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How to Change the Folder Icon Color on MacOS Tahoe

28 January 2026 at 20:36
With macOS Tahoe 26 and newer, you can change and customize the color of your folders as seen within the Finder. This is a fun way to customize the look and feel of using your Mac, and yet it’s simple to implement. There are a variety of interesting ways to customize the Liquid Glass appearance ... Read More

Five Years of Apple Silicon: M1 to M5 Performance Comparison

Today marks the fifth anniversary of the Apple silicon chip that replaced Intel chips in Apple's Mac lineup. The first Apple silicon chip, the M1, was unveiled on November 10, 2020. The M1 debuted in the MacBook Air, Mac mini, and 13-inch MacBook Pro.


The β€ŒM1β€Œ chip was impressive when it launched, featuring the "world's fastest CPU core" and industry-leading performance per watt, and it's only improved since then. We've had five total generations of Apple silicon chips, with the M5 unveiled in the 14-inch β€ŒMacBook Proβ€Œ just last month.

Here's how the M5 measures up to the β€ŒM1β€Œ, per Apple's M5 specs:

  • 6Γ— faster CPU/GPU performance

  • 6Γ— faster AI performance

  • 7.7Γ— faster AI video processing

  • 6.8Γ— faster 3D rendering

  • 2.6Γ— faster gaming performance

  • 2.1Γ— faster code compiling


Geekbench comparison scores:

  • β€ŒM1β€Œ single-core - 2,320

  • M5 single-core - 4,263

  • β€ŒM1β€Œ multi-core - 8,175

  • M5 multi-core - 17,862

  • β€ŒM1β€Œ Metal - 33,041

  • M5 Metal - 75,637


Both CPU and GPU performance have increased significantly over the past five years, and Apple has boosted AI and gaming performance too with add-ons like hardware-accelerated ray tracing and an ever-improving Neural Engine.











































β€ŒM1β€Œ Chip M5 Chip
Made with TSMC's 5nm process (N5) Made TSMC's third-generation 3nm process (N3P)
Based on A14 Bionic Pro chip from iPhone 12 Based on A19 Pro chip from iPhone 17 Pro
8-core CPU, 8-core GPU 10-core CPU, 10-core GPU
3.2 GHz CPU clock speed 4.61 GHz CPU clock speed
No integrated Neural Accelerators Integrated Neural Accelerator in every GPU core
No ray tracing engine Third-generation ray tracing engine
No dynamic caching Second-generation dynamic caching
Support for up to 16GB unified memory Support for up to 32GB unified memory
68.25 GB/s unified memory bandwidth 153 GB/s unified memory bandwidth



Apple sold Apple silicon Macs alongside Intel Macs for three years, but phased out the final Intel Mac in June 2023 when the 2019 Mac Pro was discontinued. Now all of Apple's devices have Apple chips, and we're even hitting the end of the road for Intel Mac software support. Intel Macs won't get software updates after macOS Tahoe.

Over the next five years, Apple silicon chip technology will continue to evolve. Apple supplier TSMC is already working on 2nm chips that could make an appearance as soon as 2026, offering a 10 to 15 percent speed improvement and a 25 to 30 percent power reduction. 1.4nm chips could follow as soon as 2028 for even more power and efficiency.
This article, "Five Years of Apple Silicon: M1 to M5 Performance Comparison" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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Apple Unveils M5 Chip With Next-Generation GPU

Apple today announced the M5 chip, its next-generation chip for the MacBook Pro, iPad Pro, and Vision Pro.


From Apple's press release:

Built using third-generation 3-nanometer technology, M5 introduces a next-generation 10-core GPU architecture with a Neural Accelerator in each core, enabling GPU-based AI workloads to run dramatically faster. The GPU also offers enhanced graphics capabilities and third-generation ray tracing that combined deliver a graphics performance that is up to 45 percent higher than M4. M5 features the world's fastest performance core, with up to a 10-core CPU made up of six efficiency cores and up to four performance cores. Together, they deliver up to 15 percent faster multithreaded performance over M4. M5 also features an improved 16-core Neural Engine, a powerful media engine, and a nearly 30 percent increase in unified memory bandwidth to 153GB/s.


The M5's next-generation GPU architecture is optimized for AI tasks. Each of its 10 cores features a dedicated Neural Accelerator, delivering over 4x peak GPU compute compared to the M4. The M5 also includes a third-generation ray-tracing engine, providing up to a 45% graphics uplift in apps using ray tracing.

Apple says the next-generation GPU, enhanced shader cores, second-generation dynamic caching, and third-generation ray-tracing engine on the M5 bring more realistic visuals, faster rendering times, and smoother performance. The faster 16-core Neural Engine also delivers more powerful AI performance with greater energy efficiency.

The M5 chip unified memory bandwidth of 153GB/s, providing a nearly 30% increase over the M4, offering higher multithreaded performance in apps, faster graphics performance, and faster AI performance running models on the Neural Accelerators in the GPU or the Neural Engine. It supports up to 32GB of unified memory.

The new β€ŒMacBook Proβ€Œ, β€ŒiPad Proβ€Œ, and Vision Pro with the M5 chip are available to pre-order today.
This article, "Apple Unveils M5 Chip With Next-Generation GPU" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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