The 16-inch MacBook Pro base model is over two times faster than the previous-generation base model, for seamless playback and faster rendering of ultra-high-definition video. The MacBook Pro also has a larger screen than many of the Windows laptops we.The AMD Radeon Pro 5000M series delivers the most graphics horsepower ever in a MacBook Pro. It’s half the price of Chris’ laptop, at $1,699 and features an 8-core M1, 16GB RAM and a 256GB SSD.If you edit photos or videos or render 3D graphics for a living and you. Coming in at $3,499 (although it’s currently available for $2,999), it’s not an inexpensive machine, by any stretch of the imagination. Jordan’s 24″ M1 iMac, on the other hand, is significantly less expensive. Chris’ PC in this case is the Gigabyte Aero 15 YB, with an 11th Gen Intel i9 CPU, 32GB RAM and NVIDIA RTX 3080 GPU with 8GB RAM.The M1 iMac wasn’t far behind though, at a minute and 4 seconds.What was impressive, and an area where the M1 won by default because it’s not available on the PC, was Final Cut Pro performance. The Intel PC managed it in a very speedy 56 seconds. There were some noticeable performance slowdowns with both systems, but neither really performed any worse than the other.For rendering a 30-second clip containing two 5.9K 24fps 10-bit 4:2:0 files, sampled down to 4K 24fps H.264 was sent to both machines and they were left to render. To put them to the test, though, they threw some 5.9K 24fps, 10-bit 4:2:0 footage from the Panasonic S1H at them with some multitrack picture-in-picture.It’s very exciting to see what will come in the future from Apple, but with ARM-based Windows finally getting x86 64-Bit emulation Windows might be able to catch up on performance per dollar. I still can’t see myself switching over to Apple just yet. Surprisingly, the M1 actually seemed to perform quite well, if you put all the settings sliders down to “Potato”.It was interesting to see a real-world comparison like this.
![]() Render Settings Pro Photo Series Delivers The
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