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Each can be configured with the M1 Pro or M1 Max chip and offers unprecedented levels of pro performance. The new MacBook Pro is available in 14- and 16-inch models. And it has a dedicated media engine for decode and two for encode - with up to two times faster video encoding - and two ProRes accelerators for even higher multistream performance. It delivers two times faster graphics processing and double the memory bandwidth of M1 Pro. M1 Max is the most powerful chip ever created for a pro notebook, with 10 CPU cores, up to 32 GPU cores, and a 16-core Neural Engine. Even the most ambitious projects are easily handled with up to 10 CPU cores, up to 16 GPU cores, a 16‑core Neural Engine, and dedicated encode and decode media engines that support H.264, HEVC, and ProRes codecs. M1 Pro takes the exceptional performance of the M1 architecture to a whole new level for pro users. Along with a powerful Neural Engine for supercharged machine learning and upgraded media engines with ProRes support, M1 Pro and M1 Max allow pros to do things they never could before. Both have more CPU cores, more GPU cores, and more unified memory than M1. M1 Pro and M1 Max scale the amazing M1 architecture to new heights - and for the first time, they bring a system on a chip (SoC) architecture to a pro notebook. The first notebook of its kind, this MacBook Pro is a beast. Add to that a stunning Liquid Retina XDR display, the best camera and audio ever in a Mac notebook, and all the ports you need. With the blazing-fast M1 Pro or M1 Max chip - the first Apple silicon designed for pros - you get groundbreaking performance and amazing battery life. Thanks to Mr Williams for the heads up.The most powerful MacBook Pro ever is here. Mnloona48's Cinebench R23 scores are an impressive 1,498 single core, 7,508 multi core. It quotes Twitter user who shared an MBP M1 unboxing and various other tests on his new 8GB machine. MacRumours has a result in that it reckons is from a genuine new M1 13-inch MacBook Pro, though, and it is somewhat better than the A12Z, of course. It looks like the Bits and Chips CInebench R23 result is not for the Apple M1 SoC but from an A12Z. I've put the comparative benchmark results tables side by side below (click to zoom). He compared his M1 Mac against an iMac with 9 th gen 6-core 3.7GHz Intel CPU (i5-9600K, according to EveryMac) and AMD Radeon 580X GPU. Somerfield was quite taken aback by how well the Apple M1 chip performed in this vector/raster creation and manipulation app, calling the new M1 "a monster".
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Shortly after the M1 Macs were launched Andy Somerfield of Serif Software in the UK, makers of the popular Affinity creative productivity apps, shared an interesting set of results from the Affinity Photo built-in CPU and GPU benchmark. Perhaps a better choice would be a photo/vector art application – a lighter weight creative app category which is probably more popular for publishers / web designers and the like. With the Apple M1 Cinebench R23 results thought to be in the bag and in line with the above, one might argue that these first Apple Macs aren't designed for pro rending apps like Maxon Cinema 4D.

I must comment that the little Apple M1 is a close competitor to my Dell XPS 15 laptop's Intel Core i5-8300H (45W) processor.which scores single/multi 1,038/4,284 points in the new Cinebench R23. I've put all three CB23 results in a table below: It was called out for the apples and oranges comparison so then added a run from a Ryzen 7 4800HS mobile processor (35W). It shared the result alongside runs undertaken on the AMD Ryzen 5 3600X desktop CPU (95W).


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Thus, when Maxon launched its M1 code native Cinebench R23 a day or two after the Apple event, I had some hope that folk who received their new Macs over the weekend would run the pro rendering benchmark in single and multi-core mode to provide a better PC processing comparison.Ī few hours ago Italian tech site Bits And Chips revealed one of the first Cinebench R23 scores from an Apple Mac packing an M1 SoC.
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Put simply we didn't really know the basis of Apple's claims for things like 'up to 3.5x faster CPU', even after pondering over the small print.Īhead of launch we saw some Geekbench results which were rather exciting for Mac fans but this benchmark seems more suited to mobile platforms.
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The launch event which saw three new Macs launched, powered by this 5nm Arm-based processor, was full of the typical Apple bombast but unfortunately the astonishing performance claims and comparisons weren't fleshed out with proper hardware reference points. Last week's reveal of the Apple M1 SoC for Mac computers was surely a significant moment in computing history.
