anyone has any more details on it?
i only found basically two articles on it:
arstechnica.com
eclecticlight.co
i only found basically two articles on it:
Testing Apple's 2026 16-inch MacBook Pro, M5 Max, and its new "performance" cores
M5 Pro Max's "performance" CPU cores definitely aren't just rebranded E-cores.
arstechnica.com
CPU core frequencies updated for all current Apple silicon Macs
Complete listing of all frequency steps for M1-M5 chips in each variant, for E, P and S cores, and for the A18 Pro in the MacBook Neo. Is the M5 P type more like an older E or P core?
eclecticlight.co