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Your Intel Mac Has a Few Good Years Left

Your Intel Mac Has a Few Good Years Left

For over five years, Apple has been quietly laying the groundwork for the biggest architectural shift in Mac computing since the transition from PowerPC to Intel in 2006. That shift took about three years. This one is different.

"Rosetta was designed to ease this transition by automatically translating Intel-based apps for use with Apple silicon. This has given users and app developers more time to update their apps."

Apple Support, on the purpose of Rosetta

Five Years. Five Generations. One Clear Direction.

When Apple announced the transition to Apple Silicon in June 2020, many wondered if it was too soon, too ambitious, or both. Five years later, the answer is clear: it was the right move at the right time.

We've now seen five generations of Apple Silicon, starting with M1 in late 2020 and continuing through the M4 chips powering today's Macs. Each generation delivered meaningful improvements in performance, power efficiency, and capabilities. The trajectory has been remarkable.

5+ Years of Apple Silicon
5 Chip Generations
2020 Transition Began

What makes this transition particularly impressive is not just the hardware. It is how Apple has supported the old while building the new. Rosetta 2, the translation layer that lets Intel apps run on Apple Silicon, has worked remarkably well. But all things come to an end.

Apple's Track Record: Better Support Than Anyone

One thing Apple does better than almost anyone in the industry is long-term support. When they transitioned from PowerPC to Intel in 2006, they kept those machines supported for years. When they moved to Apple Silicon, they did not abandon Intel users overnight.

macOS Tahoe (version 26) is the last major macOS release that will fully support Intel Macs. Apple has given Intel Mac users nearly six years of OS updates since the transition began.

Apple's approach has been to give developers and users ample time to adapt. That is the kind of support that turns a risky transition into a smooth evolution. But the writing is on the wall: the future is Apple Silicon, and it is arriving faster than many expected.

The Apple Silicon Leap: What Was Possible

Apple Silicon was not just about efficiency. It was about fundamentally rethinking what a personal computer chip could do. The integration of CPU, GPU, Neural Engine, and memory into a single package enabled capabilities that were previously impossible on consumer hardware.

  • Unprecedented performance per watt: All-day battery life with desktop-class performance became reality
  • Unified memory architecture: Memory shared between CPU and GPU eliminated traditional bottlenecks
  • Dedicated ML acceleration: The Neural Engine enabled on-device machine learning at scales previously impossible
  • Pro-level video editing: 8K editing and multi-stream 4K playback became native, without specialized hardware

These were not incremental improvements. They were generational leaps that redefined what users could expect from their computers.

The Timeline: What Happens When

Here is the reality of how software support will likely unfold for Intel Macs:

2026+ Most major apps still support Intel Macs, but many new features become Apple Silicon-only. Security updates continue for Intel.
2027+ Growing number of developers stop testing Intel Macs. New releases increasingly require Apple Silicon. Rosetta functionality becomes limited.
2028+ Intel support becomes uncommon outside enterprise software. Similar to how PowerPC Macs are treated today: usable, but increasingly unsupported.
2030+ Intel Macs become legacy hardware, similar to old PowerPC Macs. Functional for existing software, but no longer a development priority.
Key development: Apple has announced that macOS 27 will require Apple Silicon. Rosetta support is being phased out, removing the translation layer that has allowed Intel apps to run on newer Macs.

What This Means for MuteMe Users

At MuteMe, we have been ahead of this curve. We already offer a native Apple Silicon version of our software, and we have been shipping it for some time now.

MuteMe already supports Apple Silicon. If you are using an Intel Mac, we encourage you to download our native Apple Silicon version for the best experience.

We understand that many (nearly 4000 of you) are on Intel Macs, particularly the 2019 to 2020 MacBook Pro models and the many iMac users that remain popular in home office environments. We see you, and we are not abandoning you.

Our Commitment to Intel Mac Users

Here is our roadmap for Intel Mac support:

2027 Full support for Intel Macs. Intel-compatible updates will continue
2028 Intel support becomes "legacy" status. Bug fixes still released, but no new Intel-specific features shipped.
2029+ Only maintained if significant paying customers are still using Intel Macs.
Why 2028? Based on industry trends and Apple's deprecation timeline, we expect Intel Macs to become increasingly unsupported by developers after 2028. We will continue monitoring usage data and adjust if needed, but our engineering focus will shift to Apple Silicon.

We believe in supporting our users through transitions. That means giving you advance notice, clear information, and plenty of time to make decisions about your hardware.

The Bigger Picture

This transition reflects something Apple does well: making bold architectural moves while carefully managing the user experience during the shift. Whether you are on an Intel Mac today or an Apple Silicon machine, you have not been left behind. You have been given time to plan.

The performance gains of Apple Silicon are real and significant. If you have been thinking about upgrading, the math increasingly favors making the jump. But if you are not ready, we will meet you where you are, for now and for the next few years.

Questions about which version is right for you? Contact our support team.