![]() The M1 Ultra is literally twice as powerful as the M1 Max, but not all apps are able to turn that additional hardware into real-world performance. In other words: any performance difference you see (or don't see) below is the result of $3,000 worth of relevant upgrades. In reality, the extra 2TB of storage included in the M1 Ultra version of the Mac Studio that Apple sent over costs an additional $600, bringing the total price of this loaner to $6,800, but as far as we can tell there is no performance difference between the storage included in our 2TB M1 Max Mac Studio vs the 4TB M1 Ultra Mac Studio. The two machines we have in the office come with different amounts of storage (2TB on the M1 Max and 4TB on the M1 Ultra), but if we control for storage, these are the specs and price points of the computers that we'll be testing: Today, we're essentially comparing the fully loaded M1 Max version of the Mac Studio against the fully loaded M1 Ultra version. It is, quite literally, twice as powerful as our M1 Max Mac Studio in every single way, and we ran both of these computers through all of the same benchmarks to see just how much of an impact all that hardware can really have on your photo and video editing workflow. Shortly after we published our Mac Studio review using a configuration with M1 Max, Apple made good on their promise and sent us another unit with M1 Ultra inside. This is all amazing in theory-truly an engineering marvel, no matter how much you resent Apple for locking it inside a box with no upgradable components-but how does the M1 Ultra actually compare to the M1 Max in real-world photo and video-editing tasks? Are any of the apps currently used by most creatives actually going to benefit from all this power, or are you better off saving the $3,000 it costs to upgrade to Apple's most powerful Mac Studio configuration? The M1 Ultra is essentially two M1 Max chips stacked end to end. The M1 Ultra is essentially two M1 Max chips fused together using a new "ultra-fusion" interconnect technology.Īnd since the ultra-fusion interconnect presents these two M1 Max chips as a single, unified SOC in software, there's good reason to hope that the M1 Ultra can actually offer twice the performance in apps that need, and are optimized to use, all of these resources. That's up to 20 CPU cores (16 performance, four efficiency), 64 GPU cores, 32 neural engine cores, four video encoding engines, four ProRes encode and decode engines, and up to 128GB of LPDDR5 unified memory with 800GB/s of memory bandwidth. The M1 Ultra is essentially two M1 Max chips fused together using a new "ultra-fusion" interconnect technology, delivering twice the CPU cores, twice the GPU cores, twice the Neural Engine cores, twice the dedicated media engines, and twice the RAM with twice the bandwidth. ![]() It was also exciting because it came hand-in-hand with the release of the M1 Ultra: the most powerful Apple Silicon system on a chip (SOC) yet. The release of Apple's new Mac Studio wasn't just exciting because of the form factor, or the fact that creatives have been asking Apple for a mid-range desktop tower for years. These two Mac Studio computers look identical from the outside, but one of them has twice the CPU cores, twice the GPU cores, and twice the RAM. ![]()
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