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Apple launches MacBook laptops powered by its own computing chips

  • Apple is hoping that the massive group of iPhone developers will embrace the new Macs
  • The new chip, called the M1, marks a shift away from Intel Corp technology

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Apple fans waiting to enter the Apple Store in Sanlitun, Beijing, when the new Apple's phone landed on store shelves in October. Photo: SCMP/Minghe Hu

Apple on Tuesday introduced a MacBook Air notebook and other machines with its first central processor designed in-house for Macs, a move that will tie its computers and iPhones closer together technologically.

The new chip, called the M1, marks a shift away from Intel Corp technology that has driven the electronic brains of Mac computers for nearly 15 years.

It is a boon for Apple computers, which are overshadowed by the company’s iPhone but still rack up tens of billions of dollars in sales per year. Apple hopes developers now will create families of apps that work on both its computers and phones.

The MacBook Air will start at US$999, the same as its predecessor, and have up to twice the battery life, Apple said. The M1 will also power the MacBook Pro notebook, which starts at US$1299, and its US$699 Mac Mini computer, which comes without a monitor.

The new products will be available from next week, executives said.

Shares of Apple were up about 0.2 per cent as the event ended.

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