Moreover, the announcement was bookended by the revelation that the latest version of macOS, dubbed Big Sur, was not only the first OS to support the new ARM-based hardware, but was also Apple's leap away from the OS X roots by finally going to a newly coded macOS version 11.0. The same technology has been powering Apple mobile devices, such as iOS, iPadOS, watchOS devices for several years now. Just a few weeks ago, Apple made a similar announcement, this time around, however, it was to lay out their roadmap for the transition from Intel to Apple's new, ARM-based Silicon on Chip (SoC) SEE: macOS Big Sur: A cheat sheet (free PDF) (TechRepublic) This year Apple made its biggest announcement since 2005, when Steve Jobs announced that Apple's computing lineup would begin transitioning to Intel processors and that by 2007, all devices in the lineup would have made the switch.
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