
Microsoft appears to be using that for Teams, which could explain why the app is now twice the size as before. This way the app can run on Intel-based Macs, and Apple Silicon devices. That can use up a good chunk of the storage, especially on MacBooks with a low drive capacity.Īpple allows developers a way to include both Intel and ARM64 versions of the code in the same package, via universal binaries. The new version takes up more than twice of that, at about 537.2MB. The old version of Microsoft Teams only took up about 265.6MB of space to install. There is one other thing that is worth mentioning. It does not change the visual elements or the options in any way. You can install the app over your existing version, it should upgrade the installation. Head to the defconfig page, and look for the OSX version under the "Latest Preview Build" section. The download links are available at the Microsoft Teams' GitHub project. While that is not exactly terrible, having Electron as an extra layer would still have an impact in the performance and the battery life as opposed to an app written in Swift or Xcode.


The Teams app for Apple Silicon is still based on Electron, so it's not completely a native macOS app. That being said, there is one thing which seems odd in the new version. Microsoft says that it is committed to Mac, so things appear to be promising. But now, it appears that Teams is finally on the mend. Given its deployment amongst schools, offices, businesses, especially during the pandemic, you would have thought the Redmond company should have allocated more resources to it to improve the experience. Teams users have had a semi-unstable experience with the app, it has often been criticized for being a resource hog, how slow it is to start, quit, it was almost as bad as a browser. Most other developers ported their app to support the ARM64 architecture way earlier. It's a little surprising this took so long, given that Apple Silicon machines debuted nearly two years ago. Microsoft Teams for Mac is now optimized for Apple Silicon


The popular video conferencing and meetings app now supports devices that are powered by Apple's own chipsets, such as the MacBook Air M1. Microsoft Teams for Mac has finally been optimized for Apple Silicon.
