I'm curious why there is such a big jump (US$1000) from the 48-core GPU M1 Ultra to the 64-core version?
On the M1 Max a 24 to 32 core GPU upgrade costs $200, so you would think that the Ultra upgrade would be twice this ($400) given the fact it is essentially two M1 Maxes.
AFAIK, everything else on the 48-core and 64-core M1 Ultra versions is the same (memory, neural engine, CPU cores), so you are just paying for the GPU core upgrade.
What am I missing?
The $2000 jump from the M1 Max to M1 Ultra also seems hard to justify. It implies the upgrade cost of the SoC is the same as the entire base M1 Max version - i.e. the entire cost of the computer is the M1 Max SoC, so having "two of them" doubles the price of the machine. This is clearly ridiculous - I would be surprised if the M1 Max SoC was much more than half the cost of the whole base-level machine.
The M1 Ultra doesn't appear to be great bang-for-buck - it isn't "twice as powerful" as the M1 Max, but looks like it costs about 3 times as much (if we assume $1000 for the M1 Max SoC). I understand that the laws of diminishing returns apply here, but the pricing looks a bit off to me.
Could the M1 Ultra really have much higher fabrication costs than two M1 Maxes?
I suppose that if you really need this performance, you will pay the price, but it appears to be poor value.
On the M1 Max a 24 to 32 core GPU upgrade costs $200, so you would think that the Ultra upgrade would be twice this ($400) given the fact it is essentially two M1 Maxes.
AFAIK, everything else on the 48-core and 64-core M1 Ultra versions is the same (memory, neural engine, CPU cores), so you are just paying for the GPU core upgrade.
What am I missing?
The $2000 jump from the M1 Max to M1 Ultra also seems hard to justify. It implies the upgrade cost of the SoC is the same as the entire base M1 Max version - i.e. the entire cost of the computer is the M1 Max SoC, so having "two of them" doubles the price of the machine. This is clearly ridiculous - I would be surprised if the M1 Max SoC was much more than half the cost of the whole base-level machine.
The M1 Ultra doesn't appear to be great bang-for-buck - it isn't "twice as powerful" as the M1 Max, but looks like it costs about 3 times as much (if we assume $1000 for the M1 Max SoC). I understand that the laws of diminishing returns apply here, but the pricing looks a bit off to me.
Could the M1 Ultra really have much higher fabrication costs than two M1 Maxes?
I suppose that if you really need this performance, you will pay the price, but it appears to be poor value.