Good morning everyone,
I am currently considering purchasing the Macbook 2016 m3 model; however, the online reviews have made me concerned that it might not have the power I need to do everything I want to.
Do you feel the Macbook will be able to handle these tasks and last me around 4-5 years?
P.S. I am waiting for Monday to see if anything is announced at Apple’s event, but the reason I am currently leaning towards the Macbook is because a few years ago I had a surgery on my spine and I need something lightweight to carry around with me. The current Macbook Pro (2015) that my brother uses, whilst okay to carry around for a while, is just slightly too taxing on my back to carry around for long periods of the day and having tested the iPad, I much prefer the typical laptop experience.
I am currently considering purchasing the Macbook 2016 m3 model; however, the online reviews have made me concerned that it might not have the power I need to do everything I want to.
- I currently create illustrations in Affinity Designer/ Autodesk Graphic and edit photos in Pixelmator. I usually use around 10-15 layer, texture brushes and layer effects.
- I also edit videos in iMovie, these are around 5-15 minutes long. I use a mix of transitions, titles, audio tracks, colour correction, colour balance and overlay tool (picture in picture, cutaway, etc.).
- I also want this computer to last me around 4-5 years if possible. I am considering the m3 model as this is more in my price range.
Do you feel the Macbook will be able to handle these tasks and last me around 4-5 years?
P.S. I am waiting for Monday to see if anything is announced at Apple’s event, but the reason I am currently leaning towards the Macbook is because a few years ago I had a surgery on my spine and I need something lightweight to carry around with me. The current Macbook Pro (2015) that my brother uses, whilst okay to carry around for a while, is just slightly too taxing on my back to carry around for long periods of the day and having tested the iPad, I much prefer the typical laptop experience.