As Apple focuses on its environmental impact and reducing the company’s carbon footprint, the MacBook Pro will lead the charge as part of an impressive commitment by Tim Cook and his team.
Today’s news from Apple confirms that it is working with aluminum suppliers on carbon-free processing. As an intermediate step, the 16-inch MacBook Pro will be the first hardware to use low-carbon aluminum and forge a new, greener laptop.
The move comes as part of Apple’s goal to become 100 percent carbon neutral across the company. From the press release:
“Apple unveiled its plan to become carbon neutral across its entire business, manufacturing supply chain, and product life cycle by 2030. The company is already carbon neutral today for its global corporate operations, and this new commitment means that by 2030, every Apple device sold will have zero net impact on the climate. “
As part of the emissions during the production process, Apple is working with its suppliers on a carbon-free casting process, and the first beneficiary of this technology will be the 16-inch MacBook Pro:
“Apple is supporting the development of the first direct carbon-free aluminum smelting process through investments and collaboration with two of its aluminum suppliers. Today, the company announces that the first batch of this low-carbon aluminum is currently being used in production for the 16-inch MacBook Pro. “
For now, this MacBook Pro will be unique, but it will unite in time with the rest of the MacBook range, then with the Mac family, before the new aluminum is found in every Apple product. It is not an immediate change and you may not have a “before and after” public court date, so there is no way for a consumer to specify that they want the newest materials. Instead, they should be content with knowing Apple’s progress.
What they can choose is to choose the 16-inch MacBook Pro now or later. The current 16-inch MacBook Pro is the last new MacBook not to offer one of Intel’s tenth-generation CPUs: both the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro were upgraded to current Intel technology in the first half of this year. An upgrade to the 16-inch machine of its current ninth-generation chipset is surely on the horizon.
Perhaps Tim Cook is delaying that powerful update to showcase the first ARM MacBook Pro to go on sale to consumers during the fourth quarter of 2020. What better way to reassure geekerati than Apple, though it’s moving forward with The transition to ARM will not leave behind the huge Intel user base.
Now read three reasons why MacOS in ARM will be good for the platform, and a danger to be overcome …
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