Anyone who's seen <<my blog in the Digital Audio subforum>> will know that aside from forums and socials my main use of my Apple Mac kit is music production, mostly undertaken using my Studio Max with 32GB RAM and 2TB storage. My second-in-command is my 8GB/512GB M1 MBA, which during all of this week I have been using as my main computer while living at my ex wife's while she holidays with our 20 y/o twin sons (I'm pet-sitting).
So this week has seen me undertake a number of tasks on the MBA I would normally have undertaken on the Studio, including mixing and producing a 32-track song in Logic Pro for a client and producing a short tutorial video for my channel. During these tasks I have observed the following:
1 - From a mixing point of view, including the use of various DSP effects such as compressors, delays and reverbs, I have observed virtually no difference in how Logic Pro responds in the less-capable MBA (but boy oh boy have I missed my Qcon mixing desks).
2 - Bouncing the mixed project to a stereo file does take probably twice as long, and I guess this is where the Studio Max's extra CPU cores (32 vs 8 in the MBA) help considerably.
3 - For my tutorial video I had cause to be running Logic Pro, QuickTime (as screen-capture software), plus simultaneously recording my narration through a USB-connected Audio Technica 2020 condenser mic into GarageBand, running in the background. This activity was as smooth and incident-free as it usually is on my Studio, with no discernible difference in how this operation usually feels.
4 - I put the video together in iMovie, which is an app I think most content creators seriously underestimate considering it's possible to run multiple audio lanes and video lanes in it, and I commonly do both. The smoothness of operation while pulling the project together was on-par with my Studio Max: no discernible differences noted.
5 - Rendering-out the video as a 1080 file (4K = overkill for this content) took much longer than my Mac Studio would have taken, again probably because of the extra CPU and GPU cores. Basically the MBA exported the video in just shy of real time, whereas the Studio would have done it in probably a third of the time, or just over, based on my previous experience.
6 - I was working on these tasks for around 8 hours yesterday, and I went to bed with the battery showing 23% from a full charge at the start of the day. Utterly INSANE* battery life.
What I've learned is it's easy to see why many people believe single core performance is one of the key yardsticks that dictates just how fast a computer feels. Until I started rendering the 32-track Logic Project and the iMovie file with multiple channels of video, audio and titles, the experience of using the MBA was barely discernible from the Studio Max.
If I didn't have the Studio Max, I actually have no doubt I could get away with running my home production suite on a 2TB M1 MBA, especially had I opted for 16GB RAM and 10-core GPU.
*(C) Max Tech.
So this week has seen me undertake a number of tasks on the MBA I would normally have undertaken on the Studio, including mixing and producing a 32-track song in Logic Pro for a client and producing a short tutorial video for my channel. During these tasks I have observed the following:
1 - From a mixing point of view, including the use of various DSP effects such as compressors, delays and reverbs, I have observed virtually no difference in how Logic Pro responds in the less-capable MBA (but boy oh boy have I missed my Qcon mixing desks).
2 - Bouncing the mixed project to a stereo file does take probably twice as long, and I guess this is where the Studio Max's extra CPU cores (32 vs 8 in the MBA) help considerably.
3 - For my tutorial video I had cause to be running Logic Pro, QuickTime (as screen-capture software), plus simultaneously recording my narration through a USB-connected Audio Technica 2020 condenser mic into GarageBand, running in the background. This activity was as smooth and incident-free as it usually is on my Studio, with no discernible difference in how this operation usually feels.
4 - I put the video together in iMovie, which is an app I think most content creators seriously underestimate considering it's possible to run multiple audio lanes and video lanes in it, and I commonly do both. The smoothness of operation while pulling the project together was on-par with my Studio Max: no discernible differences noted.
5 - Rendering-out the video as a 1080 file (4K = overkill for this content) took much longer than my Mac Studio would have taken, again probably because of the extra CPU and GPU cores. Basically the MBA exported the video in just shy of real time, whereas the Studio would have done it in probably a third of the time, or just over, based on my previous experience.
6 - I was working on these tasks for around 8 hours yesterday, and I went to bed with the battery showing 23% from a full charge at the start of the day. Utterly INSANE* battery life.
What I've learned is it's easy to see why many people believe single core performance is one of the key yardsticks that dictates just how fast a computer feels. Until I started rendering the 32-track Logic Project and the iMovie file with multiple channels of video, audio and titles, the experience of using the MBA was barely discernible from the Studio Max.
If I didn't have the Studio Max, I actually have no doubt I could get away with running my home production suite on a 2TB M1 MBA, especially had I opted for 16GB RAM and 10-core GPU.
*(C) Max Tech.