Hi, I'm a photographer and I am in need for a new Mac.
I would like to have your opinion before I choose my next model, I have doubts about the range of some models, don't know what to choose.
Apple has the art to lead you from one model to the next one, always by adding or not adding options on certain models.
I use following software the most:
- Lightroom
- Photoshop
- Topaz Photo AI
- Indesign
- sometimes Illustrator, After Effects, Premiere Pro, Media Encoder
- Apple music (app), is always open, I mention this because this app uses a lot of memory
Here is my current setup:
- Macbook Pro 2019, intel core i9, 32GB RAM, 4TB SSD
- connected to a Studio display.
It's still a fast and very good computer, only the 32GB RAM is not enough.
Especially when I use Photo AI, for more than 10 images in batch, wowww it can take about an hour for denoising and sharpening a batch of 10-15 photos)
I also see when I'm using Lightroom for a long time, my mac starts to slow down.
Photoshop with more than 5-6 layers starts to struggle too (when LR is open too).
As you can imagine, my workflow is under pressure, when more than 1 app is open, which is always the case as a photographer.
I have to be careful about my budget. I can't Afford a macbook pro M3 boosted with 64Gb and 4TB SSD. I configured on the apple site what I would need and I get a price around the 6500€.
I tried out several Mac Mini models and Mac Studio models.
Very soon both models will bring their M3 versions on the market. (I hope so)
The 2 options I'm considering are:
- Mac mini M3 pro, 32 GB RAM, 1 TB SD, external NVMe 4TB SSD
- Mac Studio M3 max, 64 GB RAM, 1 TB SD, external NVMe 4TB SSD
Till now, the mac mini doesn't offer 64GB RAM, the studio does.
This is what I mean, apple won't add the option to the mac mini, so it leads you to a more expensive model.
Even though, it's Intel, the 2019 MacBook Pros (the 15-inch and 16-inch both had the same CPU options, so, in lieu of you clarifying which one you have, I'm going to treat them as being more or less the same machine when it comes to speaking to the machine you currently have.
Also, I'm guessing you are firm about your upgrade being based on the M3 Family. If not, and if Apple Certified Refurbished Macs are sold by Apple in your country, I might consider an M1 Max or M2 Max based 16-inch MacBook Pro (I generally wouldn't recommend 14-inch Mx Max MacBook Pros because the 16-inch will always provide better heat dissipation and cooling [not to mention battery life], but that's way more of a firm recommendation-against on M1 Max 14-inch MacBook Pros specifically).
Otherwise, as others have said, if 32GB of RAM isn't doing it on your current Mac (and is [as it sounds like] the main limitation prompting you to consider upgrading), then you definitely should not get the Mac mini (which tops at 32GB on an M2 Pro and, assuming they upgrade the Mac mini line in exactly the same fashion with M3 and M3 Pro, that'll still only give you a ceiling of 36GB).
The other thing to consider about the M2 Pro Mac mini and the M2 Max Mac Studio, at least as those models are with the M2 family, is that the higher-end variant of M2 Pro configured to match all other possible specs of the base model M2 Max Mac Studio (e.g. RAM to 32GB, SSD to 512GB, 10 Gb Ethernet) is actually $100 more. The only reason to consider that kind of machine at that point is if you prefer the Mac mini's form factor. There is SOME merit to that, given that the Mac Studio form factor will cake up dust like it's no one's business (but regularly dust your Mac Studio and that becomes a non-issue.
Here is my main question. Knowing that I can't compare how RAM works on 'Intel based chips' and the more recent 'Silicon M chips'.
I saw several youtube videos explaining that it doesn't work the same way.
What many of the videos and especially the Apple fanbase are ignoring is that while the RAM is very different on an Apple Silicon Mac, those differences have nothing to do with the effect of RAM CAPACITY. RAM is still RAM. What's different is that data doesn't have to travel between RAM and every other component of your computer on an Apple Silicon Mac when compared to PowerPC and Intel Macs as well as Intel and AMD PCs. All of the places that the data stored in RAM would want to go to are already on the chip and have just as easy of access as the CPU. So, data transfer rates between RAM and other components are where RAM on Apple Silicon is night and day different to RAM on any x86 machine (whether Apple or not, whether Intel or AMD).
But, 32GB of RAM will still only be able to accomodate 32GB of data (give or take whatever macOS's memory compression technology is able to compress [though that technology isn't exclusive to Apple Silicon Macs; that's been around on macOS for several years now). So, if you're struggling with 32GB of RAM on an Intel Mac because you are literally running out of RAM, you will do so on an Apple Silicon Mac with 32GB of RAM as well.
Would a mac mini with 32GB RAM be enough for my type of workflow, or is it recommended to go to a mac studio with 64GB RAM.
You can't upgrade the RAM on any Apple Silicon Mac. So, I'd buy as much RAM as you can reasonably afford. Something to keep in mind; while it's probably overkill today, you can bump any M2 Max based Mac to 96GB of RAM.
Also knowing that in the first 5-6 years, I won't look for a new model.
We'll have to see how Apple Silicon Macs age. Apple did a fantastic job of allowing 2012 Macs to get 8 years of running the latest OS and then two thereafter of security update support. They're now clearly getting more aggressive in only supporting Macs that are up to 5 years old, though, that could just be the push to finally ditch Intel Mac support.
It'll be very interesting to see how much longer base M1 Macs are supported for, following the discontinuation of all Intel Mac support. I just hope Rosetta 2 sticks around well after that point.