Hi,
I'm planning on buying a new Apple notebook (MacBook Air M1 or M2), but I'm in doubt about the specs because I have no experience with the Apple silicon.
I'm absolutely no power user. I don't edit video's, I'm happy with editing photo's directly on my phone, I'm no software developer, ... I'm just an ordinary guy browsing websites, fora, watching video's on YouTube/Netflix and checking my mail. The only programs that are always open are Safari, Mail, Notes and Calendar.
I'm currently typing this (or should I say: punching on every key) on my 2015 12" MacBook with the 1,2 GHz Dual-Core processor and 8GB of RAM. As most of you will know, this is an awesome and awful machine at the same time .
It does paint a clear picture about my low demands for a notebook. The processor is really (really really) slow, but I never got in trouble with the 8GB of RAM. I'm mostly using up to 6GB with a memory pressure below 45%. The highest I can remember is 7GB with 1,5GB swap and a memory pressure of 65%.
However, I don't know how this translates to the new chips. Can I just assume that the M1 or M2 processor will handle RAM exactly the same way, and therefore it's enough to choose 8GB again?
I also know there's a lot of talk about 'future proofing' your purchase. However, I haven't seen or heard any evidence that programs indeed asks more and more RAM as time progress. Back in 2015 people were already telling a lot of doom scenario's about 8GB. Yet here I am, 8 years later, and I don't notice a thing about more demanding applications or OS.
So, what's the deal behind everybody thinking that you need to future proof your device? Is this just based on gut feeling or is there some evidence behind it?
I'm planning on buying a new Apple notebook (MacBook Air M1 or M2), but I'm in doubt about the specs because I have no experience with the Apple silicon.
I'm absolutely no power user. I don't edit video's, I'm happy with editing photo's directly on my phone, I'm no software developer, ... I'm just an ordinary guy browsing websites, fora, watching video's on YouTube/Netflix and checking my mail. The only programs that are always open are Safari, Mail, Notes and Calendar.
I'm currently typing this (or should I say: punching on every key) on my 2015 12" MacBook with the 1,2 GHz Dual-Core processor and 8GB of RAM. As most of you will know, this is an awesome and awful machine at the same time .
It does paint a clear picture about my low demands for a notebook. The processor is really (really really) slow, but I never got in trouble with the 8GB of RAM. I'm mostly using up to 6GB with a memory pressure below 45%. The highest I can remember is 7GB with 1,5GB swap and a memory pressure of 65%.
However, I don't know how this translates to the new chips. Can I just assume that the M1 or M2 processor will handle RAM exactly the same way, and therefore it's enough to choose 8GB again?
I also know there's a lot of talk about 'future proofing' your purchase. However, I haven't seen or heard any evidence that programs indeed asks more and more RAM as time progress. Back in 2015 people were already telling a lot of doom scenario's about 8GB. Yet here I am, 8 years later, and I don't notice a thing about more demanding applications or OS.
So, what's the deal behind everybody thinking that you need to future proof your device? Is this just based on gut feeling or is there some evidence behind it?