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It is over for Intel Macs, Apple says Tahoe is last big update

It is over for Intel Macs, Apple says Tahoe is last big update

India Today10-06-2025

Apple is in the final leap of closing the chapter of the Intel-based Macs. During its annual developer conference WWDC 2025 keynote, the company announced that the upcoming macOS Tahoe 26 will be the last major macOS release to support Intel-based Macs. From next year, Apple's desktop operating system will be exclusively built for Apple Silicon. Apple introduced its in-house chip architecture in late 2020.advertisementNow this is not a big surprise. Apple has been pushing its users to switch to the Apple silicon with new Macs. In fact when the Cupertino tech giant launched its own silicon in 2020, it also announced a two-year transition plan from Intel processors to its custom Apple Silicon chips, starting with the M1. Since then, the company has been launching more powerful variants of Apple Silicon like M1 Pro, M2, and the latest M4. Now, with macOS Tahoe, Apple is completing this transition.But wait, Apple is not ditching Intel altogether. Here is what Intel Macs will still get.
Apple has released the developer's beta for the latest macOS Tahoe 26. But not all Intel-based Macs are eligible for the new OS. macOS 26 will support only a small set of Intel models, including:MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019)MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2020, Four Thunderbolt 3 ports)iMac (27-inch, 2020)Mac Pro (2019)advertisementUsers of these machines will be able to install macOS Tahoe in beta or the final release– which is expected in fall– and receive its feature set. However these devices will not get access to Apple Intelligence– Apple suite of AI features. The company has kept the AI experience exclusive to Apple Silicon Macs. Older Intel models, such as all Intel MacBook Airs and Intel Mac minis, have already been cut off from major OS upgrades.Intel Macs to get security support While the MacOS Tahoe 26 will be the last new OS for Intel Macs. From next year, the company will continue to release critical security updates for the Intel Macs for the next three years. So users can expect patches through 2028, but no new system capabilities beyond what macOS Tahoe offers.Apple is also urging app developers to finish migrating their apps to Apple Silicon. The company's Rosetta translation layer — designed to let Intel-based apps run on Apple Silicon — will remain available through macOS 27, after which it will be phased out except for a limited set of older gaming frameworks.That means developers have two more OS cycles to finalise support for Apple's ARM-based architecture. Beyond that, even legacy compatibility for apps running on Intel code will end.

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