i'm now using an imac with 48GB ram
I myself am professionally engaged in photography. From my experience I can say that 36GB of memory will be very, very little, especially for deep retouching in Photoshop. Choose a configuration with 36GB and a spacious disk.Going to buy the Macbook Pro M3 pro 2TB 18GB or 36GB
I'm a fulltime photographer, mostly using Lightroom and Photoshop, sometimes also editing 4K video in FCP
So, do I need 18GB or 36GB, I have no idea, i'm now using an imac with 48GB ram
I've been probably overtaxing my M1 Air with 8GB of RAM and a 256 GB SSD for some time -- basically using it for a lot more graphic design work than I thought I would when I got it. Multiple GB of VM swap space used much of the time, on the smallest SSD you can get. I used DriveDx the other day to check the wear levels compared to my M1 iMac (16 GB RAM / 1TB SSD) which sees much of the same use. The wear levels were pretty similar, honestly. A decent sized SSD will handle the paging better, and frankly I just don't think it's the end of the world from what I can tell.For photography, probably not. For video editing, the general rule of thumb is: the more RAM the better.
If you have a complicated project and it needs a lot of RAM, Silicon Mac will use SWAP instead (which is basically trying to use the internal storage like not-quite-as-fast RAM). It is debatable if using it in this way will wear it out sooner than life of device. Fans will argue that it will be fine but all objective material will generally discourage writing too frequently to SSDs. You may be fine using SWAP or you may not- only time will tell. Nobody here knows for sure either.
MacOS will ALWAYS try and use all the available RAM.What kind of RAM utilization do you see with your workflow?
I've been probably overtaxing my M1 Air with 8GB of RAM and a 256 GB SSD for some time -- basically using it for a lot more graphic design work than I thought I would when I got it. Multiple GB of VM swap space used much of the time, on the smallest SSD you can get. I used DriveDx the other day to check the wear levels compared to my M1 iMac (16 GB RAM / 1TB SSD) which sees much of the same use. The wear levels were pretty similar, honestly. A decent sized SSD will handle the paging better, and frankly I just don't think it's the end of the world from what I can tell.
That is just an ignorant post. The only point is it will drive apples revenue.Since you cannot add more ram later, get as much as you can afford
That is just an ignorant post. The only point is it will drive apples revenue.
Since OP doesn’t reply what activity monitor says in iMac it doesn’t make sense to answer in that way.
Be careful with this suggestion. I was doing basic 1080p video editing years ago and people suggested that. 128GB of RAM did not make it any better than my 8GB of RAM 2010 Mac Pro. I have now dipped into 4k video editing so I need more RAM obviously.For photography, probably not. For video editing, the general rule of thumb is: the more RAM the better.
I always (mis) quote Dorothy Parker, who said " you can never be too rich or too thin"Going to buy the Macbook Pro M3 pro 2TB 18GB or 36GB
I'm a fulltime photographer, mostly using Lightroom and Photoshop, sometimes also editing 4K video in FCP
So, do I need 18GB or 36GB, I have no idea, i'm now using an imac with 48GB ram
Between 18Gb and you recommending to buy as much as OP can afford (128GB) is a whole different story.It does if they want to keep their computer longer than a couple year
Ram needs will grow and constant swapping could wear down their drive faster
18 gb of ram is already a small amount. It’s just ignorant to assume it’s enough for video editing even now, let alone in a few years
Between 18Gb and you recommending to buy as much as OP can afford (128GB) is a whole different story.
If you're talking about Fusion Drives, they are really a special case and the SSDs get absolutely murdered with wear because data is constantly being shuttled between the SSD and the HDD as it gets actively used. This happened to my own iMac 5K a few years ago. It didn't help that Apple used absurdly small SSDs -- as little as 32GB if I recall. Here's a pretty deep dive into it:Yes, but in my experience, some of these gauges will report all is fine until it isn't. There are many posts one can find on this website- particularly in reference to Apple's hybrid drives- in which an owner shares that select disk tools showed all is fine and then suddenly it was no longer fine and they are looking for ways to recover potentially lost data.
Going to buy the Macbook Pro M3 pro 2TB 18GB or 36GB
I'm a fulltime photographer, mostly using Lightroom and Photoshop, sometimes also editing 4K video in FCP
So, do I need 18GB or 36GB, I have no idea, i'm now using an imac with 48GB ram
AND you're using swap! So even if it is working ok, its slowly but surely wearing out your SSD. Thanks for the info.I just received the $1,999 stock build of the M3 Pro, MBP 14 inch with 18GB of RAM.
Here is my memory pressure while using the "Develop" module of Lightroom Classic with other basic applications open:
Safari, messages, notes, music.
View attachment 2320266
As soon as you exit the Develop module and go back to Library within LR Classic, the memory pressure goes back to green.
I do not think 18GB is enough if you plan to be in LR and a video editing software like FCP at the same time.