Apple will switch to ARM processors: what does it mean for plugin developers?
- KVRist
- 448 posts since 11 May, 2016 from Serbia
As for why iOS plugins are cheaper:
Usually there is not much added cost to support different plugin formats. These days plugin frameworks are doing much of the heavy lifting.
So basically FabFilter are looking at iOS revenue as an added bonus on the macOS plugin revenue. In that way they can lower the price of the macOS plugins.
All in all, they are in really bad position now.
Usually there is not much added cost to support different plugin formats. These days plugin frameworks are doing much of the heavy lifting.
So basically FabFilter are looking at iOS revenue as an added bonus on the macOS plugin revenue. In that way they can lower the price of the macOS plugins.
All in all, they are in really bad position now.
Website: https://youlean.co/
- KVRist
- 448 posts since 11 May, 2016 from Serbia
It would be interesting next few year for sure in the plugin market.
Lower prices will not necessarily benefit consumers. There is a lot of cost for developers and we are very small market in order to benefit for larger sale quantity and lower prices.
This could lead developers go into more consumer stuff or going into more profitable industries.
But on the other hand, devs could introduce subscriptions like every f**king app on iOS and milk their customers instead.
Lower prices will not necessarily benefit consumers. There is a lot of cost for developers and we are very small market in order to benefit for larger sale quantity and lower prices.
This could lead developers go into more consumer stuff or going into more profitable industries.
But on the other hand, devs could introduce subscriptions like every f**king app on iOS and milk their customers instead.
Website: https://youlean.co/
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- KVRist
- 177 posts since 18 Oct, 2019
Like it has been since day one in some form or another
{"panic_string":"BAD MAGIC!
(flag set in iBoot panic header), no macOS panic log available"} "Apple did not respond to a request for comment."
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midi_transmission midi_transmission https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=298730
- KVRian
- 1045 posts since 13 Feb, 2013
I'm sorry and no offence. But could we please stop spreading this false information that a iphone is faster than a current i7 that is repeated in every internet forum all the time? A geekbench score is not a valid comparision. The Apple ARM may be super fast, maybe faster than intel, but let's wait for valid benchmarks before stating it as a proof.Widowsky wrote: Fri Apr 24, 2020 8:29 amApple latest iPhones already best Apple latest MacBook Pros in single-core CPU performance (source: https://daringfireball.net/2020/04/the_2020_iphone_se).david.beholder wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2020 6:06 pmNot going to happen any time soon. Modern ARMs are not fast enough for Diva or "do what you want" OS.syntonica wrote: Mon Mar 23, 2020 10:27 pm Considering how fast the latest iPad's are, I'm sure we'll see ARMS in the consumer laptops and desktops soon enough.
They are definitely coming soon:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/04 ... s-in-2021/
Thanks.
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- KVRAF
- 5201 posts since 16 Nov, 2014
I have 100´s of music apps but none has a subscription. I would never buy into that.Youlean wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 10:23 am It would be interesting next few year for sure in the plugin market.
Lower prices will not necessarily benefit consumers. There is a lot of cost for developers and we are very small market in order to benefit for larger sale quantity and lower prices.
This could lead developers go into more consumer stuff or going into more profitable industries.
But on the other hand, devs could introduce subscriptions like every f**king app on iOS and milk their customers instead.![]()
But anyway it might be bad indeed. It could be that prices will rise or these developers leave iOS. The only one which might win here are indeed the iOS only developers which are used to such prices, prefer the app store economy, do not want to care about piracy and some more. I mean a lot apps are actually as good as much more expensive plug-ins, offer even often more in terms of midi control (especially midi out), control things via dedicated multi-touch etc. iOS is a crippled OS and before AUv3 it was a pain often but all these needed workarounds from the past also lead to innovative ways and a more modular system in general (things like connecting 5 DAWs is more easy there for me).
I mean this was coming since years and now it happens. Love it or leave it.
- KVRist
- 448 posts since 11 May, 2016 from Serbia
I am talking about regular iOS apps and subscriptions. Try to find a weather app or a wallpaper app without the subscription. I mean, come on, do we really need a subscription for that?!Cinebient wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:00 pmI have 100´s of music apps but none has a subscription. I would never buy into that.Youlean wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 10:23 am It would be interesting next few year for sure in the plugin market.
Lower prices will not necessarily benefit consumers. There is a lot of cost for developers and we are very small market in order to benefit for larger sale quantity and lower prices.
This could lead developers go into more consumer stuff or going into more profitable industries.
But on the other hand, devs could introduce subscriptions like every f**king app on iOS and milk their customers instead.![]()
But anyway it might be bad indeed. It could be that prices will rise or these developers leave iOS. The only one which might win here are indeed the iOS only developers which are used to such prices, prefer the app store economy, do not want to care about piracy and some more. I mean a lot apps are actually as good as much more expensive plug-ins, offer even often more in terms of midi control (especially midi out), control things via dedicated multi-touch etc. iOS is a crippled OS and before AUv3 it was a pain often but all these needed workarounds from the past also lead to innovative ways and a more modular system in general (things like connecting 5 DAWs is more easy there for me).
I mean this was coming since years and now it happens. Love it or leave it.
Sure, there are a lot of cool apps on iOS, but in many cases, these devs are selling macOS apps for higher prices too, so iOS comes as a side income. Developing software takes the same amount of resources on macOS as on the iOS if you are developing from scratch, so if your margins are lower that could be a problem for devs.
Just imagine that Steinberg can't sell Cubase on macOS anymore and need to sell Cubasis for $50. That would destroy their development budget...
Website: https://youlean.co/
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- KVRAF
- 5201 posts since 16 Nov, 2014
Yes, but i mean there are some really great apps as good as most i have as plug-ins. Especially synths could be easy replaced for me (well, beside 2-3 maybe). I just mean for the developers which started with iOS and/or develop exclusive for it.Youlean wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:16 pmI am talking about regular iOS apps and subscriptions. Try to find a weather app or a wallpaper app without the subscription. I mean, come on, do we really need a subscription for that?!Cinebient wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:00 pmI have 100´s of music apps but none has a subscription. I would never buy into that.Youlean wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 10:23 am It would be interesting next few year for sure in the plugin market.
Lower prices will not necessarily benefit consumers. There is a lot of cost for developers and we are very small market in order to benefit for larger sale quantity and lower prices.
This could lead developers go into more consumer stuff or going into more profitable industries.
But on the other hand, devs could introduce subscriptions like every f**king app on iOS and milk their customers instead.![]()
But anyway it might be bad indeed. It could be that prices will rise or these developers leave iOS. The only one which might win here are indeed the iOS only developers which are used to such prices, prefer the app store economy, do not want to care about piracy and some more. I mean a lot apps are actually as good as much more expensive plug-ins, offer even often more in terms of midi control (especially midi out), control things via dedicated multi-touch etc. iOS is a crippled OS and before AUv3 it was a pain often but all these needed workarounds from the past also lead to innovative ways and a more modular system in general (things like connecting 5 DAWs is more easy there for me).
I mean this was coming since years and now it happens. Love it or leave it.
Sure, there are a lot of cool apps on iOS, but in many cases, these devs are selling macOS apps for higher prices too, so iOS comes as a side income. Developing software takes the same amount of resources on macOS as on the iOS if you are developing from scratch, so if your margins are lower that could be a problem for devs.
Just imagine that Steinberg can't sell Cubase on macOS anymore and need to sell Cubasis for $50. That would destroy their development budget...
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- KVRAF
- 5201 posts since 16 Nov, 2014
midi_transmission wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 3:11 pmI'm sorry and no offence. But could we please stop spreading this false information that a iphone is faster than a current i7 that is repeated in every internet forum all the time? A geekbench score is not a valid comparision. The Apple ARM may be super fast, maybe faster than intel, but let's wait for valid benchmarks before stating it as a proof.Widowsky wrote: Fri Apr 24, 2020 8:29 amApple latest iPhones already best Apple latest MacBook Pros in single-core CPU performance (source: https://daringfireball.net/2020/04/the_2020_iphone_se).david.beholder wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2020 6:06 pmNot going to happen any time soon. Modern ARMs are not fast enough for Diva or "do what you want" OS.syntonica wrote: Mon Mar 23, 2020 10:27 pm Considering how fast the latest iPad's are, I'm sure we'll see ARMS in the consumer laptops and desktops soon enough.
They are definitely coming soon:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/04 ... s-in-2021/
Thanks.![]()
https://www.theverge.com/2020/6/23/2130 ... ujitsu-arm
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- KVRist
- 177 posts since 18 Oct, 2019
I bet that if you take just enough PIC16F84´s and start stacking them together, you will eventually outperform thatCinebient wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:21 pmmidi_transmission wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 3:11 pmI'm sorry and no offence. But could we please stop spreading this false information that a iphone is faster than a current i7 that is repeated in every internet forum all the time? A geekbench score is not a valid comparision. The Apple ARM may be super fast, maybe faster than intel, but let's wait for valid benchmarks before stating it as a proof.Widowsky wrote: Fri Apr 24, 2020 8:29 amApple latest iPhones already best Apple latest MacBook Pros in single-core CPU performance (source: https://daringfireball.net/2020/04/the_2020_iphone_se).david.beholder wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2020 6:06 pmNot going to happen any time soon. Modern ARMs are not fast enough for Diva or "do what you want" OS.syntonica wrote: Mon Mar 23, 2020 10:27 pm Considering how fast the latest iPad's are, I'm sure we'll see ARMS in the consumer laptops and desktops soon enough.
They are definitely coming soon:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/04 ... s-in-2021/
Thanks.![]()
https://www.theverge.com/2020/6/23/2130 ... ujitsu-arm
{"panic_string":"BAD MAGIC!
(flag set in iBoot panic header), no macOS panic log available"} "Apple did not respond to a request for comment."
- KVRAF
- 2473 posts since 25 Sep, 2014 from Specific Northwest
Unless there's some hand-coded assembler in there, a recompile is all that is needed. Even then, the ARM series has the Neon SIMD instruction set. Xcode already compiles to ARM for iOS. It's just a quick switch to make it compile to ARM for macOS as opposed to compiling for Intel. The compiler will still provide auto-vectorization and intrinsics.aMUSEd wrote: Mon Jun 22, 2020 8:33 pm I'm worried this will be the kiss of death for apps like Metasynth - U&I have been spending well over a year having to update their ageing codebase to make it Catalina compatible, now I bet they are pissed that they have to do it all again.
The only people that might need to do some rewrites are those who made their own SIMD libraries or used extensive assembly to exploit 32/64 bit Intel architecture.
For me, I just need to change the target and compile away.
Looks like my 2014 MBP is still good for at least another two years before it gets the OS update axe. In that time, I'll be watching with great interest as iOS and macOS finally converge and what sorts of hybrid products might be on offer.
I think the low-end stuff will make the switch first with the Mac Pro being the last to make the switch. That model may see some speed bumps, but otherwise will remain unchanged until it gets its first 128-core CPU. 5 A12Zs are as fast as the 28-core Xeon in the Mac Pro! The A14 should debut here pretty quick and will only be faster. The new Pro design will probably be half the size, or more with room to stuff it full of drives and cards. However, now imagine a 13" or 16" MacBook Pro with more CPU power than the current top end Mac Pro using less energy and producing less heat!
I started on Logic 5 with a PowerBook G4 550Mhz. I now have a MacBook Air M1 and it's ~165x faster! So, why is my music not proportionally better? 
- u-he
- 30217 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
- u-he
- 30217 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
I have yet to come across a compiler that does this for anything other than the most trivial loops. You have to give them so many hints, it's faster to just write vectorised code yourself.
(please prove me wrong... I'd love to spend my time on other things)
- KVRAF
- 2473 posts since 25 Sep, 2014 from Specific Northwest
With a single-core, it is faster than some i7s and i9s. However, all stops pulled out, it's only about a quarter as fast. Geekbench is not the worst benchmark and does a good job of putting CPUs through various use cases in its testing. Like any benchmark though, keep your salt shaker handy. It's too bad that efficiency isn't compared as well.midi_transmission wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 3:11 pmI'm sorry and no offence. But could we please stop spreading this false information that a iphone is faster than a current i7 that is repeated in every internet forum all the time? A geekbench score is not a valid comparision. The Apple ARM may be super fast, maybe faster than intel, but let's wait for valid benchmarks before stating it as a proof.Widowsky wrote: Fri Apr 24, 2020 8:29 amApple latest iPhones already best Apple latest MacBook Pros in single-core CPU performance (source: https://daringfireball.net/2020/04/the_2020_iphone_se).david.beholder wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2020 6:06 pmNot going to happen any time soon. Modern ARMs are not fast enough for Diva or "do what you want" OS.syntonica wrote: Mon Mar 23, 2020 10:27 pm Considering how fast the latest iPad's are, I'm sure we'll see ARMS in the consumer laptops and desktops soon enough.
They are definitely coming soon:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/04 ... s-in-2021/
Thanks.![]()
I started on Logic 5 with a PowerBook G4 550Mhz. I now have a MacBook Air M1 and it's ~165x faster! So, why is my music not proportionally better? 
- KVRist
- 448 posts since 11 May, 2016 from Serbia
It could be possible that OpenGL will be dropped for ARM (did anyone checked?). If so, or when, this will definitely require a lot of work to fix.syntonica wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:34 pma recompile is all that is needed.aMUSEd wrote: Mon Jun 22, 2020 8:33 pm I'm worried this will be the kiss of death for apps like Metasynth - U&I have been spending well over a year having to update their ageing codebase to make it Catalina compatible, now I bet they are pissed that they have to do it all again.
Website: https://youlean.co/
