That would be like saying when Apple switched from PowerPC to Intel CPU is was revolutionary.
No, it wouldn't.
Is that how you think analogies work?
Switching CPU architecture to a different common CPU architecture isn't what I'd call "revolutionary".
Well that depends, doesn't it?
If you put a V8 in a car, not so revolutionary. Put an RB-25 on the back of it? Pretty fucking revolutionary.
So, putting a motor in that dramatically changes the characteristics of this thing vs. what existed before- can be revolutionary, can't it?
ARM chips weren't new when they made the switch
lol. Are you trolling?
Arm (it's not capitalized) chips with power comparable (not to mention better) than any PC mobile-class chip were absolutely new when they made the switch.
Hell, they're still the only game in town, there.
other desktop OSes were already running on ARM by that point.
Oh, totally. Your shitty Raspberry Pi is completely comparable to a device that performs 14x better than it.
Come the fuck on.
Now, if they had suddenly come out with MacOS on something new like a quantum CPU, then we'd be talking.
One wonders if you know what a quantum CPU is. Given how ignorant your comment was, I'm going to go with no. I won't explain to you why there'd be nothing revolutionary about putting a quantum CPU into a computer, any more so than putting a water faucet in place of the motor in your car.
Apple Silicon CPUs in a laptop put the power of a workstation-class laptop in the power envelope of a netbook.
To this day, you cannot find a comparison of a PC and a MacBook that doesn't sacrifice every shred of intellectual honesty the person has,.
You can have better performance, if you don't mind 2 hours of battery life, and you can have half as much battery life as the MacBook, if you don't mind the performance of a Nintendo Switch.
There's upping things a notch, and then there is smashing through the glass ceiling, and that is revolutionary.