macOS 27 won’t be supporting Intel anymore
Posted by tasoeur 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by kirb 1 day ago
They also say:
> Please note that Rosetta functionality for older, unmaintained gaming titles that rely on Intel-based frameworks will continue to be supported.
I interpret that to mean just enough of Rosetta and Intel frameworks will continue to be around, at least for macOS 28. Not specified which ones, or whether it stays any longer than that.
I’m pretty curious of what that will look like exactly, because there’s a fair amount of system frameworks/libraries needed to get to a bare minimum “hello world” AppKit app. Add on top any number of other frameworks that might be used by “older, unmaintained” games that Apple sees fit to keep supporting. Does this ensure OpenGL is kept on life support? Will they consider Wine important enough to support, perhaps even after they drop native Intel games?
Comment by pram 1 day ago
Comment by andrewmcwatters 1 day ago
Comment by alin23 1 day ago
I get it that macOS has to evolve, but that doesn't mean all apps have to drop Intel support at the same time.
On hardware-level apps like my Lunar app I have plenty #if arch(arm64) because some features like reading the brightness nits or reading ambient light is different or completely missing based on the architecture. I need to test the UI differences based on what features are available.
I don't see it viable to stay on macOS 26 for this, especially if we're going to see breaking changes again with the display and window server subsystem like we did with Tahoe. M5 support for Gamma table changes is still broken after so many months [0]
[0] https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/819331#819331021
Comment by ryukoposting 1 day ago
You don't. You could stay on an old MacOS. Apple would prefer that you tell your customers to stop being poor and buy a new computer. They will make your situation increasingly unbearable until you do.
The overwhelming majority of people haven't needed a new computer since 2016. The current economic situation makes a new computer a worse value proposition than it's been in 35 years. Vendors are responding to this situation by manufacturing obsolescence. Microsoft pulled the same stunt with Windows 11's TPM 2.0 requirement.
Comment by troad 1 day ago
We're talking here about an OS that hasn't even come out yet, that will get years of security support, for computers that Apple hasn't been selling for several years now. Seems pretty reasonable.
Comment by ryukoposting 1 day ago
If it was planned, Rosetta 2 would have never existed in the first place. It would have been a qemu fork haphazardly crammed into Xcode.
There was no "planning" here. Here's how I imagine it went: a developer whined about tech debt, management seized an opportunity to generate revenue, neither party considered, yknow, humans, and now we're here.
Comment by tsunamifury 1 day ago
For day to day tasks there is no difference.
Comment by troad 1 day ago
I think "M series chips are no better than ten year old Intel chips" is a take that would be somewhat difficult to sustain, given the data.
Comment by tsunamifury 1 day ago
Comment by EPWN3D 1 day ago
Comment by hagbard_c 20 hours ago
Comment by icedchai 21 hours ago
My 2019 MacBook Pro used to sound like a jet plane taking off whenever I did any sort of build. On a bad day, I could've baked some cookies on it. Admittedly, the corporate spyware that was constantly scanning every single file didn't help matters.
Comment by nomel 1 day ago
Comment by ryukoposting 1 day ago
Comment by malshe 23 hours ago
Btw she can downgrade to Sequoia from Tahoe.
Comment by ryukoposting 29 minutes ago
And why the hell would I know that? I was 8 years old the last time I used a Mac. This is shit I shouldn't have to know.
Comment by throwaway27448 1 day ago
This is certainly an interesting way to characterize dropping support for old hardware. What is a reasonable way to go about hardware deprecation in your view?
Comment by protimewaster 22 hours ago
Especially when I can keep getting both feature and security updates for Windows on hardware that's the same age (or older) as the EOL Apple hardware.
Comment by ryandrake 20 hours ago
The reasonable way to go about hardware deprecation is to not do it until that hardware is Truly Gone™, buy some actual definition of Gone that isn't an arbitrary number of years or versions.
Comment by apetrovic 1 day ago
- Mac Classic II, the slowest of the bunch, $1.900, or about $4.661 today
- Quadra 900, the fastest model in 1991, was $7.200 ($17.663 today)
- PowerBook 170 was $4600 ($11.285)Comment by ryukoposting 1 day ago
Plenty of people would even be perfectly happy on an x86 Mac, too. Sure, there would be a perceptible difference compared to a new machine, but not enough to justify the price. That's what obsoleting Rosetta is about, it's about artifically making x86 Macs so unbearable that would-be happy users have no choice but to buy something else.
Comment by malshe 23 hours ago
Comment by scioto 1 day ago
Comment by stetrain 1 day ago
Comment by icelusxl 1 day ago
Comment by forgotaccount3 1 day ago
Isn't this a general form of 'how do we deal with the transition from a to b?'
If your client's can get intel Mac's, then you should be able to get one. If they can't, why do you need to keep supporting intel Mac's?
Comment by BrandonSmith 21 hours ago
For instance, consider https://tart.run/
All the Android / iOS devs on my team use Tart locally when we need to test mixed environments.
Then we use Tart's sister Cirrus CLI to run our builds on our server.
Comment by alsetmusic 23 hours ago
Oh hey! Thanks for making this. I've been running this app for a while now, between one and two years. Very much something that I rely on and appreciate.
Comment by GeekyBear 1 day ago
In a older version of the OS running in a virtual machine?
Comment by FireBeyond 21 hours ago
You are trying to emulate x86 to test those builds.
Rosetta doesn't emulate x86 hardware, but translates x86 instructions into ARM. The only thing your solution would get you is verification that the Intel build can work on Apple Silicon with Rosetta.
Comment by al_borland 1 day ago
They followed the same path when moving from PPC to Intel.
Comment by mleo 1 day ago
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Comment by rimliu 1 day ago
Comment by kalleboo 1 day ago
But I wonder if they're eager to drop support for the Intel TSO memory model from their CPUs.
Comment by zitterbewegung 1 day ago
Comment by kalleboo 1 day ago
Comment by piperswe 1 day ago
Comment by mrpippy 23 hours ago
Comment by andor 1 day ago
Comment by mrpippy 23 hours ago
> There will continue to be support for older, unmaintained gaming titles leveraging Rosetta along with software running Intel binaries in Linux VMs.
Comment by stetrain 1 day ago
MacOS on ARM can't directly virtualize an Intel OS using Rosetta today using the native virtualization framework, you need something like qemu for that. But you can use an ARM linux VM with the Rosetta framework installed internally to run x86 containers, which is I think how docker desktop and similar alternatives are handling it.
Comment by mrpippy 23 hours ago
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/macos-release-note...:
> There will continue to be support for older, unmaintained gaming titles leveraging Rosetta along with software running Intel binaries in Linux VMs.
Comment by ralphc 19 hours ago
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Comment by angerman 21 hours ago
It does supposed xeyes and similar via XQuartz; I gave up trying to make xmms work though. That would have been some fun.
Comment by tyingq 1 day ago
Edit: "Apple says that it will continue to support older, unmaintained gaming titles with Rosetta along with software running Intel binaries in Linux VMs beyond macOS 27 . There could also be future security fixes." - https://www.macrumors.com/2026/02/16/macos-tahoe-26-4-rosett...
No Apple citation shown for that, though seems plausible.
Comment by nntwozz 1 day ago
— Steve Jobs
https://youtu.be/H8eP99neOVs (WWDC '97)
This is something Microsoft will never learn, it's not in their DNA.
Comment by whatever1 1 day ago
If they are afraid of IP leak, well, they can continue support.
My desktop I built in 2012 is still working running ubuntu, even after Intel & MS decided that it is EOL with the release of windows 11.
Comment by rootsudo 1 day ago
They are great heavily supported Linux machines though. They work out of the box gorgeously with numerous distros and being usbc is nice. For $100-200 for a mint condition model, it isn’t so bad.
Comment by compounding_it 1 day ago
Since the release of Touch Bar based Macs (which contain apple silicon) this has not been the case. The Macs that are well supported by linux and work very well were abandoned long time ago.
Comment by tym0 4 hours ago
Comment by opan 1 day ago
Comment by bombcar 1 day ago
Would the M* be much better? Obviously, but that's not (yet) in the cards.
Comment by jimrandomh 20 hours ago
Comment by troad 1 day ago
Comment by fennecfoxy 1 day ago
Comment by skywhopper 1 day ago
Comment by icedchai 1 day ago
In all seriousness, it's a little lame. Consider that the Intel Mac Pro (2019 model) was still selling in 2023! That's not that long ago, and those were their highest end machines in terms of memory capacity. The "new" Mac Pro has since been discontinued...
Comment by microtonal 1 day ago
(IMO it stopped making sense buying an Intel Mac after the M1 Air or if your want to be generous the M1 Pro/Max-based MacBook Pros.)
Comment by shalmanese 1 day ago
Comment by icedchai 1 day ago
Comment by lxgr 1 day ago
> Rosetta 2 requires almost the entire OS to have Intel support.
The implication here being that (almost) the entire OS having Intel support is not trivial.
Comment by Ygg2 1 day ago
Comment by stetrain 1 day ago
Google might wear that particular crown: https://killedbygoogle.com
Comment by atroon 1 day ago
Comment by Ygg2 1 day ago
Google is the God-King of Killing software.
Comment by icf80 1 day ago
Comment by tengbretson 22 hours ago
Comment by al_borland 1 day ago
It’s almost like they did the work to get the actual game running on Apple Silicon, but installed Rosetta in the process, then just forgot about the launcher.
I always refused to install Rosetta on my Mac, so I could get a big warning if I was about to install something that wouldn’t work in the not too distant future.
Comment by bombcar 1 day ago
Comment by al_borland 23 hours ago
The 3rd party launchers seem to exist mostly for modding. I don’t care about this. I play very infrequently, usually just with my nephews at the point, so I would rather have the simplicity of the 1st party launcher vs trusting a 3rd party and having a bunch of extra bloat I’m never going to use.
All of this is besides the point that Microsoft should have a functional launcher for a game they are charging people money for, that they claim supports Apple Silicon. If 3rd party launchers exist, it’s clearly not a technical issue that can’t be overcome. They just haven’t done it. That’s pretty pathetic considering how big Minecraft is.
Comment by bombcar 22 hours ago
Comment by tonyedgecombe 1 day ago
Comment by jmclnx 1 day ago
So, it looks to me application vendors who depends upon this emulation was given proper notice of this removal. So I think you should complain to the vendors instead of Apple.
Most times I tend to criticize Apple, but this time seems Apple just moving on to avoid "bloat" and "cruft" from being carried forward in future releases.
OpenBSD does things like this all the time and they get praised for it, which I agree with. Apple did the same with this and some people are upset :)