‘Peek Performance’ as it happened: Here’s everything Apple announced
With the tagline “Peek Performance,” Apple’s first event of 2022 contained a surprisingly robust array of new stuff. The third-generation iPhone SE was expected, but we also were introduced to an all new desktop Mac with that has a new M1 Ultra processor and the Mac Studio display which has a camera, speakers, and USB ports.
Here’s a brief list of everything Apple announced at its spring event, with highlights of each announcement and links to our more in-depth coverage.
Apple TV+ films and Friday Night Baseball
Apple began the event by highlighting the critical success it has has with Apple TV+, particularly its original acclaimed movies “CODA” and “The Tragedy of MacBeth.” Then it previewed some new films such as “Spirited” and “Lucky.” We maintain a list of all the upcoming shows, series, and movies on Apple TV+.
But the big announcement was a new Friday Night Baseball feature. In partnership with the MLB, Apple TV+ subscribers (and for a limited time, non-subscribers) will be able to watch a live double-header on Friday evenings, complete with a live pre- and post-game show. Friday Night Baseball is free as part of Apple TV+ in eight countries, and fans in the US will also get “MLB Big Inning,” a live show with highlights and look-ins every weeknight. The US and Canada will get a new 24/7 live stream devoted to MLB replays, news, classic games, and more. All this baseball stuff starts as soon as the new MLB season does.
Green iPhone 13
Last year, Apple gave us a purple iPhone 12. This year, it’s two new green iPhone 13 models. The regular iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini are now available in green, while the iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max are available in a new Alpine Green finish. Preorders start on Friday, March 11, with availability on March 18.
iPhone SE
The next announcement from Apple was the one we all expected: a third-generation iPhone SE. It looks just like the second-gen model with an iPhone 8 body and display, only with the latest and greatest A15 processor inside. This means better performance and battery life, plus 5G capability–but only for sub-6GHz networks, not mmWave.
The iPhone SE has the same cameras as before, but the improved image processing of the A15 means better photos and videos (though it still doesn’t have night mode). It starts at $429, a $30 increase over the previous model’s price. The iPhone SE goes up for preorder on March 11 and will be available on March 18.
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5th-generation iPad Air with M1 processor
We also expected a new iPad Air update, and Apple didn’t disappoint. Rather than step up from the A14 to the A15, Apple included the same M1 processor you’ll find in the iPad Pro. The front camera gets an upgrade to the 12MP ultra-wide with Center Stage support, too.
The price is still $599, but the cellular-equipped model, which now has 5G support, is $20 more than it used to be. As with most of the products Apple announced, pre-orders begin on March 11 with availability on March 18.
M1 Ultra
M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max… and now M1 Ultra. That’s right, Apple has a fourth variant of its M1 Apple Silicon, and it’s essentially two M1 Max chips in a single package, connected by a custom high-speed interconnect. It appears to the operating system to be a single chip with 20 CPU cores, 64 GPU cores, and up to 128GB of memory. Everything else is double the M1 Max, too: double the Neural Engine for ML tasks, double the video engine, double the memory bandwidth. It’s a monster of a chip, and an impressive technical feat.
Apple
Apple says it delivers up to 90 percent more performance than the most powerful competing 16-core desktop CPU (a Core i9-129000K with DDR5 memory) when running at the same power envelope (roughly 60 watts). It can match the peak performance of said chip while using 100 watts less power.
The GPU, according to Apple, is about as fast as a GeForce GTX 3090 while using about 200 watts less power.
Mac Studio
This monster of a chip will debut in a whole new product: Mac Studio. Think of it like two or three Mac minis stacks on top of each other, with lots of Thunderbolt ports and even an SD card slot in the front. It’s about 7.7 inches square and 3.7 inches tall. It’s available with an M1 Max, 32GB of RAM, and a 512GB SSD starting at $1,999. That’s for a 24-core GPU version–the full 32-core GPU will cost $200 more, and you can get 64 GB of RAM and an SSD up to 8TB, too.
Apple
Or you can get it with the new M1 Ultra, 64GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD for $3,999. That’s with a 48-core GPU–the 64-core GPU version is another $1,000, and you can configure it with 128GB of RAM and up to 8TB of storage.
A Mac Studio fully kitted out with the M1 Ultra, 128GB of RAM, and an 8GB SSD sells for $7,999, on par with one of the lowest-end Mac Pro configurations you can buy. It is likely much more powerful than a Mac Pro that costs 2-3 times more.
Apple Studio Display
Last but not least, there’s the Apple Studio Display, Apple’s first new consumer display in over a decade.
The display part is almost identical to the display of the 27-inch iMac, but with much slimmer bezels: It’s got the same 5k resolution, P3 Wide Color, and True Tone, but no HDR or 120Hz ProMotion.
That would hardly be enough to justify the $1,599 starting price (you can spend more for a tilt-and-height adjustable stand or nano-texture glass), but the Studio Display is more than just a monitor. It’s got an A13 inside to manage the 12-megapixel ultra wide webcam with Center Stage support, three-mic array, and six-speaker audio system with Spatial Audio. It’s also got four USB-C ports (10Gb/sec) and a Thunderbolt 3 port (48Gb/sec) that can supply up to 96 watts to charge your MacBook.
Apple removed the 27-inch iMac from its lineup at this time; it’s clear that the company intends those who want a bigger desktop experience than the 24-inch iMac to purchase an Apple Studio Display to go along with their Mac mini, Mac Studio, or MacBook.
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