Updated 30 April 2021: Maxon has released Redshift 3.0.45, the first M1-native version of its GPU renderer for DCC applications including Blender, Cinema 4D, Maya and Houdini. In addition, Procreate 5.2, the upcoming version of Savage Interactive’s popular iPad painting and sketching app, will feature native M1 support when the chip reaches Apple’s new iPad Pros. Updated 26 April 2021: RE:Vision Effects has released M1-native versions of the OFX editions of all of its compositing and editing plugins, including video retiming tool Twixtor. At the time of writing, there is no news about native versions. Updated 10 March 2021: The March 2021 stable build of Photoshop features native M1 support.Īlthough Apple also featured Autodesk software in its livestreams – Fusion 360 this week and Maya in its original Apple Silicon announcement – it wasn’t for its native M1 support.īoth were cited as examples of how applications can run on the new Macs via Rosetta, Apple’s new translation environment. Work on supporting M1 processors in After Effects and Character Animator will also begin in 2021. Stable builds will follow in the “first half of 2021”. Updated 22 December 2020: M1-native versions of Adobe’s Premiere Pro, Premiere Rush and Audition are now available as beta builds. Once again, the relevant release, Unity 2020.2, is still in beta, and Unity has confirmed that the M1 is currently only supported by the Unity player, not the Unity Editor itself.Īdobe will support the M1 in at least some of its software, but not at launch.Īpple announced during its livestream that the new version of Lightroom capable of running on Apple Silicon hardware will ship “next month”, with a compatible version of Photoshop to follow “early next year”. Unity Technologies is also supporting the M1 GPU in its Unity game engine. Updated 10 March 2021: Otoy has released Octane X PR 8, which includes native M1 support. Otoy has announced in a tweet that it will have an M1-compatible version of Octane X, the new Metal-native version of OctaneRender, its GPU renderer. Updated 10 March 2021: Blackmagic has now shipped DaVinci Resolve 17.1 and compositing application Fusion Studio 17.1, both of which natively support M1 processors. Serif supports the M1 chip in version 1.8.6 of its Affinity tools: image editing app Affinity Photo, vector design software Affinity Designer and desktop publishing system Affinity Publisher.Īll three updates are available now and again, are free to existing users.īlackmagic Design has also released an M1-compatible version of DaVinci Resolve, its colour grading and editing software, in beta. Maxon also supports the M1 in version 23 of Cinebench, its free CPU benchmarking tool. ![]() Cinema 4D R23 SP1 is available now, and is a free update for existing users. Maxon has been quick out of the gate, touting Cinema 4D as the “first professional 3D animation tool available for the new Macs”. Unsurprisingly, Apple is supporting the M1 in its own software, including editing tool Final Cut Pro, noting on its website that “every app that comes with Mac, and every app made by Apple, is optimised for M1”. There are some caveats about how that will translate to serious CG work, which we’ll address at the end of this story, but first: which CG applications are actually supporting the M1 chip at launch? It features both an eight-core CPU and integrated graphics, and will become available in Apple’s new 13-inch MacBook Pro, new MacBook Air and Mac mini, all due to ship “from next week”.Īpple claims that it offers the “world’s fastest integrated graphics in a personal computer” and the “world’s best CPU performance per Watt”. The M1 is the first of the new Apple Silicon processors: the new ARM-based SoCs that will replace Intel processors in the firm’s laptops and desktop Macs. ![]() ![]() The first Apple Silicon chip promises the ‘world’s fastest integrated graphics’ Scroll down for news of the latest applications to support M1 chips.ĬG software developers have begun to announce support for Apple’s M1 chip, the first of the firm’s Apple Silicon processors, due to ship next week in its new MacBook Pro, MacBook Air and Mac mini systems.Īnimation, post-production and design applications already compatible with the M1 chips include Maxon’s Cinema 4D, Blackmagic Design’s DaVinci Resolve, and Serif’s Affinity Photo, Designer and Publisher.Īn M1-compatible version of Otoy’s Octane X renderer will be available “in tandem” with the new Macs, and Apple announced that Adobe will support the M1 in Lightroom next month, and Photoshop next year. You can see some of the CG applications that support the new Mac processors from 17:30 in the video above, and read a full list below. Apple announced its new M1 chip during its livestream earlier this week.
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