
M1 is the first personal computer SoC built using cutting-edge 5-nanometer process technology, combines numerous powerful technologies into a single chip, and features a unified memory architecture for improved performance and efficiency. If nothing else, I suppose there's Pixelmator, or going back to my college days and dropping the chunk of change for Photoshop Elements.Today, millions of Apple developers across the globe are seeking to support Apple’s once-in-a-generation transition to a new family of custom silicon designed specifically for the Mac, starting with the M1 System on Chip (SoC). Don't get me wrong, I've seen some really cool vector stuff, but I don't really want my work to look like the Obama poster or a cel-shaded likeness of a celebrity (which appears to be at least 50% of vector artwork out there) Hence my specification for a raster system.


Not only is the wild world of vector drawing completely foreign, but vector art is just so.slick. There are drawing programs that are supposed to be really good on M1, but they seem to all be vector-based, which I'm not interested in.

And I guess there are programs that could work on M1 via Rosetta 2. I was even told to switch to a PC! The only real alternatives I was offered were GIMP (which would probably be hard to acquire on an M1 MacBook) and Clip Studio Paint (which would also be a downgrade, but is M1 native and better than nothing) I'm also considering Tayasui Sketches. I asked for alternatives, and was told (by the community, not just the dev) that OGL would essentially interfere with any draw/paint programs I might attempt to use. (on further inspection, the dev who told me that seems to have a definite antipathy toward Apple).

Unfortunately, I was asking some questions in the Krita forums and was essentially told that OGL would interfere heavily with Krita. I definitely want to get an M1 with 16GB of RAM, because the idea of intentionally getting something that you know will soon be obsolete is anathema to me. However, after 6 years, 4 lost screws, and who knows how much dog hair in the keys, it's time for me to get a new laptop. Currently, the program I've been using for drawing/painting (which I haven't done much of recently) has been Krita.
