Side, side note: Please put AR viewing into the Fusion 360 app! No reason not to with this kind of performance and it'd just be plain awesome. When should I start raising the white flag? I just learned that the iPhone 12's processor outperforms my i7-6600K in my desktop by more than 40%. The final release is expected soon, but with that final release comes something that the tech preview doesn’t have: a price tag. While that support didn’t come nearly as fast as Parallels, it is at least here in tech preview at least. As Fusion 360 is single-core heavy, it looks like the BEST performance period for Fusion might be on a Mac in the near future.Īlso, (somewhat) disappointing side fact. It’s probably not surprising that VMware Fusion would also add support for M1 Macs. Also given the fact that the chip is only clocked at 3.1 GHz, there's a lot of head room for future performance improvements as well. VMWare has announced that they are working towards supporting Linux on Fusion on M1's, but have no plans to do so for Windows unless Microsoft changes their licensing policy. That crazy processor just outscored intel's i9-10900k by almost 25% in single-core performance, and AMD's new Ryzen 9 5950X by ~6%. Microsoft has a version of Windows that runs on ARM, but it's not licensed to run on Macs. But it's impossible to ignore the benchmarks that the M1 just put out on geekbench. Considering that they also highlighted Fusion 360 in their keynote, I'd hope there's some good collaboration planned.ĭisclaimer: I'm a die-hard windows guy. I'd also like some info on what the future of Fusion 360 would look like on the Mac.
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