Can't find any threads on this yet, so...Apple will be moving all of its computers to its own silicon, starting with the M1 chip in the new MacBook Pros and Mac Minis. Most of us who use Macs run Lutron programming software just fine in Parallels or a similar virtual machine just fine. Parallels is working on a version that will run on M1 Macs, but it will only run the ARM version of Windows. It's unlikely they'll be able to create a version that will run Intel x86 Windows on an ARM chip.So, the question is whether Lutron is thinking about the future of its programming software and how to support non-x86 machines? I think it's increasingly likely that other chip architectures, especially ARM, will proliferate in modern portables. The new Macs can run iOS apps, as they use pretty much the same chip. Will Lutron consider turning their iOS/mobile apps into full-fledged programming environments? Or will we all be scrounging eBay for old Intel laptops 5 years from now to keep our old Inclusive software running?
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