A6 chip: More Apple, less ARM

Apple's chip investments may have borne native fruit with the A6. The iPhone 5's A6 may be more of an Apple creation than previous A series chips, according to an updated post by review site Anandtech. Like Qualcomm, Apple is incorporating more of its in-house expertise into chips.And that means it's getting further away from pure ARM designs. For example, the latest design from U.K.-based ARM is the Cortex A15, which Texas Instruments is using in future chips. But Apple isn't going that route, according to Anandtech.And that means that past Apple buyouts of chip design houses PA Semi and Intrinsity are bearing fruit. Related stories2009 PC shipments inch into positive territoryMicrosoft brings kids developer tool to the PC Anandtech initially believed the A6 used the Cortex-A15 design.But in a post on Saturday, Anandtech said that's not the case."Based on a lot of digging over the past couple of days, and conversations with the right people, I've confirmed that Apple's A6 [chip] is based on Apple's own ARM based CPU core and not the Cortex A15," wrote Anand Shimpi. And this probably isn't good news for Intel.If Apple is able to make increasingly powerful A series processors, they could theoretically be used for a MacBook Air-style product.But only time will tell.Intel's next chip, codenamed "Haswell," will be its most power-efficient mainstream chip to date and also well suited for future MacBooks.

37 years later, world's first Apple reseller to close its doors

Flashback to the late 1970s, when Apple was but a pup and graphics were barely graphical.AppleAlthough Apple has a group of stores all its own, the company has a chain of resellers that are also authorized to sell and fix its products. And now, its oldest reseller is shuttering its doors.FirstTech, a company once known as Team Electronics, will close its doors next week, the company confirmed to TwinCities.com.• See also: Selling the Apple II: Three true stories After nearly 37 years selling Apple's products as an authorized reseller, the company has decided that it can't keep profits high enough to justify keeping its doors open. The main culprit, the company said, has been major box stores that are selling products below cost -- something the small FirstTech can't do.The news that the world's oldest Apple authorized reseller is closing its doors surely says something about the state of the retail environment for electronics -- those big box stores aren't exactly having it easy these days, either, what with the easy appeal of online sales.It seems quite possible, then, that more resellers might close their doors as time goes on.(Via 9to5Mac)