My uncle works at Apple. I’ll let him know.Not seen someone mention M2 Pro for a while, so I'm just reminding everyone that I REALLY want an M2 Pro mini.
My uncle works at Apple. I’ll let him know.Not seen someone mention M2 Pro for a while, so I'm just reminding everyone that I REALLY want an M2 Pro mini.
To be fair: The global situation with Covid, interrupted supply chains etc. is definitely challenging and was not predictable.Exactly.
I remember when the excuse was "Apple is stuck waiting for Intel..."
Now what's the excuse?
🤣
Supply chains being turned into sludge by Covid and waiting for a more impressive base Mx chip (it seems the M2 wasn't quite up to what Apple wanted) come to mind.Exactly.
I remember when the excuse was "Apple is stuck waiting for Intel..."
Now what's the excuse?
🤣
To be fair, in the existing Mac mini case, an M2 would not have heat/power consumption related battery life issues and actually has better single core performance, slightly better multi core, and notably improved graphics due to a couple extra cores along with Pro-Res encode support in hardware.Supply chains being turned into sludge by Covid and waiting for a more impressive base Mx chip (it seems the M2 wasn't quite up to what Apple wanted) come to mind.
Interesting. Because of the sharp fall in the US dollar in the last couple of days, the Canadian dollar is now worth more in USD today than it was on Nov. 10, 2020, the day M1 made its debut two years ago.Aside from the likely (high) European price due to weak FX rates and relative lack of ports there's a lot going for it.
notably improved graphics due to a couple extra cores along with Pro-Res encode support in hardware.
The drop in the US dollar only matters if it is long term. Looking at the Canadian dollar over the last year it had been up and down in the 1.26 to 1.30 until Sept 2022 when it started to go up substantially. People are already predicting a resurgence of COVID which would cause major disruptions.Interesting. Because of the sharp fall in the US dollar in the last couple of days, the Canadian dollar is now worth more in USD today than it was on Nov. 10, 2020, the day M1 made its debut two years ago.
This bodes well for pricing remaining the same in Canada come spring, and maybe pricing in Europe won’t be quite as bad as it could have been if this keeps up.
Whatever Apple are planning they'll be pricing all these factors into the exchange rate they decide at the time of release of any new products over the expected lifetime of that refresh. Already they'll be aware that refurbished products currently cost less because they were released at pre-crisis prices (when the only crisis was COVID with a side order of component shortages due to COVID).The drop in the US dollar only matters if it is long term. Looking at the Canadian dollar over the last year it had been up and down in the 1.26 to 1.30 until Sept 2022 when it started to go up substantially. People are already predicting a resurgence of COVID which would cause major disruptions.
Will need to see more benchmarks for specific workflows really. We can't really say for any specific person's needs whether or not M2 is a better deal for them than M1.Don't forget the 50% improvement in memory bandwidth as that helps a ton with the GPU.
Any time between next year and never. None of the rumours seem particularly compelling, and it's a long way from "Apple is working on" to "Apple is about to release".So, what are people's best guesses as to when the new Mac mini might actually come out?
I'm actually of the opinion that if you need more ports than a Mini and don't already have a Thunderbolt dock then the Mac Studio remains the better deal.So, I've been watching used Mac Studio sales. One base model here in Canada just went for CA$1900. That doesn't seem bad considering they all still have some Apple warranty, and CA$1900 + shipping is only ~US$1450. However, looking at it another way, Apple Canada sells the base model on their edu store for CA$2249, which is only ~US$1695. IOW the discount from new edu to used pricing was only 14%. (Mac Studio is US$1799 edu in the US so edu pricing in Canada is also cheaper than edu pricing in the US.)
BTW, USB4/Thunderbolt 4 hubs finally can add actual Thunderbolt ports and are mostly in the CA$210-285 (US$160-215) range. These hubs take one Thunderbolt 4 port and convert that into 3 Thunderbolt 4 ports plus one USB-A port. Prior to Thunderbolt 4, most of the hubs converted 1 Thunderbolt 3 to 1 Thunderbolt 3 plus a bunch of USB-A ports.
It's looking more and more like I'm going to get a 24 GB M2 Mac mini (edu), probably with 512 GB storage, plus Thunderbolt 4 hub, unless I can get a good deal on a used Mac Studio, and assuming the M2 Pro Mac mini doesn't exist. Unless Apple Canada raises prices, that M2/24/512 SKU might go for CA$1529 / US$1150 edu.
Any time between next year and never. None of the rumours seem particularly compelling, and it's a long way from "Apple is working on" to "Apple is about to release".
Apple are still selling 2018 Intel Minis.
Before that, the Mini went 2014-2018 without an update.
It's never been Apple's top priority. The original M1 Mini was probably needed as a developer machine for the Apple Silicon transition (the A12 DTK being landfill as soon as the M1 processor was released). This thread is 746 pages long for a reason.
It depends on need and local pricing of course, but if my pricing scheme holds true, that means a Mac mini M2/24/512 + TB4 hub would be CA$1739 edu (US$1306) whereas Mac Studio would be $2249 edu (US$1689). One way of looking at it is that it’s only a US$383 difference but another way of looking at it is that it’s a 29% price difference.I'm actually of the opinion that if you need more ports than a Mini and don't already have a Thunderbolt dock then the Mac Studio remains the better deal.
Periodically you can pick up a refurbished Mac Studio base model for £1799 in the UK which for me makes it look the better deal against current M1 refurbs if you need more ports and more than 16Gb RAM.
Given the mini is an entry level/transition Mac you wouldn't (or shouldn't) expect anything resembling a regular update schedule.Any time between next year and never. None of the rumours seem particularly compelling, and it's a long way from "Apple is working on" to "Apple is about to release".
Apple are still selling 2018 Intel Minis.
Before that, the Mini went 2014-2018 without an update.
Because the high end products like the Mac Pro have such a regular update schedule.Given the mini is an entry level/transition Mac you wouldn't (or shouldn't) expect anything resembling a regular update schedule.
Interestingly if you go by Machine model (Macmini x; Macpro x,) both the Mini and the Mac Pro had a very aggressive update schedule until 2013/2014:Because the high end products like the Mac Pro have such a regular update schedule.
Maybe they should just put an M2 Pro chip in a mini and be done with it....I've not read all 750 posts on this topic so forgive me if this has already been said.
It's crossed my mind a few times. Given the M2 isn't exactly mind blowing when placed against an M1, and given the age of the M1 Mac Mini, do you think Apple will simply Skip M2 and go straight to M3 for the Mini?
If they put M2 in a new Mini next year then it's going to seem out of date VERY quickly isn't it when M3 arrives?
IMHO, there is basically no chance chance the next Mac mini will be M3. In fact, I don't expect M3 until 2024.I've not read all 750 posts on this topic so forgive me if this has already been said.
It's crossed my mind a few times. Given the M2 isn't exactly mind blowing when placed against an M1, and given the age of the M1 Mac Mini, do you think Apple will simply Skip M2 and go straight to M3 for the Mini?
No. It's not as if you're buying a slow Intel machine now, and then 8 months later an Apple Silicon Mac comes out that's 3X as fast and is fanless.If they put M2 in a new Mini next year then it's going to seem out of date VERY quickly isn't it when M3 arrives?
Yes please. Let's get it done.Maybe they should just put an M2 Pro chip in a mini and be done with it....
And don't forget the extra 2 GPU cores for people who want that kind of performance - in video timeline rendering. Depending on the eventual price in Europe, an M2 mini would have all of that plus 2 more years support over an M1 mini.IMHO, there is basically no chance chance the next Mac mini will be M3. In fact, I don't expect M3 until 2024.
And yes, M2 is only an incremental improvement over M1, but what do you expect? And for some of us the "incremental" improvement is actually kinda of a big deal. For me it's the option to get 24 GB RAM, and for others it's the hardware ProRes acceleration. For some video editor types, M2 can be almost twice as fast as M1 in some workloads.
The thought actually comes to mind that the M3 is the CPU that's been broadly linked to a move to the 3NM architecture which is meant to be a leap ahead for power consumption and battery life in laptops.It's crossed my mind a few times. Given the M2 isn't exactly mind blowing when placed against an M1, and given the age of the M1 Mac Mini, do you think Apple will simply Skip M2 and go straight to M3 for the Mini?
If they put M2 in a new Mini next year then it's going to seem out of date VERY quickly isn't it when M3 arrives?
I'm starting to feel the same way.So, what are people's best guesses as to when the new Mac mini might actually come out? Are there particularly windows in the spring that Apple favours for new hardware releases? I'm hoping it will be March, as I can wait that long, though if it ends up being May or later I'll probably be wishing I'd bitten the bullet now on an M1...