The website of a French company called Macbidouille recently published a rumor in which we read “Apple is testing different types of Macs with ARM architecture” and in which its magic crack pad is combined with a physical keyboard. According to the company, a new version of OS X has been adapted to this processor architecture for this purpose.

According to Macbidouille news sources, Apple is building three devices with this new configuration: the Imec, the Mac Mini, as well as the 13-inch MacBook and possibly the MacBook Air. Both the Imec and the MacBook will have quad-core and 8-core processors with the arm64 architecture, and the Mac mini will only use the quad-core processor in this series.

The systems have reportedly been developed enough to be made public soon, but Apple fears a sudden migration from Intel processors to ARM because it could damage all Mac products. As a result, it has decided to conduct the operation covertly for the time being.

Of course, this issue and the sudden changes have already happened at Apple. In 2005, the company announced a change in the processor of new Macs and changed their architecture from PowerPC to Intel x86 chipsets.

Apple has been building its ARM (A4-A7 line) processors for IDEs since the launch of the first generation iPad. Now it looks like the company has finally decided to treat its other products by turning the Mac into an ARM platform.