Leaked debug kit suggests Apple is testing a new βiMac Pro,β among many other Macs
Apple doesnβt like to talk about its upcoming products before itβs ready, but sometimes the companyβs software does the talking for it. So far this week weβve had a couple of software-related leaks that have outed products Apple is currently testingβone a pre-release build of iOS 26, and the other some leaked files from a kernel debug kit (both via MacRumors).
Most of the new devices referenced in these leaks are straightforward updates to products that already exist: a new Apple TV, a HomePod mini 2, new AirTags and AirPods, an M4 iPad Air, a 12th-generation iPad to replace the current A16 version, next-generation iPhones (including the 17e, 18, and the rumored foldable model), a new Studio Display model, some new smart home products weβve already heard about elsewhere, and M5 updates for the MacBook Air, Mac mini, Mac Studio, and the other MacBook Pros. Thereβs also yet another reference to the lower-cost MacBook that Apple is apparently planning to replace the M1 MacBook Air it still sells via Walmart for $599.
For power users, though, the most interesting revelation might be that Apple is working on a higher-end Apple Silicon iMac powered by an M5 Max chip. The kernel debug kit references an iMac with the internal identifier J833c, based on a platform identified as H17Cβand H17C is apparently based on the M5 Max, rather than a lower-end M5 chip. (For those who donβt have Appleβs branding memorized, βMaxβ is associated with Appleβs second-fastest chips; the M5 Max would be faster than the M5 or M5 Pro, but slower than the rumored M5 Ultra.)


Β© Samuel Axon