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This list of Macintosh models grouped by CPU type contains all CPUs used by Apple Inc. for their Macintosh computers. It is grouped by processor family, processor model, and then chronologically by Macintosh model.
1Motorola 68000
2PowerPC
3Intel x86
Motorola 68000[edit]
Motorola 68000[edit]
A Motorola 68000 processor in a dual in-line package, as the early Macintosh models used
The Motorola 68000 was the first Apple Macintosh processor. It had 32-bit CPU registers, a 24-bit address bus, and a 16-bit data path; Motorola referred to it as a '16–/32-bit microprocessor.'[1]
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L1 cache (bytes)
Introduced
Discontinued
MC68000
Lisa[2]
5
5
—
January 1983
January 1984
Lisa 2[2]
5
5
—
January 1984
January 1985
Macintosh[3]
8
8
—
January 1984
October 1985
Macintosh 512K
8
8
—
September 1984
April 1986
Macintosh XL[4]
5
5
—
January 1985
April 1985
Macintosh Plus[5]
8
8
—
January 1986
October 1990
Macintosh 512Ke[6]
8
8
—
April 1986
September 1987
Macintosh SE
8
8
—
March 1987
August 1989
Macintosh SE FDHD
8
8
—
August 1989
October 1990
Macintosh Classic
8
8
—
October 1990
September 1992
MC68HC000
Macintosh Portable
16
16
—
September 1989
October 1991
PowerBook 100
16
16
—
October 1991
August 1992
Motorola 68020[edit]
A Motorola 68020 processor
The Motorola 68020 was the first 32-bit Mac processor, first used on the Macintosh II. The 68020 had many improvements over the 68000, including an instruction cache, and was the first Mac processor to support a memory management unit, the Motorola 68851.
The Macintosh LC configured the 68020 to use a 16-bit system bus with ASICs that limited RAM to 10 MB (as opposed to the 32-bit limit of 4 GB).
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L1 cache (bytes)
Data path width/ Address width (bits)
FPU
MMU
Introduced
Discontinued
MC68020
Macintosh II
16
16
256
32/16
68881
68851 (optional)
March 1987
January 1990
Macintosh LC
16
16
256
16/16
—
—
October 1990
March 1992
Motorola 68030[edit]
A Motorola 68030 processor
The Motorola 68030 was the first Mac processor with an integrated memory management unit, allowing for virtual memory. Another improvement over the 68020 was the addition of a data cache.
The PowerPC 601 was the first Mac processor to support the 32-bit PowerPCinstruction set architecture.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L1 cache (KB) (data/ instr.)
L2 cache (KB)
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 601
Power Macintosh 7100
66–80
33.3–40.0
16/16
—
March 1994
January 1996
Workgroup Server 6150
60–66
30.0–33.3
16/16
—
April 1994
April 1996
Workgroup Server 9150
80–120
40.0
16/16
512–1024
April 1994
May 1996
Power Macintosh 8200
100–120
40.0
16/16
256
April 1996
July 1996
PowerPC 601v
Workgroup Server 7250
120
40.0
16/16
—
February 1996
April 1997
PowerPC 603[edit]
A Motorola PowerPC 603 processor
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L1 cache (KB) (data/ instr.)
L2 cache (KB)
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 603
Power Macintosh 6200 Performa 6200CD Performa 6205CD Performa 6210CD Performa 6214CD Performa 6216CD Performa 6218CD Performa 6220CD Performa 6230CD
75–120
37.5–40.0
8/8
256
May 1995
July 1997
PowerPC 603e
PowerBook 5300c/ce/cs
100–117
33.3
16/16
—
August 1995
August 1996
Power Macintosh 5260 Performa 5260CD Performa 5270CD Performa 5280CD
100–120
40.0
16/16
256
April 1996
March 1997
Power Macintosh 6300/120 Performa 6320
120
40.0
16/16
256
May 1996
July 1997
PowerBook 1400c/cs
117–133
33.3
16/16
—
November 1996
May 1998
PowerPC 603ev
Power Macintosh 6400 Performa 6400
180–200
40.0
16/16
256
August 1996
August 1997
PowerBook 1400c/cs
166
33.3
16/16
128
November 1996
May 1998
Power Macintosh 6500
225–300
50.0
16/16
256
February 1997
March 1998
20th Anniversary Macintosh
250
50.0
16/16
128
May 1997
March 1998
PowerPC 604[edit]
Mac Pro 3.2 Qcx Manual Software
An IBM PowerPC 604e processor
The PowerPC 604e was the first Mac processor available in a symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) configuration.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (KB)
CPUs
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 604
Power Macintosh 9500
120–150
40–50
512
1
May 1995
August 1996
Workgroup Server 8550
132
44
512
1
February 1996
September 1996
PowerPC 604e
Power Macintosh 9500
180–200
45–50
512
1–2
August 1996
February 1997
Network Server 700[9]
150–200
50
1024
1
September 1996
April 1997
Power Macintosh 7300
166–200
45–50
256
1
February 1997
November 1997
Power Macintosh 9600
200–233
50
512
1–2
February 1997
August 1997
Workgroup Server 9650
233
50
512
1
April 1997
August 1997
PowerPC 604ev
Power Macintosh 9600
300–350
50
1024
1
August 1997
March 1998
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (KB)
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 750
PowerBook G3
233–500
50–100
512–1024
November 1997
January 2001
iMac
233–500
66–100
512
August 1998
July 2001
Macintosh Server G3 (Blue & White)
350–450
100
1024
January 1999
August 1999
iMac
600
100
256
September 2000
May 2001
PowerPC 750CXe
iMac
500–700
100
256
July 2001
March 2003
PowerPC 755
iBook
600–900
100
512
May 2002
October 2003
PowerPC G4[edit]
A Motorola PowerPC 7400 ('G4') processor
The PowerPC 7400 was the first Mac processor to include an AltiVecvector processing unit.
The PowerPC 7455 was the first Mac processor over 1 GHz.
Mac Pro 3.2 Qcx Manual Download
Processor
Model
Clock speed (MHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
CPUs
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 7400
Macintosh Server G4
350–500
100
512–1024
—
1–2
January 2000
January 2001
PowerPC 7410
PowerBook G4
400–500
100
1024
—
1
January 2001
October 2001
Power Mac G4 Cube[10]
450–500
100
1024
—
1
April 2001
July 2001
PowerPC 7450
Macintosh Server G4
733–1000
133
256
0–2
1–2
September 2001
August 2002
iMac G4
700–800
100
256
—
1
January 2002
January 2003
PowerPC 7455
PowerBook G4
667–1000
133–167
256
0–1
1
April 2002
September 2003
Macintosh Server G4
1000–1250
133–167
256
1–2
1–2
August 2002
January 2003
eMac
800–1000
133
256
—
1
May 2003
April 2004
PowerPC 7447
eMac
1250
167
512
—
1
April 2004
May 2005
PowerPC 7447a
iBook G4
1000–1420
133–142
512
—
1
April 2004
May 2006
eMac
1420
167
512
—
1
May 2005
July 2006
PowerPC G5[edit]
An IBM PowerPC 970FX ('G5') processor
The PowerPC 970 was the first 64-bit Mac processor.
The PowerPC 970MP was the first dual-core Mac processor and the first to be found in a quad-core configuration. It was also the first Mac processor with partitioning and virtualization capabilities.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (KB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
Introduced
Discontinued
PowerPC 970
PowerPC 970FX
Power Mac G5
1.8–2.7
900–1350
512
1–2
1
June 2004
November 2005
Power Mac G5
2.0–2.5
1000–1250
2×1024
1–2
2
November 2005
August 2006
Intel x86[edit]
Overview[edit]
Processor family
Process (nm)
MMX
SSE
SSE2
SSE3
SSSE3
SSE4.1
SSE4.2
AVX
DBS/ EIST
XD bit
VT-x
AES
Intel 64
Quick Sync
TXT
QPI
HT
ITB
Yonah
65
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
Core Penryn
65/45
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Some
Some
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Some
No
No
No
Nehalem Westmere
45/32
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Some
Yes
No
Some
Some
Some
Some
Sandy Bridge Ivy Bridge
32/22
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Some
Yes
Some
Some
Some
Some
Some
Haswell Broadwell
22/14
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Some
Yes
Some
Some
Some
Some
Some
Skylake Kaby Lake Coffee Lake
14
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Some
Some
Some
Some
P6[edit]
Yonah was the first Mac processor to support the IA-32 instruction set architecture, in addition to the MMX, SSE, SSE2, and SSE3 extension instruction sets.
The Core Solo was a Core Duo with one of the two cores disabled.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (MB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
Introduced
Discontinued
Core Duo ('Yonah')
iMac
1.83–2.00
667
2
1
2
January 2006
September 2006
MacBook Pro
1.83–2.16
667
2
1
2
February 2006
October 2006
Mac mini
1.66–1.83
667
2
1
2
February 2006
August 2007
MacBook
1.83–2.00
667
2
1
2
May 2006
November 2006
Core Solo ('Yonah')
Mac mini
1.50
667
2
1
1
February 2006
September 2006
Pentium M ULV ('Crofton')
Apple TV[11][12]
1.00
350
2
1
1
January 2007
September 2010
Core[edit]
Woodcrest added support for the SSSE3 instruction set.
Merom was the first Mac processor to support the x86-64 instruction set, as well as the first 64-bit processor to appear in a Mac notebook.
Clovertown was the first quad-core Mac processor and the first to be found in an 8-core configuration.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (MB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
Introduced
Discontinued
Xeon 5100 ('Woodcrest')
Mac Pro
2.00–3.00
1333
4
2
2
August 2006
January 2008
Xserve
2.00–3.00
1333
4
2
2
October 2006
January 2008
Core 2 Duo ('Merom')
iMac
1.83–2.40
667–800
2–4
1
2
September 2006
April 2008
MacBook Pro
2.16–2.60
667–800
4
1
2
October 2006
February 2008
MacBook
1.83–2.20
667–800
2–4
1
2
November 2006
February 2008
Mac mini
1.83–2.00
667
2–4
1
2
August 2007
March 2009
MacBook Air
1.60–1.80
800
4
1
2
January 2008
October 2008
Xeon 5300 ('Clovertown')
Mac Pro
3.00
1333
2×4
2
4
April 2007
January 2008
Core 2 Extreme ('Merom XE')
iMac
2.80
800
4
1
2
August 2007
April 2008
Penryn[edit]
An Intel Wolfdale processor
Penryn added support for a subset for SSE4 (SSE4.1).
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
FSB speed (MT/s)
L2 cache (MB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
Introduced
Discontinued
Xeon 5400 ('Harpertown')
Mac Pro
2.80–3.20
1600
2×6
1–2
4
January 2008
March 2009
Xserve
2.80–3.00
1600
2×6
1–2
4
January 2008
April 2009
Core 2 Duo ('Penryn')
MacBook Pro
2.26–3.06
1066
3–6
1
2
February 2008
March 2011
MacBook
2.00–2.40
1066
3
1
2
February 2008
July 2011
iMac
2.40–3.06
1066
6
1
2
April 2008
October 2009
MacBook Air
1.60–2.13
1066
6
1
2
October 2008
July 2011
Mac mini
2.00–2.66
1066
3
1
2
March 2009
July 2011
Mac mini Server
2.53–2.66
1066
3
1
2
October 2009
July 2011
Core 2 Duo ('Wolfdale')
iMac
3.06–3.33
1066–1333
3–6
1
2
October 2009
July 2010
Core 2 Duo CULV ('Penryn')
MacBook Air
1.40–1.60
800
3
1
2
October 2010
July 2011
Nehalem[edit]
An Intel Bloomfield processor
Bloomfield and Gainestown introduced a number of notable features for the first time in any Mac processors:
Integrated memory controllers (with on-die DMI or QPI).
Simultaneous multithreading (branded as Hyper-threading).
Full support for the SSE4 instruction set (SSE4.2).
Support for Intel Turbo Boost.
Four cores on a single die rather than a multi-chip module of two dual-core dies.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
QPI
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Xeon 3500 ('Bloomfield')
Mac Pro
2.66–3.33
4×256
8
1
4
Yes
Yes
Yes
March 2009
July 2010
Xeon 5500 ('Gainestown')
Mac Pro
2.26–2.93
4×256
8
2
4
Yes
Yes
Yes
March 2009
August 2010
Xserve
2.26–3.33
4×256
8
1–2
4
Yes
Yes
Yes
April 2009
January 2011
Core i5 ('Lynnfield')
iMac
2.66–2.80
4×256
8
1
4
No
No
Yes
October 2009
May 2011
Core i7 ('Lynnfield')
iMac
2.80–2.93
4×256
8
1
4
No
Yes
Yes
October 2009
May 2011
Westmere[edit]
Arrandale introduced Intel HD Graphics, an on-die integrated GPU.
Mac Pro 3.2 Qcx Manual Pdf
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
CPUs
Cores per CPU
QPI
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 ('Arrandale')
MacBook Pro
2.40–2.53
2×256
3
1
2
No
Yes
Yes
April 2010
March 2011
Core i7 ('Arrandale')
MacBook Pro
2.66
2×256
4
1
2
No
Yes
Yes
April 2010
March 2011
Core i3 ('Clarkdale')
iMac
3.06–3.20
2×256
4
1
2
No
Yes
No
July 2010
May 2011
Core i5 ('Clarkdale')
iMac
3.60
2×256
4
1
2
No
Yes
Yes
July 2010
May 2011
Xeon 3600 ('Gulftown')
Mac Pro
3.33
6×256
12
1
6
Yes
Yes
Yes
August 2010
October 2013
Xeon 5600 ('Gulftown')
Mac Pro
2.40–3.06
4–6×256
12
2
4–6
Yes
Yes
Yes
August 2010
October 2013
Sandy Bridge[edit]
An Intel Core i7 2600K processor
Sandy Bridge added support for Intel Quick Sync Video, a dedicated on-die video encoding and decoding core. It was also the first quad-core processor to appear in a Mac notebook.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.3
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
March 2011
June 2012
Mac mini
2.3–2.5
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
July 2011
October 2012
Core i7 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.7–2.8
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
March 2011
June 2012
Mac mini
2.7
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
July 2011
October 2012
Core i7 (4-core)
MacBook Pro
2.0–2.5
4×256
6–8
4
Yes
Yes
March 2011
June 2012
iMac
2.8–3.4
4×256
8
4
Yes
Yes
May 2011
October 2012
Mac mini Server
2.0
4×256
6
4
Yes
Yes
July 2011
October 2012
Core i5 (4-core)
iMac
2.5–3.1
4×256
6
4
No
Yes
May 2011
October 2012
Core i5 CULV (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.6–1.7
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
July 2011
June 2012
Core i7 CULV (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.8
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
July 2011
June 2012
Ivy Bridge[edit]
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.5
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
June 2012
October 2016
Mac mini
2.5
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
October 2012
October 2014
Core i5 (4-core)
MacBook Pro
2.3
4×256
3
4
Yes
Yes
June 2012
October 2013
iMac
2.7–3.2
2×256
6
4
Yes
Yes
October 2012
September 2013
Core i7 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.9–3.0
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
June 2012
October 2016
Core i7 (4-core)
MacBook Pro
2.3–2.8
4×256
6–8
4
Yes
Yes
June 2012
October 2013
iMac
3.1–3.4
4×256
8
4
Yes
Yes
October 2012
September 2013
Mac mini
2.7
4×256
6
4
Yes
Yes
October 2012
October 2014
Core i5 CULV (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.7–1.8
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
June 2012
June 2013
Core i7 CULV (2-core)
MacBook Air
2.0
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
June 2012
June 2013
Core i3 (2-core)
iMac (education-only)
3.3
2×256
3
2
Yes
No
March 2013
June 2014
Xeon E5 v2
Mac Pro
3.7
4×256
10
4
Yes
Yes
December 2013
current
3.5
6×256
12
6
Yes
Yes
December 2013
current
3.0
8×256
25
8
Yes
Yes
December 2013
current
2.7
12×256
30
12
Yes
Yes
December 2013
current
Haswell[edit]
The Crystal Well variant used in some MacBook Pros contains an on-package L4 cache shared between the CPU and integrated graphics.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
L4 cache (MB)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 ULT (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.3–1.4
2×256
3
—
2
Yes
Yes
June 2013
March 2015
iMac
1.4
2×256
3
—
2
Yes
Yes
June 2014
October 2015
Mac mini
1.4–2.8
2×256
3
—
2
Yes
Yes
October 2014
current
Core i7 ULT (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.7
2×256
4
—
2
Yes
Yes
June 2013
March 2015
Mac mini
3.0
2×256
4
—
2
Yes
Yes
October 2014
current
Core i5 (4-core)
iMac
2.7–3.5
4×256
4–6
—
4
No
Yes
September 2013
October 2015
Core i7 (4-core)
iMac
3.1–4.0
4×256
8
—
4
Yes
Yes
September 2013
October 2015
MacBook Pro
2.0–2.8
4×256
6
128
4
Yes
Yes
October 2013
July 2018
Core i5 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.4–2.8
2×256
3
—
2
Yes
Yes
October 2013
March 2015
Core i7 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.8–3.0
2×256
4
—
2
Yes
Yes
October 2013
March 2015
Broadwell[edit]
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core M
MacBook
1.1–1.3
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
April 2015
April 2016
Core i5 ULT (2-core)
MacBook Air
1.6
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
March 2015
current
MacBook Pro
2.4–2.8
2×256
3
2
Yes
Yes
March 2015
July 2018
Core i7 ULT (2-core)
MacBook Air
2.2
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
March 2015
current
MacBook Pro
3.1
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
March 2015
July 2018
Skylake[edit]
An Intel Core i7 6700K processor
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 (4-core)
iMac
3.2–3.3
4×256
6
4
No
Yes
October 2015
June 2017
Core i7 (4-core)
iMac
4.0
4×256
8
4
Yes
Yes
October 2015
June 2017
MacBook Pro
2.6–2.9
2×256
6–8
4
Yes
Yes
November 2016
June 2017
Core m3
MacBook
1.1
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
April 2016
June 2017
Core m5
MacBook
1.2
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
April 2016
June 2017
Core m7
MacBook
1.3
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
April 2016
June 2017
Core i5 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.0–2.4
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
October 2016
June 2017
MacBook Pro
2.9–3.3
2×256
4
2
Yes
Yes
November 2016
June 2017
Xeon W
iMac Pro
3.2
8×1024
11
8
Yes
Yes
December 2017
current
iMac Pro
3.0
10×1024
13.75
10
Yes
Yes
December 2017
current
iMac Pro
2.5
14×1024
19.25
14
Yes
Yes
December 2017
current
iMac Pro
2.3
18×1024
24.75
18
Yes
Yes
December 2017
current
Kaby Lake[edit]
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
TDP (W)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 (2-core)
iMac
2.3
2×256
4
15
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
current
MacBook Pro
2.3–3.3
2×256
4
15–28
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
July 2018
MacBook[13]
1.3
2×256
4
4.5
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
current
Core i7 (2-core)
MacBook Pro
2.5–3.5
2×256
4
15
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
July 2018
MacBook[13]
1.4
2×256
4
4.5
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
current
Core i5 (4-core)
iMac
3.0–3.8
4×256
6
65–91
4
No
Yes
June 2017
current
Core i7 (4-core)
iMac
3.6–4.2
4×256
8
65–91
4
Yes
Yes
June 2017
current
MacBook Pro
2.8–2.9
4×256
6–8
45
4
Yes
Yes
June 2017
July 2018
Core m3
MacBook
1.2
2×256
4
4.5
2
Yes
Yes
June 2017
current
Coffee Lake[edit]
Coffee Lake was the first 6-core processor to appear in a Mac notebook.
Processor
Model
Clock speed (GHz)
L2 cache (KB)
L3 cache (MB)
L4 cache (MB)
TDP (W)
Cores per CPU
HT
ITB
Introduced
Discontinued
Core i5 (4-core)
MacBook Pro
2.3
4×256
6
128
28
4
Yes
Yes
July 2018
current
Core i7 (4-core)
MacBook Pro
2.7
4×256
8
128
28
4
Yes
Yes
July 2018
current
Core i7 (6-core)
MacBook Pro
2.2–2.6
6×256
9
—
45
6
Yes
Yes
July 2018
current
Core i9 (6-core)
MacBook Pro
2.9
6×256
12
—
45
6
Yes
Yes
July 2018
current
See also[edit]
References[edit]
^Motorola Literature Distribution, Phoenix, AZ (1992). Motorola M68000 Family Programmer's Reference Manual(PDF). [motorola]. pp. 1–1. ISBN0-13-723289-6.CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list (link)
^ abIncluded due to its compatibility with Macintosh software and common use as an early Macintosh development platform.
^Retroactively named the 'Macintosh 128K' after the release of the Macintosh 512K.
^An Apple Lisa modified with MacWorks XL to run Mac software.
^Sold in educational markets as the 'Macintosh Plus ED.'
^Sold in educational markets as the 'Macintosh ED.'
^Shipped with A/UXoperating system but capable of running Mac OS.
^Sold in Europe and Asia as the 'Power Macintosh 6300/160.'
^ abShipped with AIX operating system and incapable of running Mac OS.
^User reports indicate that the Power Mac G4 Cube began shipping with the more power efficient PowerPC 7410 in April 2001. [1]
^Ran a modified version of Mac OS X with the Front Row user interface.
^Teardowns indicate that it used an under clocked Dothan-based Pentium M ULV processor,[2] called 'Crofton' by Intel. [3]
^ abUses an ultra low-voltage processor previously branded as Core M.
Sources[edit]
Specifications, Apple, Inc.
Ian Page and contributors, MacTracker.
Glen Sanford, Apple History, apple-history.com.
Dan Knight, Computer Profiles, LowEndMac, Cobweb Publishing, Inc.
Product Specifications, Intel, Inc.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Macintosh_models_grouped_by_CPU_type&oldid=905055561'