It makes it much more secure as well. Unix is very secure and much more secure than Windows.I assume it depends what they need it for. STEM is a huge area.
Having just completed a master's in Medical Informatics, my Mac proved much more useful than those with PCs, as having Unix as the underlying O/S made everything much easier.
I believe that with a dedicated GPU some of the machine learning stuff would have been faster, but we were mainly using Tensorflow within R (using reticulate) and I'm not sure that supports GPUs anyway.
Forbes 30 under 30, or being on the cover, has a huge association with fraud / incompetence. I'd prefer that Forbes stayed as far away from any of my work as possible. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/apr/06/forbes-30-under-30-tech-finance-prisonNote that Forbes lets more or less anyone submit articles that get posted to the Forbes site with little to no editorial review.
Forbes ought not to be a name anyone trusts in the first place, and not just because of this policy.
It does bring up a good point it's shocking that AutoCAD and other design software isn't on macOS.
I dunno how you guys got the idea that Autodesk software doesn't run on Macs, or only on Intel Macs. According to Autodesk, AutoCAD works under Rosetta and native Apple Silicon support is coming soon.I teach an industrial design class (the missing A in Americas STEM), where we push the kids boundaries, and even of what’s possible in cad. Some kids bring in their gaming laptops, but a few every semester bring an intel mac. The popular 2015 15 retina is about as old as one can go running Adesk and Solidworks, which require a gig of vram to install. I help out with the i9 2019s, which require a cooling mod & fan base to not start the place on fire, but those are generally the most powerful laptops i see from anyone. But yeah, NuMacs are out.
For the first time, AutoCAD for Mac 2024 and AutoCAD LT for Mac 2024 now run natively on both Intel and Apple Silicon architectures, including M1 and M2 chips in the M-series chips. The support for Apple Silicon can increase overall performance by up to two times compared to 2023.*
If she doesn't already have a laptop I'd pack her off with whatever hand-me-down you have lying around in a cupboard provided it can run Word and an up-to-date Chrome, which is all she's likely to need in the first few weeks (if not the whole course).Back on the topic, my daughter is a senior in HS, and she's considering STEM, I've been expecting to buy a MacBook and I do think that's what we'll be buying but its interesting to see that this may not be the case.
I dunno how you guys got the idea that Autodesk software doesn't run on Macs, or only on Intel Macs. According to Autodesk, AutoCAD works under Rosetta and native Apple Silicon support is coming soon.
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AutoCAD for Mac 2024: New Collaboration Enhancements and Improved Performance With M-Series Chips
Discover the new features and enhancements for AutoCAD for Mac 2024, including support for Apple Silicon architecture.www.autodesk.com
We have about a year to worry about it, and she still needs to pick her college so I'm not terribly worried about what she'll be using, though as I said I'd prefer a Mac for herf she doesn't already have a laptop I'd pack her off with whatever hand-me-down
It does bring up a good point it's shocking that AutoCAD and other design software isn't on macOS.
I ran AutoCAD back in 2016 on my Mac. Did they pull support after that??Wait what? AutoCAD is getting a Mac port?
Well that's news to me. I had no idea since the program hasn't been on Mac for years.
Great in theory, but try to get my daughter to accept a hand-me-down anything is nearly impossible 😋. Although, buying her something used and convincing her it’s a cool vintage sometimes works.If she doesn't already have a laptop I'd pack her off with whatever hand-me-down you have lying around in a cupboard…
Then it's too broad of a brush to just sideline the Mac and you focusing on Engineering so so so hard is just eh to me. Science is a very very big part of STEM and it's the foundation of every subject. Again, I can make a YouTube video about Windows sucks as a perspective of an astronomer but I would't since my philosophy is cross platform and frankly it's petty.STEM is more than just science. For science yeah a Mac will do you great, after all the first images of a black hole were rendered on a 15 inch Macbook Pro
But STEM is more than just science. Engineering is a big part of STEM, and unfortunately, Mac is lacking when it comes to engineers and designers due to software compatibility issues and the lack of GPU acceleration making jobs take a lot longer.
Here's an example: CLO 3D (I know CLO is a clothing designer program when engineers use AutoDesk but this is for an example of the problems with the lack of GPU Acceleration.) On Windows CLO 3D has GPU Acceleration so models and simulations are a lot faster. On Mac there's no GPU Acceleration so fabric simulation is a lot slower than if it was done on an Nvidia workstation, which you can see a real world example of that below here:
The same is true with CAD models, and in engineering time is money. Those designs need to get made and approved as soon as possible so they can get sent to the machinists to actually build.
Because we’re talking about Professional level software. Realtime rendering large multipart parametric 3d solid model assemblies in Inventor Pro, Revit, Solidworks & Catia as well.I dunno how you guys got the idea that Autodesk software doesn't run on Macs, or only on Intel Macs. According to Autodesk, AutoCAD works under Rosetta and native Apple Silicon support is coming soon.
My eldest started at Virginia Tech this week. The recommended laptop specs absolutely do not require a discrete GPU, in fact graphics is the one area he felt he could skimp on.Any Thoughts or comments on the Forbes Article A STEM Degree Requires a Real PC see: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tirias...em-degree-requires-a-real-pc/?sh=50a0923378b8
This article states “While these Apple processors and PCs may be optimized for a wide variety of entertainment, productivity, and design applications, they are not optimized for many STEM applications. As I mentioned previously, it is difficult or sometimes impossible to run some STEM applications on x86-based laptops without a discrete GPU. It is even more of a challenge on a Mac because in my experience, the vast majority of STEM-oriented applications are written on and for x86-based PCs.”
I strongly disagree. A SOC Mac is more than capable and in my experience superior. What a STEM student requires is a laptop that they can write and run Python (and possibly R), write and run MatLab (and possibly Mathematica) and spreadsheet with plotting. What a student does NOT need is to be battling an operating system, fighting with configuration management and constantly worrying about viruses, malware and ransomware. And a battery that last longer than 40 minutes, is really useful too.
Seems like the article’s authors [Falsely] believes student need a gaming machine to do STEM course work.
Any other thoughts?
What is this? The nintendo switch e-shop? How does this require such power that it needs a dedicated gpu?Any Thoughts or comments on the Forbes Article A STEM Degree Requires a Real PC see: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tirias...em-degree-requires-a-real-pc/?sh=50a0923378b8
This article states “While these Apple processors and PCs may be optimized for a wide variety of entertainment, productivity, and design applications, they are not optimized for many STEM applications. As I mentioned previously, it is difficult or sometimes impossible to run some STEM applications on x86-based laptops without a discrete GPU. It is even more of a challenge on a Mac because in my experience, the vast majority of STEM-oriented applications are written on and for x86-based PCs.”
I strongly disagree. A SOC Mac is more than capable and in my experience superior. What a STEM student requires is a laptop that they can write and run Python (and possibly R), write and run MatLab (and possibly Mathematica) and spreadsheet with plotting. What a student does NOT need is to be battling an operating system, fighting with configuration management and constantly worrying about viruses, malware and ransomware. And a battery that last longer than 40 minutes, is really useful too.
Seems like the article’s authors [Falsely] believes student need a gaming machine to do STEM course work.
Any other thoughts?
It has been on there for a while now. I used it a while back on a Mac.Wait what? AutoCAD is getting a Mac port?
Well that's news to me. I had no idea since the program hasn't been on Mac for years.
STEM is a large field and using Python and R are not the only things people do.Any Thoughts or comments on the Forbes Article A STEM Degree Requires a Real PC see: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tirias...em-degree-requires-a-real-pc/?sh=50a0923378b8
This article states “While these Apple processors and PCs may be optimized for a wide variety of entertainment, productivity, and design applications, they are not optimized for many STEM applications. As I mentioned previously, it is difficult or sometimes impossible to run some STEM applications on x86-based laptops without a discrete GPU. It is even more of a challenge on a Mac because in my experience, the vast majority of STEM-oriented applications are written on and for x86-based PCs.”
I strongly disagree. A SOC Mac is more than capable and in my experience superior. What a STEM student requires is a laptop that they can write and run Python (and possibly R), write and run MatLab (and possibly Mathematica) and spreadsheet with plotting. What a student does NOT need is to be battling an operating system, fighting with configuration management and constantly worrying about viruses, malware and ransomware. And a battery that last longer than 40 minutes, is really useful too.
Seems like the article’s authors [Falsely] believes student need a gaming machine to do STEM course work.
Any other thoughts?
Sure. The point is that just saying “STEM“ doesn’t indicate whether you need any specific type or level of computer. Some areas need Windows to run very specific software. Others don’t. Some need GPUs. Others don’t. It’s just handwaving and FUD without the specifics.In a STEM degree you do more than just programming. What about mechanical/PCB/FPGA hardware design?
Funny because my first exposure to AutoCAD was on an Apple II.It does bring up a good point it's shocking that AutoCAD and other design software isn't on macOS.
Time to learn how to deploy Windows S image so she couldn’t do much of anything that’s unrelated to her studywow
Back on the topic, my daughter is a senior in HS, and she's considering STEM, I've been expecting to buy a MacBook and I do think that's what we'll be buying but its interesting to see that this may not be the case.
I prefer Windows machines for a variety of reasons, but I think the MBP would be such a better laptop for her, I hope the PC isn't a requirement for her. Otherwise, I may be getting tech support phone calls from her![]()
She's entering her senior year and no, while she has a short list of schools, there's not one college that grabbed her.I believe she must have made her mind already.![]()
...which is why it is nonsense to make general statements like "You need a computer of type X for STEM" let alone "You must turn up on day #1 of a STEM degree course with a computer type X". Even if "X" is "Windows PC" that doesn't mean its going to be suitable for every specialist application - and if the course requires specialist applications then the school should either provide suitable equipment in labs or make it very clear, up front, what students need to bring.STEM is a large field and using Python and R are not the only things people do.
This isn't about "backwards compatibility" it is all about "x86 compatibility" - usually Windows and sometimes with a side helping of CUDA. The only thing Apple could do to "fix" that is to throw away all of the advantages of Apple Silicon and go back to making PC clones with nicer trackpads - for a small and shrinking niche of users who (a) need to run x86 software but (b) don't need specific hardware, such as GPUs.Apple's disregard for backwards compatibility is harming it in this case, and they don't seem interested in fixing it because it doesn't make them money