Apple M4

System on a Chip (SoC) designed by Apple Inc.
  • TSMC
Architecture and classificationApplicationtablet (iPad Pro)Technology node 3 nm (N3E)Instruction setARMv9.2aPhysical specificationsTransistors
  • 28 billions
Cores
  • 9 or 10 (3 or 4 high-performance + 6 high-efficiency)
Memory (RAM)
  • LPDDR5X 7500 MT/s (8 or 16 GB)[1]
GPUApple-designed integrated graphics (10 core)HistoryPredecessorApple M3

Apple M4 is an ARM-based system on a chip (SoC) designed by Apple Inc., part of the Apple silicon series, including a central processing unit (CPU), a graphics processing unit (GPU), a neural processing unit (NPU), and a digital signal processor (DSP). It was introduced in May 2024 for the iPad Pro (M4), and is the fourth generation of the M series Apple Silicon architecture, succeeding the Apple M3.[2][3][4]

According to Apple, the M4 SoC's Neural Engine is capable of 38 trillion operations per second, "which is 60x faster than Apple’s first Neural Engine in the A11 Bionic chip." The SoC is built upon a 3-nanometer process, and features 3 or 4 performance cores, 6 efficiency cores, and 10 graphics processing cores.[5]

The M4 is the world's fastest consumer SoC in single core performance according to the Geekbench benchmarking suite,[6] (beating Apple's M3 Max and Intel's Core i9 desktop CPUs), and compares to Apple's M3 Pro in multi-core performance.[7]

It is the first iPad SoC to support AV1 decode, and has a new display controller that Apple claims is necessary to support the iPad Pro (7th generation)'s Tandem OLED display.[5]

It is rumored the Apple M4 is Apple's first SoC which uses the ARMv9 architecture for its CPU cores, ARMv9.4 to be specific.[8][better source needed][9] It also could support Arm's SME2 extension,[10] which was announced in 2022[11] and is a superset of SME and SVE2,[12] to accelerate matrix operations. This is likely the cause of the majority of the estimated 7.6% Instructions Per Cycle (IPC) uplift from M3 Max, which would only be 3.0% without the new matrix extensions.[13][better source needed]

Apple M4 products

  • iPad Pro (7th generation)[5]

References

  1. ^ Smith, Ryan (May 7, 2024). "Apple Announces M4 SoC: Latest and Greatest Starts on 2024 iPad Pro". AnandTech. Retrieved June 14, 2024.
  2. ^ Leswing, Kif (May 7, 2024). "Apple announces new iPad Pro with M4, new iPad Air tablets". CNBC. NBCUniversal. Retrieved May 8, 2024.
  3. ^ Warren, Tom (May 7, 2024). "Next-gen M4 chips start arriving in Apple devices this year". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved May 8, 2024.
  4. ^ "Apple introduces M4 chip" (Press release). Cupertino, CA: Apple Inc. May 7, 2024. Retrieved May 8, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c "Apple unveils stunning new iPad Pro with the world's most advanced display, M4 chip, and Apple Pencil Pro" (Press release). Cupertino, CA: Apple Inc. May 7, 2024. Retrieved May 8, 2024.
  6. ^ Norem, Josh (May 10, 2024). "The Apple M4 Is the New Geekbench Single-Core Performance Champion". ExtremeTech. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 12, 2024.
  7. ^ Mayo, Benjamin (May 11, 2024). "iPad Pro with M4 chip boasts impressive performance jump compared to just-released M3 MacBook Air". 9to5Mac. Retrieved May 12, 2024.
  8. ^ Yuryev, Vadim (2024-05-09). "M4 chip is finally using ARMv9 architecture which supports SME/SVE2 which means it can more efficiently run more complex workloads compared to previous NEON..." Twitter. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  9. ^ Mann, Tobias. "You OK, Apple? Seriously, your silicon lineup is a mess". www.theregister.com. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  10. ^ "Microbenchmarks | Hello SME documentation". scalable.uni-jena.de. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  11. ^ "Arm A-Profile Architecture Developments 2022 - Architectures and Processors blog - Arm Community blogs - Arm Community". community.arm.com. 2022-09-29. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  12. ^ "Documentation – Arm Developer". developer.arm.com. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  13. ^ @TwistedAndy (2024-05-09). "Unfortunately, the actual IPC increase is minimal (~3%). We got an improved score because of the SME support in M4 and Geekbench 6.3. In actual apps that do not use SMEs, there will be no noticeable difference". Twitter. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
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