However, once I got my MacBook Pro, I realised most of the iPhone and iPad apps I’d want to run on my laptop weren’t available as the developers had chosen not to have them available. I personally thought with the opt-out approach, most iPhone-specific apps would be available on the App Store. So Apple decided that developers needed only to opt out of having their iPad and iPhone Apps available on the Mac App Store. With the M1 Chip, all Apple devices now shared a similar architecture. Not much work was required on the side of the developer to make iPad/iPhone apps ready for the Mac. Now with all Macs that have Apple’s Silicon, in the App Store you have the option to install Mac-specific apps, or choose other iPad/iPhone apps. When the M1 Macs launched, apart from being excited about how powerful they were while offering great battery life, I was also excited that finally one could run iPad and iPhone apps on their laptops.
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