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| image_size = 200px
| caption = IBM [[PowerPC 601]] used in early [[Power Macintosh]] models (1994)
| date =
| participants = [[Apple Inc.]], [[IBM]], [[Motorola]] ([[AIM alliance]])
| outcome = All [[Macintosh]] models migrated to [[PowerPC]] CPUs
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{{Classic Mac OS sidebar}}
The '''Mac transition to PowerPC processors''' was a major shift in [[Apple Inc.|Apple]]'s [[Macintosh]] line, in which the company replaced the [[Motorola 68000 series]] (68k) [[Complex instruction set computer|CISC]] processors with [[PowerPC]] [[Reduced instruction set computer|RISC]] processors co-developed with [[IBM]] and [[Motorola]] (the [[AIM alliance]]). The transition began in March 1994 with the launch of the [[Power Macintosh]] series and was largely completed by mid-1996, though Apple continued supporting 68k systems in its software until 1998.
== Background ==
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== Transition ==
The first public demonstration of the new Power Macintosh — specifically, a prototype of what would become the [[Power Macintosh 6100]]
The original plan was to release the first Power Macintosh machine on January 24, 1994, exactly ten years after the release of the [[Macintosh 128K|first Macintosh]].{{r|pmbook|p=26}} Ian Diery, who was EVP and general manager of the Personal Computer Division at the time, moved the release date back to March 14 in order to give manufacturing enough time to build enough machines to fill the sales channels and to ensure that the Macintosh Processor Upgrade Card would be available at the same time. This was a departure from prior practice at Apple; they had typically released upgrade packages months after the introduction of new Macintoshes.
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== Aftermath ==
Apple continued selling some 68k-based Macs into 1996 but ended production of new 68k models by mid‑1996 with the discontinuation of the [[PowerBook 190]]. The Mac system software continued supporting 68k through [[Mac OS 8.1]],
The PowerPC transition restored Apple’s performance competitiveness, especially in multimedia and graphics-intensive markets.<ref name="macworld"/> The successful use of emulation and fat binaries influenced two later Apple transitions: [[Mac transition to Intel processors|to Intel x86 in 2006]] and [[Mac transition to Apple silicon|to Apple silicon (ARM) in 2020]].
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