This question is trivially answered by visiting Apple's website, which is---to my point---not generally true for their competition. If you have some further point to make, I recommend stating it more clearly so we can avoid wasting time here.
Why is the "Ultra" more powerful than the "Max"? I would expect "Max" to mean "maximum" in this context but it seems to mean "directly subordinate to that which is the maximum". This is pretty obviously a point of confusion. Just because other CPU manufacturers do goofy stuff with naming doesn't mean that Apple is exempt from criticism for doing something so obviously bereft of common sense.
Well then, it's a good thing I didn't say anywhere that they should be exempt from criticism. Incidentally, it's not something I believe. But I do think they are still doing a much better job at naming than other CPU manufacturers, despite the obnoxious Pro/Max/Ultra stuff.
I suppose I commented here because I think people are letting their subjective distaste for those terms sway their opinion of a superior naming scheme.
Why would you expect that? Also, the M4 is faster than the M3, but that doesn't mean Apple couldn't or didn't want to fuse two of them together for an M4 Ultra.
Is an Intel 10700K faster than a 12400F? The generations are different but the chips have vastly different capabilities and features.
M4 is the generation. The modifier modifies the generation. M4 Pro is an M4 with some extra pizzaz. M4 Max is an M4 with lots of extra pizzaz.
> This question is trivially answered by visiting Apple's website, which is---to my point---not generally true for their competition.
wtf are you talking about? Intel, Nvidia, and AMD all absolutely have complete specs for their products readily available on their respective websites. Much, much more complete ones than Apple does as well.
I guarantee you that a quick scan of any of those companies' websites will not equip one with a useful general understanding of the naming scheme they use for their products, in the sense that one can see a product name and immediately know where it falls in their lineup and what workloads it's meant to handle. That is what "the fuck" I am talking about.
Intel desktop options are quite simple. My only complaint is on laptops, where the i3, i5, i7 thing conflicts with U vs H, and almost seems intentionally misleading. Like, why does i7-U even exist?
But the nice thing is you search the model name, and Intel gives you all the specs upfront.
I like how the table of suffixes hasn't been updated to add "V" but the section on Core Ultra uses 288V as an example. The document's too big to stay in sync with itself.