demanding creative applications such as video editing and 3D rendering. Apple unveiled a secret feature in the M1 Max processors at its launch event today: a die-to-die connector called "Ultra-Fusion" that allows it to link many chips. It's comparable to AMD's Infinity Fabric in terms of concept, which provides fast communication between the CPU, GPU, and other components.


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Data processing speed For M1 Ultra:-

According to Apple, the Ultra-Fusion connection can handle up to 2.5 terabytes per second of bandwidth, so there should be no performance issues between the two M1 Max dies. The M1 Ultra has 114 billion transistors in total and can accommodate up to 128GB of unified memory with 800 GB/s bandwidth. The Ultra contains a 20-core CPU (16 high performance and 4 high efficiency cores) and a 64-core GPU, as you'd expect when two M1 Max CPUs are sandwiched together. The manufacturer says that it is up to 8 times quicker than the original M1 processor in terms of graphics.

Apple didn't have to worry about battery life because the M1 Ultra will be featured in the company's new Mac Studio mini-desktop. Nonetheless, Apple claims that the Ultra is more energy efficient than the competition, using up to 65 percent less power than a 10-core x86 processor. Apple didn't say whose CPU the M1 Ultra was compared to, but the figures make sense given what we've seen from the M1 Max thus far.

 

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