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thanks for the logic test, usually ppl show some render times in daw's, which is meaningless :) it's all about those p-cores, cannot wait for the ultra
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@maxtechofficial Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
It doesn't bother ME... but one of my friends goes crazy when he hears someone say the word 'LESS' when they should be saying 'FEWER' . It's not 'less cores'. It's 'fewer cores'. That's because it's a countable item. For everything else, you can say 'less'. Could my comments be FEWER irritating? No. But they could perhaps be LESS irritating? YES!!!
lol yes!!! Thank you. Why doesn’t ANYONE know when to say fewer rather than less? It’s so easy. If you can count it, you say fewer. If you measure, you say less. And ppl always say amount instead of number!! Again.. if you can count, you say number..
First chip change always give best gains...all after seem to only give small increments(to keep profits up). Environmentally they should wait 5+ years before new electronics, but 100 years most of the world will probably fall into the dark ages again.
Apple really needs to step up its game in terms of hardware features. Until they do, I'm sticking with my trusty M1 Pro and not considering an upgrade. Maybe: -Under display Face ID -OLED Screen (No blooming 🎉) - 240 Hz Panel on Pros (For actual gaming) and 120 Hz on Airs (catch up to the times) -Titanium body for weight reduction (especially on 16”)
I'd like to see comparisons against the M1 Pro. I don't see people upgrading from M2, but rather M1 which I think is one reason why Apple kept comparing M3 to M1 in the Keynote. Maybe even compare to the last gen Intel MacBook Pros as well. These would be much better comparisons. If someone upgrades from an M2 they were gonna do it regardless of the performance because they're ones who just have to have the latest tech at all times.
@@Mehwhatevr As an M1 user, if you haven’t upgraded to an M2 it’s because the performance hasn’t advanced enough to upgrade. A direct M1 to M3 would make it easier to see if the m3 is a big enough jump to upgrade without having to go back and see what the jump to M2 is then to M3.
@@MatrixRolandyou’re falling into apples marketing trick. It’s people like you who “look for the biggest jump” that completely disregards generations between your current and latest gen and that’s how companies can get away with making marginal gen on gen improvements. As a previous reply said, the direct m2 to m3 comparison is critical in figuring out if getting the latest gen is a waste of your money. Of course a 2 or 3 gen jump is going to have an improvement. But why would you buy a latest gen for 400$ more when the m2 does the exact same thing, if not better?
I think there’s another reason why the M3 Pro has been changed so radically. I believe this chip is destined for the new iPad Pros to differentiate the IPad Pros from the Airs, which will only get the M3. iPads need more efficient chips and have worse thermals, so they can’t have too many performance cores, nor too many graphics cores. This chip ssems to be designed for power savings, something an iPad needs. The prices of the Pro and Max are too different for this to be an upsell only. Few people will spend an extra $1100 to go from a Pro to Max if they had been in the market for a Pro to begin with.
I’d be surprised if the M3 Pro was able to run well in an iPad with much smaller heatsinks and no fans. But I’m sure there is a reason for changing up the architecture in the way they did.
IMO it would have made more sense to upgrade the M3 base model to have 4P+8E cores and cut that down for the iPad Air instead of using 6P cores where you are going to need a fan regardless if you clock all 6 at higher speeds. Lastly does the iPad Pro really need a lot more power???
No probably not. The M1 / M2 Pro used to be just a cut-in-half version of the Max chip. Therefore the CPU was the same, just some GPU cores were cut off. Now they decided, to also differentiate between CPU performance, so if you are a CPU-heavy user, the performance of Pro and Max will not be the same anymore.
I think that’s a good point, but at the expense of the MacBook Pro’s performance? It seems like a risky move, especially considering how much more scrutinized the MBP is compared to the iPad Pro is, due to its different use-case scenarios.
@@doomtomb3 maybe. It's actual real world usage which matters, not synthetic benchmarks. Just month and half to 2024 so I can buy it (have enough tax write offs this year). Can't wait.
Huh, that's why I like watching videos with tear downs in them. Had no idea about the larger heat block on the M3 models. That's good to know, will never complain about improved thermals.
5:48 For one, Apple doesn't advertize clock speeds. The max clock speed benchmark apps report is only for 1 core, and it's expected behavior for chips to have a little bit lower all-core max frequency. If you're not seeing the 4GHz speed on the graph, it could be due to 2 reasons: 1. The cooling can't sustain 4GHz on a single core due to the density of the heat on one core and therefore you'll only see it in even shorter workloads than Geekbench, 2. If the M3 is briefly boosting to 4GHz on Geekbench, the sampling rate of the frequency graph might not be high enough to detect that.
A new chip with less cores and less memory bandwidth and still beating the M2 Pro means MORE efficient cores on less power.. That's no downgrade my dear Watson. That is a HUGE improvement.
Well it beat the m2 pro in tests that aren't "like for like" and is barely an upgrade on "generic" benchmarks. The former is honestly kind of weird because you'll basically never find say somebody reviewing rtx20xx cards comparing ray tracing performance to their gtx10xx cards, nor 40xx cards vs 30xx ones with DLSS3 enabled. The obvious meme to make is apple optimizes for influencer use cases, but more charitably maybe their users self select. Either way this more seems to suggest to me that whether it's an improvement for you depends entirely on whether your use case aligns with what apple specifically optimized for.
@@angusbabb4913 My Main use is Logic too, and it's been shown on James Zhan channel that Logic/Ableton can't use Efficiency Cores ( when Reaper can). For us Logic users, less performance core is immediate downgrade it seems, more than choice of processor. I will definiely lean toward M1 or M2pro or max. 8 perf core (with either 2 or 4 unused efficiency cores). One exception: People going for M3 Max are going to be happy though: 12 powerfull new performance core against 8 in previous generations. Otherwise, even just M1pro rules.
Thanks for including Logic in your test! As a music producer i´m always happy to see those getting tested as well. 😃 Quiet shocking to see an older Macbook outperforming a new one. 😯 Planning on getting the M3 Max, that should outperform the M2 Max (hopefully).
just bought brand new m1max 14" 64gb ram and 2tb ssd for $2500. m3 max is not mind blowing to me since m1max is still one of the best laptops out there for ux/ui designers and no need to spend over $4k for that "extra" performance. very happy with my purchase
@@Wontreplyeverdontbotherare you high lol. M2max with the same specs as mine goes above $3500 😂 you must be smoking something and $900 for my laptop?? Where are you shopping from, ali express? My spec laptop used still goes over $2k lmao
I had a feeling this might be the case. The engineers know what they are doing, and I think they struck a real sweet spot between power and efficiency with this model.
What I mean is that the M3 Pro saw the biggest change from its M2 sibling. It’s easy to say things like Apple took away 2 performance cores just to boost profit margins, or to force people to upgrade to the Max chip. But in my opinion, this M3 Pro chip strikes the best balance between improved performance and improved battery life. The performance numbers, battery results, and thermal results in this video seem to back up that statement.
If you do video editing I would go for it because you also get double the encoders. For photo editing the M2 Pro is also a very good choice. Even the binned one as you can see in this video.
Nah, for the price you can get the best windows laptop and a maxed out PC, apple users seem so eager to spend so much money on downgrade after downgrade.
@@marlo8850 I don’t want multiple devices though. I like Macbooks because I enjoy how they work in addition to the devices being significantly powerful, remarkably efficient, and well engineered all in a portable design. Everything plays into it. I’m willing to pay to get all that in one package and have that last me 7-10 years reasonably. If I really wanted to keep the price low across multiple devices, I would just get a Mac mini and an iPad.
@@marlo8850And you still can’t edit on the go with that windows laptop which requires you to plug into a wall to actually work? Do people not understand what a laptop is for?
@@ghost-user559 The battery argument is BS, both a macbook or my Laptop will last exactly 2 hours before turning off when running a stress test. If the workload isnt heavy mine will last 8 hours or so. Besides if im on the go im either on the train sitting right next to a power outlet, even the trams here have em or im in a car where I should be focused on driving, also on the go is not a good work enviornment id merely do some writing and that I can do with my Ipad, which you could also add on top of the full PC, full laptop bill and still be lower than the M3 max laptop.
They test thoroughly but just choose to create content and form opinions at each stage, which is a subjective approach but it’s nice. Generates more content and controversy.
For Lightroom classic, exporting is typically not a big deal as part of the end of a workflow. However, the denoise function done in the middle of the workflow can bring a system down to it's knees. Would love to see that test.
Export speed is important to me as I shoot sports with deadline live edits to wire. Every second helps. But I agree, the Denoise difference would have been nice to see for sure.
I think there are situations at the margin where 18 vs 16 GB of RAM is a meaningful upgrade. I’ve noticed a total lack of M2/M3 refurbs in 32/36GB+1 TB configurations.
Great review! There isn't much incentive for M2 Pro owners to upgrade to the M3 Pro of course but I'd say the improvements are substantial enough to discard the "M3 Pro is a dud" nonsense, especially once you also factor in ~20% better battery life and lower surface temps. People upgrading from Intel will be very happy. I just wish they'd offer more than 36 GB of RAM without requiring an M3 Max.
@@movieblues4614 I still have an intel because the machine would cost me $3.8 grand for what I need. Like the other commentor mentioned, they should allow ram to be increased without requiring higher end chips. The M3 or M3 pro should be allowed to get to 64gb.
@@markw496 No criticism intended. You can pick up an m1 ultra studio w/ 64 gigs of RAM for about 2.8K. On the other hand you could take home a Pro for a few days, and return it if it's RAM limited. Just suggestions.
For battery comparison: Is the M2 Pro brand new out-of-the-box like the M3 Pro for this comparison? If not, I believe a disclaimer should be made regarding how many months of recharging are on the M2 Pro's life at time of recording
It is about 8 months old so using Apple's 1000 charge cycle to 80% rule, then at worst it will be 95% with one charge a day, but as this is a test machine, probably nearer 100%.
I've got a M1 Pro MacBook Pro with 32GB RAM and a 1TB SSD and it's still fast enough for compiling applications and such. Not gonna upgrade to a M3 for a couple percent more performance/efficiency.
Reducing memory bandwidth (that they were so proud of when they introduced it in previous chips) is the biggest blow. But I get it. Probably just a tiny fraction of both users and developers that even make use of that insane bandwidth. I see the M3 as a first generation 3nm product, which they will learn a lot from. I expect big refinements in M4. And as Vision Pro rolls out, we have a new target platform for low power, low heat, max performance. Should motivate them to be on top of the game.
Used/refurbished/stay-with a MBP 14” M1 base model. Best deal for performance/value if you can wait a minute or two😉 Especially if you are in a non-USA country where US$ has made any new MAC crazy priced. I use my MBP M1 for basic work, photo/video editing (no 3D rendering) and it still is fast enough, and has the ports, beautiful display (w/ VIVID app for more nits if needed), battery lasts a day out if needed, and I can’t understand the new color hype except ‘Space Black is the new Space Gray.’
I suspect that the M3 having fewer cores in the M3 Pro vs M2 Pro had to do with yield on the new 3nm process, not meant to be a slight to make the M3 Max look better. Still a shame. Seems the power efficiency gain is greater than the performance loss.
The DAW performance issues aren't limited to Logic. ProTools and Studio One also appear to not use E cores. Reaper and Cubase use both P/E cores and are very close in performance. I am on an M1 max, so it is much less of an issue as it's 8/2 P/E. For those with a 50/50 split, it's really unfortunate.
Software developer with M1 Pro 16GB here and was thinking about upgrading this year but to see a real difference it would have to be one of the Max versions which is priced a bit to high in my opinion. If it could (really) replace my gaming PC it would be another question, but for now I am holding out one more year. Hopefully we will see a more mature 3nm process and maybe some other upgrades besides the chips. Space black looks nice though
Similar situation here, I'd really like to get rid of windows by selling my gaming PC and upgrading my m2 air 8GB to an M3 max, but for now it seems a bit too early to do that. The hardware is already pretty decent, but it's still a gamble as long as we need to use GPT/crossover instead of native ports.
@@idontcare_wtf Well, I initially intended to only migrate my music production workflows to the M2 air, I never intended it to take over all the workloads except for gaming, but it handled the other workloads much better than I expected, so I did. But it's using a lot of swap which will eventually grind through the SSD, so I'd need 16 gigs of ram to be safe from doing that. If I'm upgrading though, I think I'll go for the M3 max instead, and sell my gaming pc altogether and settle for translation layers until more native ports are out. I'll lose some framerates in the early stages, but I'll have a much more stable system that costs a lot less power. But I'm still just slowly getting to being committed to do that :D
You should not compare just video export, it is almost the same on all new macs. You should compare, noise reduction, optical flow or any demanding task.
Great video. So pleased with your results. Some reviewers were quick to say the M3 pro was a 'dud' (i.e no better than M2 pro) but you have shown how good it is. Do you think the 16" M3 pro would be much different, maybe thermally better? I upgraded from 2019 Intel MBP so M3 pro MBP is 300% faster on Geekbench score.
@@davide88rn nice and plenty of ram there.😀 The point is the M3 is an upgrade to tempt out the intel MacBook owners not so much M1 or M2 MacBook owners
@@pauljazzman408 I'm one of those, I would like to wait for an M3 air but I need the laptop now so I'll go all in for an m3pro. I hope is not too much bigger around the world that the air
I come from a 2019 Macbook Pro 16inch with the strongest i7 and graphics card back then. I can now plug this pc to a monitor without the fans kicking in. I did literally nothing and just let it plugged into my monitor and the machine was running hot after time. On two monitors the fan kicked in so fast.
The difference is even smaller between them if you compare 12 core vs 12 core instead of 10 core vs 11 core. M2 pro 12 core /19 core 16gb/1tb is the best value tbh
It seems these days "professionals" are never happy. Which is a shame because there is so much joy to be found in feeling happy. Apple would be foolish not to increase the performance.
M3 Pro is the perfect system for a guy like me who just went in the apple mac eco system. The base m3 pro is good because it balances performance and price. It doesn't make sense to buy any other for the use case
A common theme for the gpu, is that it is generally slower in rasterization and compute tasks, but faster in RT workloads, if you test games, gfx bench, UE5, the M3 pro is in unfortunately general slower. Kind of a sidegrade this generation as the base M2 Pro was never slower than the full M1 pro. But if your workload revolves around RT then it’s a no brainer
I mentioned in another comment but the GPU is slower because there are just fewer GPU cores on the M3 Pro. The base model M3 Pro in particularly only has 14 GPU core which is a fair bit lower than M2 Pro base (16 cores). From reviews etc, I think the fully maxed out M3 Pro (18 GPU cores) should perform better than maxed M2 Pro (19 GPU cores) across the board, because the M3 GPU should be strictly better than M2 GPU per core. The dynamic caching feature is there to explicitly make video game / rendering faster as it allows for better utilization of the hardware. (It's harder to write video game shaders that can do that without this feature)
And for $200 more, I think the M3 Pro with 12-Core CPU and 18-Core GPU is going to be a killer machine, specially when it comes out into the Mac Mini 😍
Ahora la pregunta es: cual recomiendas entre el MACBOOK AIR M2 o MACBOOK PRO M3 ?? Tengo un macbook pro mid 2012 y ya está un poco lento (a pesar que tiene mejoras de SSD y RAM)... Saludos
I can see the M3 Pro not being worth it if you have an M2 pro or even M1 pro for some people, but as I'm going to be coming from an intel i5 macbook pro i think the M3 will be well worth the money, even if its just for the color alone haha
As someone who took delivery of a new 14-inch M2 pro on September 29 (upgrading from a 2014 MacBook Air); this new M3 family of MacBook Pros has been an unexpected and interesting release (lol). It seems as though apple silicon has bought the mac out of it's slumber, and back onto the 'noticeable improvements every year' bandwagon that iPhones and iPads have experienced since 2010. This is good. Anytime someone needs a new mac, apple will now have good products on offer that will comfortably run the latest software for years to come. We'll just have to get used to apple's regular 'tick, tick, tick' of noticeable and iterative improvements that the mac, honestly, hasn't seen for years.
After not wanting to jump onto the new M1 and dismissing the M2 as an M1.5, I finally jumped in on the M3 w/ a MacBook Pro 14” base M3 w/ 16GB RAM and 1TB storage, which I’ll get to check out next week.
I get stuck on the fact that M2 Pro's 16gb ram is 200gb/s and M3 Pro's 18gb ram is 150gb/s. Which is actually better in terms of ram?? Less information can travel at once with M3, .. but it can.. store more information to be used at any given time compared to M2.. am I understanding this correctly?
So as long as you have software that can take advantage of hardware raytracing, the Pro is a complete beast compared to its predecessor. If not then it's a lot closer.
apple calculated that the TSMC N3B node would be better than it turned out, so now apple is in a precarious situation MacBook Pro M3 has fewer transistors than MacBook Pro M2 less bandwidth, fewer ports, fewer fans which causes problems with heat development so that the cpu throttles to mention some changes for the worse for the M3 chip externally, Apple made no changes to the MacBook Pro 2023 also MacBook Pro and Air need a major overhaul, the last one I think was in 2019 The I Mac also need a major overhaul that it still uses a lightning cable for the accessories, this says something about how often Apple updates M2 Pro has 40 billion transistors, 200GB/s bandwidth M3 pro has 37 billion transistors 150GB/s of bandwidth Not the increase transistor density by about 33% compared to 5 nm TSMC states you should get from 5 nm to 3 nm "according to TSMC has stated that its 3 nm chips will reduce power consumption by 25-30% at the same speed, increase speed by 10-15% at the same amount of power and increase transistor density by about 33% compared to its previous 5 nm" but it didn't happen with the N3B node and it affected the M3 for TSMC N3B is not good but apple had no choice but to use this fuse.wikichip.org/news/7375/tsmc-n3-and-challenges-ahead/? the 3 nm node apple uses is far from fully developed so the TSMC N3B node is not much better than the M2 node which is based TSMC N5P even if apple wants the consumer to believe it and try to get customers to buy products based on TSMC N3B just because these are manufactured on 3nm but an unfinished one with a bad prestandard that new nodes have problems is nothing new just look at Intel That the N3B node had problems you could already see on the A17 pro chip, it doesn't come close to what TSMC states that the 3 nano meter node should be able to achieve neither in energy efficiency nor in performance and Apple's M3 chip is based on the A17 pro architecture Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 which, according to tests, has the same or better capacity than Apple's M2 chip those who developed the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 are all former managers of apple's groundbreaking M chip but they got tired of apple's management Qualcomm Snapdragon is based on TSMC N4 nodes which are now well proven and have good yield as it stands now the TSMC N4 node is no worse than the TSMC N3B node so Qualcomm's new Snapdragon using TSMC N4 is logical apple took a chance and jumped on the N3 node too early with the consequence that this performs worse than what a 3nm node should do according to TSMC and what apple hoped for TSMC N3B has a very bad yield rate of just 55%, far below the standard which makes this extremely expensive to manufacture now Apple only paying for qualified circuits TSMC pay the rest TSMC sees it as a development cost to get a working 3 nm production with a reasonable yield rate technode.com/2023/07/17/tsmcs-3nm-yield-rate-reportedly-just-55-with-apple-only-paying-for-qualified-circuits/ when TSMC has better control of 3nm manufacturing and better yield, which TSMC will probably get with the N3P node that TSMC expects to come out in 2024 i had waited until apple release the M4 or the M5 chip before i had upgraded to a new apple MacBook Pro and kept my M1 M2 I MacBook Pro these are enough for 99% of all users there are too few advantages to upgrade to an M3 machine at the price apple wants I'll end with something funny ruclips.net/video/BeHs9eGzsB8/видео.htmlsi=QzTT4Jv2Aer3L7uE
Interesting data but I disagree with your assessment. I actually think that they anticipated this, and that is why they wanted customers used to binned chips as a standard for Apple devices. Really Apple Silicon has a built in tolerance for faults due to the price brackets and upgrade path of the new systems. They don’t need to maximize yield if most customers are buying binned chips, and very little of their chips ever go to waste with this strategy. And with the cost of the unbinned chips I don’t see profit margins being an issue, and by the time 3nm lives up to its potential they will have the potential to shrink and provide significant power to their mobile devices. An iPad, iPhone, and MacBook with 3nm, with less power draw, more transistors, and less heat is a future they feel is worth gambling on. Especially with the Vision pro launching soon.
@@ghost-user559 your analysis may well be more correct than mine what speaks against your analysis is that these decisions are made many years in advance now apple is working on the architecture of the M6, M7 chip the M5 is already completed so i maintain that apple and TSMC thought the N3B node would perform better than it did once apple realized that wasn't the case, it was too late to change the architecture but apple somehow managed to get TSMC to take the full cost and only paying for qualified circuits so this was a good deal for apple and this should reduce the cost for apple by huge amounts, but unfortunately this is not reflected in reduced prices for the customer
For lightroom, creating previews is the thing that takes the most time. That would be a really useful, real world benchmark for photographers, and used far more than exporting. Otherwise some great comparisons. Thanks
Год назад+1
Same for video editing. I wish we would see how responsive timelines are, stabilization and noise reduction process smoothness and motion design tests in AE. I don’t care about a few minutes or seconds difference i export time personally
@exactly! I'm having such a hard time deciding because I'm a Windows user looking into getting a Mac for my AE motion design work but I need to make sure if it's worth getting the more expensive option. I understand it's almost always better but I'd be putting such a huge dent on my savings. 😅
For making the battery comparison fair, you should have used the same wallpapers on both machines. The dark one on the M3 Pro MBP should be much more power saving on the miniLED display 😊
@@MrZerg0403 In this case it may be true, but don‘t forget: Maksim cranked up the brightness to 100%, so the display will contribute significantly to the overall power consumption 🤓 But anyway: very good and interesting comparison 💚
Thinking about selling off my gaming computer to get a Mac. For normal computer programming, am I better off getting the M1 pro or paying for the M3? Everyone is saying no need to upgrade but I’d like to know if that applies to non-Mac holders as well.
6:51 I think the Metal Compute score is worse on M3 Pro because these are the base models. Base M2 Pro / M3 Pro have 16 and 14 GPU cores respectively, so it's a 12.5% reduction in core count for M3 Pro, which is a lot. If you get the fully maxed out M2 Pro / M3 Pro instead, they have 19 and 18 cores respectively (only 5.3% reduction in core count in M3 Pro), and from other benchmarks I have seen (e.g. from Ars Technica) I think the maxed out M3 Pro still produces better Geekbench Metal score, as each M3 GPU core is faster than the M2 ones. 8:20 The GPU performance improvement in M3 probably isn't due to ray tracing, as the Wild Life Extreme test you are doing doesn't use it I think (this way you get apples-to-apples comparison). It's probably due to generally more efficient GPU especially with the Dynamic Caching feature which allows apps/games to more fully utilize the hardware.
nice comment. Another thing that concerns me about the mbp 14" is whether I should get the m3 max on it. Does m3 max chip on it suffer throttling issue (compared to the 16"), like in previous gen max chip on 14" body?
@@tty2020 Yeah that's a good question. FWIW I think even on M1 Max, each increase in M1 Max core count produces better performance on the 14". They just aren't as good as the 16", but if you say compare 14" 32-core GPU M1 Max to 14" 24-core, the 32-core is still noticeably better (at least this is my observation playing multiplayer Baldur's Gate 3 with a friend side-by-side with identical settings/specs on 14" M1 Max MBPs other then 24 vs 32-core GPUs)
Fyi, lower transistor counts doesn’t mean slower. Could mean they optimized the layouts of the logic gates reducing propagation delays. So less transistor counts
I have an M1 Pro with 32GB and 1TB, it's my go to if I need battery life for a project. Expensive but I never had a problem with it! M3 does look promising!
need advice, what should i choose between M2 Pro 1TB vs M3 Pro 512GB (base model), the M2 Pro 1TB has higher Core, what should i choose? cause the price of both almost the same in my country
As with the 16" M1 Max MBP (which I own), your Mic test reveals the audio to be rather muffled. It's lacking in Loudness versus your regular Mic, as it is versus my own Lav Mic. I am always left wondering why that is. Is it some kind of noise reduction Apple is using? It makes it hard to record the screen on my MBP while talking into the MBP's Mics and later integrating that audio seamlessly into a video I am editing in FCPX, where most of the audio was shot using my LAV mic. Even after boosting the Gain and adding Loudness, the MBP audio still doesn't sound anywhere close to the Loudness and clarity of my regular LAV mic. What are your thoughts about that?
Good Review. I have been using my new MBP M3 Pro equipped with the unbinned M3 Pro chip coupled to 36 GB of unified memory and 1 TB of SSD storage. This machine FLYs with all that ram. Suffice it to say, I am one happy new owner of a very nice Space Black 14" MBP. PS Windows 11 on ARM in a Parallels Desktop 19 virtual machine (configured to 4 CPU cores/8 GB or ram) boots in 9 seconds and useful work ia available after 15 seconds from initial boot up. I have been impressed.
Not sure why you'd be surprised by the photo exporting. You showed earlier that the read/write speed of the internal SSD was quicker on the M3 to begin with. As a professional photographer, 15 seconds of export time doesn't mean squat. I want to know that I can breeze through heavy edits in Lightroom Classic with no lag. I want to see how the M3 vs M2 with cataloging, preview building, etc. A simple export test doesn't show me anything, especially when that's primarily going to be read/write speed dictated.
As always your videos are great. However I’ve got one request that nobody had tested yet. For around the same price what’s best between MacBook 14” M3 Max binned 14 CPU 30 GPU with 96GB 300GB/sec at $3,999 vs M3 Max 16 CPU 30 GPU 64GB 400GB/sec at $3,899 ? 14 inches being more thermally constrained, is it better to have a less powerful chip with more memory or the full chip with 22GB less memory ? Do 300GB/sec any slower than 400GB/sec in real life ? Thanks in advance
I think the most telling thing here was the beta software that takes advantage of all the new features. Perhaps folks don’t know that, for instance, when Intel comes out with a new feature or instruction in new processors, they update the Intel Performance Primitives library to use that feature where it can be used. Until the software you’re using gets updated to use the new IPP that uses the new features, you won’t see the most performance increase everywhere. All of that to say, run these tests again in, say, February, and you may have some different results. And for all the folks out there that need 140 tracks in Logic that can’t afford the extra cash for the Max chip… you need to learn to use your software better. Also, you’re not running a business, you are running a hobby.
Great comparison! I hope the M3 Logic Pro performance can be fixed with a software update. Would it be possible for you guys to add Xcode and Unreal Engine to your comparison test plan for the M3Max?
Yes we will! The issue is that Xcode 15 no longer installs the iOS tools by default so the benchmark wasn’t working. We had to download an additional 7.2GB of files for the iOS tools. Took way too long with our slow internet, so we had to skip it.
Overall if I were upgrading from Mac Mini I would buy the Macbook Pro M3 Pro 18 GB, 1 TB SSD. I find my 512 GB SSD on Mac Mini to be a problem doing very large video editing so 1 TB for me.
This is just the comparo I was looking for! I was leaning towards the refurbished M2 Pro, but now am leaning towards the M3 Pro. While not a big gamer per se, I would like to be able to play Baldur's Gate 3. Was worried about the reduced GPU cores on the M3. But it looks like it should handle it just fine, due to the results of all the other tests. Thanks for doing all these tests between the two. Now will keep looking for any deals I can find on the 14" M3 Macbook Pro. Because right now I do think the extra $$ will be worth it in the long run. Thanks!
I just pulled the trigger on an open box m2 pro 14" for about $500 less than a new m3 pro 14" and after seeing this Im doubting I made the right call. apple rates them both with the same battery life but these guys got a huge difference.
You know what would be really AWESOME to see? A video doing a detailed comparison between a top spec Macbook Pro M3Max and a top spec Dell Precision 17"
Buenisimooo pensaba que la m2 pro y la m3 pro estaban a la par pero me equivoqué, como no tengo laptop en si, creo que si me convendrá mas la m3 pro, tocó invertir un poco mas pero se que valdrá la pena para los siguientes 6 años, tambien me gustó mucho la comparativa en cual se sobrecalentaba mas
Still rocking a early 2011 15" MacBook Pro and still hasn't died! Thinking of upgrading to a M3 16" MacBook Pro but not sure what to get but really want to future proof it. Pro or just Max it?
I really enjoy your videos. This one was very interesting, especially the detailed comparison between the M2 Pro and M3 Pro. It was really helpful to learn about their temperature and battery life, as I was curious about that. Could you please compare the M2 Max and M3 Max next? I'm looking forward to it.
@@MaxTechOfficial Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
I think that for some people, how well, some Virtualisation software works on M3 is a key issue. Mac Intel virtualisation is a big plus for some software, like Revit that people use via Parallels x86 with dedicated AMD graphic cards. How that software works on Macs with M3? Parallels for Apple Silicon runs Windows for ARM, not the x86 version.
Nothing interesting has happened since M1 Pro Macs were released imo, having 10% or 20% performance increase here and there is just not enough. At this rate, I might have to wait for something like M8 for a reason to upgrade.
Well we see 15-20 % improvements each year while having same or better battery life. In case of Max, even 50 % jump just in 10 months. That is something unheard of with Intel (not just on Macs, in general). And in case of Max, it's 100 % higher than M1 Pro. Double the performance in just 2 years. For many people this means huge, huge time savings. Sure, if you have som peak at 5 minutes taxing the processor, shaving that time to 3 minutes might not mean anything. But if you do that every day multiple times, that's a lot of time saved. If you are doing some intensive calculations for say 2 hours (ie blender animations), cutting that to 45 minutes with RT rendering is HUGE boost.
For someone who is doing time intensive work, the M3 would be an advantage. But for the average non time intensive work, the M2 is more than sufficient. It all depends what you are going to be using the laptop for.
Anyone with a M1/M2 Pro has no need to upgrade, this machines can last around 5-7 years with no issues, I have a 16" M1 Pro from week 1 and it's still blazing fast for all I need with full speed SSD and 200GB/s memory bandwidth. I think maybe an M5/M6 Pro will be a nice upgrade for me in the future.
Overall some gains with year over year bumps, but this was a bigger year for the change to 3nm IMO. Plus the M3 Ultra looks to be an absolute beast when it comes to market next year.
This has already been explained. Low yield means that the 2nm wafers have around 40-50% of chips that have subpar cores, so Apple has had to bin them rather than e-waste them and probably add more efficiency cores as the 3nm process has higher yield with the small cores. If Apple had not done this, we would have to wait 6-12 months for yields to get better and by then, the N3E/N3P M4 would be getting ready. Sometimes things don't go to plan but rather than give up again (already delayed by 6 months), they have given us the first taste of 3nm.
I’d like to see a comparison between the binned M1 Pro vs binned M3 Pro. Also M3 Pro vs M3 Max, which I assume is coming soon. Most people upgrading are coming from M1 or older, so the comparison to M2 is incremental at best.
This is a pleasant surprise in favor of the M3 Pro chip MBP. For the M4 Pro chip, I think they should add a couple more p-cores to the unbinned chip making it 8 p-cores and 6 efficiency cores.
@@marlo8850 I was saying that I was pleasantly surprised that the M3 pro chip model here did so well than what was originally talk about. I'm not even thinking about buying any M3 model because yes you do get less here thanks to Apple's degrade to this MBP model. I'm personally waiting for the M4 line up and hopefully they go back to where the bandwidth and other specs were like with the M1 and M2 models.
@@XAV-117 my purchase was a windows Laptop more powerful and cheaper than this thing, youre coping and I can chose how much ram I want, I currently have 64Gb or the Apple equivalent of a 2000$ option. I also have 8TB of replacable SSDs which are way faster than the ones apple uses.
@marlo8850 Sorry trying to follow you based on what I said as to what you commented. What do you mean keep it longer than that?
Год назад+1
Damn… on the fence as wether to choose M3 Pro or M1/M2 Pro. Coming initially from Retina 2013 and made the worst upgrade ever in 2018 with the intel 6 cores. It is a hell editing A7S3 /FX6 footage or drone footage on it. It is ARM time but those machine are more expensive than ever
You Guys are killing me 😭😭😭😭😭 I bought an 8 GB M1 Pro in ‘21, and I LOVE it!!!! I never even thought about getting 16gb. I came from a 2013 mac with 4GB so 8gb was a huge upgrade and seemed perfect. I got an M2, and I swear my M1 was faster, and it was freezing, so I returned it yesterday. Now, I’m going to get the M3, and I do not feel confident in my purchase at all 😢
For the speakers test. Just close your eyes and see if you can feel any difference or when the speaker changes. That's the only way one can make out the difference between these 2 speakers in this video. I think they are the same set of speakers in both. No difference.
Specs on paper do not always tell the full story. I never really thought the M3 Pro would be a downgrade. It made logical sense to me Apple picked up performance in other ways to make the chip more efficient. Thats why there is so much more battery life. The M3 Pro is working smarter and not harder. I'm not really surprised by the FCP last of difference. Nothing in FCP will yet make use of the new GPU technologies and exporting largely is tethered to the built in hardware encoders. There are other ways a NLE utilizes hardware however and exporting is not really much of a benchmark anymore. Exporting only represents a small portion of our process of editing at the very end and in reality it doesn't really matter much if it takes two minutes vs 3 minutes. Where NLE performance really matters is what the system can handle playing back in realtime before falling apart. We need more benchmarks like that. Like the Logic test where we see how much each system can handle before it can no longer playback.
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thanks for the logic test, usually ppl show some render times in daw's, which is meaningless :)
it's all about those p-cores, cannot wait for the ultra
Hello, I am sahil. My interest in coding, web development. i want to become a good developer but i have no laptop and i am not able to buy it. i am belong to poor family. so please can you give me any good laptop in your treasure. And may I be grateful to you all my life
@maxtechofficial Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
3:22, you said by mistake RAM instead of SSD Storage
It doesn't bother ME... but one of my friends goes crazy when he hears someone say the word 'LESS' when they should be saying 'FEWER' . It's not 'less cores'. It's 'fewer cores'. That's because it's a countable item. For everything else, you can say 'less'. Could my comments be FEWER irritating? No. But they could perhaps be LESS irritating? YES!!!
I’m always trying to improve my english and I find your comment useful 👍
think ur boy is acoustic bro
lol yes!!! Thank you. Why doesn’t ANYONE know when to say fewer rather than less? It’s so easy. If you can count it, you say fewer. If you measure, you say less.
And ppl always say amount instead of number!! Again.. if you can count, you say number..
I appreciate the video, but while we're critiquing grammar and word choices, it'd be appreciated if the producer used the word "actually" LESS.
Is your friend Stannis Baratheon?
no point to replace M3 if you have M1 in your hand
Completely agree! I upgraded from the 2018 i7 to the M1 Pro so I’m good until the M6!
Should I upgrade I have an early 2011 MacBook pro? But I'm low on funds
@@Pablo-oi1hv Buy the original M1 13" MBP and it would be a huge upgrade. Should be able to pick one up for $800 or less.
First chip change always give best gains...all after seem to only give small increments(to keep profits up). Environmentally they should wait 5+ years before new electronics, but 100 years most of the world will probably fall into the dark ages again.
Apple really needs to step up its game in terms of hardware features. Until they do, I'm sticking with my trusty M1 Pro and not considering an upgrade.
Maybe:
-Under display Face ID
-OLED Screen (No blooming 🎉)
- 240 Hz Panel on Pros (For actual gaming) and 120 Hz on Airs (catch up to the times)
-Titanium body for weight reduction (especially on 16”)
I'd like to see comparisons against the M1 Pro. I don't see people upgrading from M2, but rather M1 which I think is one reason why Apple kept comparing M3 to M1 in the Keynote. Maybe even compare to the last gen Intel MacBook Pros as well. These would be much better comparisons. If someone upgrades from an M2 they were gonna do it regardless of the performance because they're ones who just have to have the latest tech at all times.
@@Mehwhatevr As an M1 user, if you haven’t upgraded to an M2 it’s because the performance hasn’t advanced enough to upgrade. A direct M1 to M3 would make it easier to see if the m3 is a big enough jump to upgrade without having to go back and see what the jump to M2 is then to M3.
Exactly, that's why I'm here @@Mehwhatevr
I upgraded from my 16" m1 pro to the 16" m3 pro. I mainly only code and maybe some light gaming. The biggest upgrade is definitely the color.
@@MatrixRolandyou’re falling into apples marketing trick. It’s people like you who “look for the biggest jump” that completely disregards generations between your current and latest gen and that’s how companies can get away with making marginal gen on gen improvements.
As a previous reply said, the direct m2 to m3 comparison is critical in figuring out if getting the latest gen is a waste of your money. Of course a 2 or 3 gen jump is going to have an improvement. But why would you buy a latest gen for 400$ more when the m2 does the exact same thing, if not better?
I have a M1 Pro 14, and I don't see any reason why I should upgrade. I do programming and office.
I think there’s another reason why the M3 Pro has been changed so radically. I believe this chip is destined for the new iPad Pros to differentiate the IPad Pros from the Airs, which will only get the M3. iPads need more efficient chips and have worse thermals, so they can’t have too many performance cores, nor too many graphics cores. This chip ssems to be designed for power savings, something an iPad needs. The prices of the Pro and Max are too different for this to be an upsell only. Few people will spend an extra $1100 to go from a Pro to Max if they had been in the market for a Pro to begin with.
I’d be surprised if the M3 Pro was able to run well in an iPad with much smaller heatsinks and no fans. But I’m sure there is a reason for changing up the architecture in the way they did.
ipad pro / air have same chip BUT not same graphic performance . for ipad 15 perhaps not 1000§ ipad where 500§ will be to much
IMO it would have made more sense to upgrade the M3 base model to have 4P+8E cores and cut that down for the iPad Air instead of using 6P cores where you are going to need a fan regardless if you clock all 6 at higher speeds. Lastly does the iPad Pro really need a lot more power???
No probably not. The M1 / M2 Pro used to be just a cut-in-half version of the Max chip. Therefore the CPU was the same, just some GPU cores were cut off. Now they decided, to also differentiate between CPU performance, so if you are a CPU-heavy user, the performance of Pro and Max will not be the same anymore.
I think that’s a good point, but at the expense of the MacBook Pro’s performance? It seems like a risky move, especially considering how much more scrutinized the MBP is compared to the iPad Pro is, due to its different use-case scenarios.
Surprising results! Still very happy with my m1 pro mac power and efficiency. Thankyou max tech for all these comparisons!!
I would love to see you put the 11/14 M3 Pro vs the 12/18 M3 Pro. For the minimal cost in upgrading it would be great to see if it’s worth it.
And the 12/18 M3 Pro with M2 Pro
For GPU improvements probably yes
The synthetic benchmarks are going to show 9% and 28% improvements
@@doomtomb3 maybe. It's actual real world usage which matters, not synthetic benchmarks. Just month and half to 2024 so I can buy it (have enough tax write offs this year). Can't wait.
As someone coming from Intel, I will definetely buy the M3 Pro. Thanks for the video
You won't be disappointed. I upgraded to an M1 2 years ago from an intel Mac 2015. The difference is huge.
Bro that’s an almost 10 year pc.
And yeahhhhh
Crazy that Macs are just now getting black laptops.....haha
They’ve been black years ago…@@tommy516
Huh, that's why I like watching videos with tear downs in them. Had no idea about the larger heat block on the M3 models. That's good to know, will never complain about improved thermals.
5:48 For one, Apple doesn't advertize clock speeds. The max clock speed benchmark apps report is only for 1 core, and it's expected behavior for chips to have a little bit lower all-core max frequency.
If you're not seeing the 4GHz speed on the graph, it could be due to 2 reasons: 1. The cooling can't sustain 4GHz on a single core due to the density of the heat on one core and therefore you'll only see it in even shorter workloads than Geekbench, 2. If the M3 is briefly boosting to 4GHz on Geekbench, the sampling rate of the frequency graph might not be high enough to detect that.
A new chip with less cores and less memory bandwidth and still beating the M2 Pro means MORE efficient cores on less power.. That's no downgrade my dear Watson. That is a HUGE improvement.
Agreed. This will preserve the lifespan of the laptop too.
Well it beat the m2 pro in tests that aren't "like for like" and is barely an upgrade on "generic" benchmarks.
The former is honestly kind of weird because you'll basically never find say somebody reviewing rtx20xx cards comparing ray tracing performance to their gtx10xx cards, nor 40xx cards vs 30xx ones with DLSS3 enabled. The obvious meme to make is apple optimizes for influencer use cases, but more charitably maybe their users self select.
Either way this more seems to suggest to me that whether it's an improvement for you depends entirely on whether your use case aligns with what apple specifically optimized for.
really ? i use logic ,the less cores means it runs slower than the M2 pro according to this logic test
@@angusbabb4913 My Main use is Logic too, and it's been shown on James Zhan channel that Logic/Ableton can't use Efficiency Cores ( when Reaper can). For us Logic users, less performance core is immediate downgrade it seems, more than choice of processor. I will definiely lean toward M1 or M2pro or max. 8 perf core (with either 2 or 4 unused efficiency cores). One exception: People going for M3 Max are going to be happy though: 12 powerfull new performance core against 8 in previous generations. Otherwise, even just M1pro rules.
@@akin242002how so? Not disagreeing with you. I just don't know how less cores and less memory bandwidth mean longer lifespan?
Pleased with my binned M3 Pro on my 14" MacBook Pro. From the 8/7 base M1 on my Air it's a massive step up.
Hey why the upgrade. Do you feel like 14 inch screen is too small. Curious to know your thoughts haha
Did you choose base model or 12/18 ?
Picking my M3 Pro up tonight! I've also got the base 8/7 M1 Air, and it really struggles with 8GB ram.
@@PackFan-tv5pj Felt the same about mine. Enjoy!
Thanks for including Logic in your test! As a music producer i´m always happy to see those getting tested as well. 😃
Quiet shocking to see an older Macbook outperforming a new one. 😯
Planning on getting the M3 Max, that should outperform the M2 Max (hopefully).
just bought brand new m1max 14" 64gb ram and 2tb ssd for $2500. m3 max is not mind blowing to me since m1max is still one of the best laptops out there for ux/ui designers and no need to spend over $4k for that "extra" performance. very happy with my purchase
You'll love it, have it and it's a rocket ship!
@@jimtipton8888yeah, i’m planning on using it 5+ years with this machine
@@Wontreplyeverdontbotherare you high lol. M2max with the same specs as mine goes above $3500 😂 you must be smoking something and $900 for my laptop?? Where are you shopping from, ali express? My spec laptop used still goes over $2k lmao
I also bought a second-hand 99% new m1 max 16" 32gb ram and 2tb ssd for $1950. Can't ask for more
@@jamonleecarter8698 Yeah, I agree. M1 Max with 64GB Ram and a 2 TB hard drive is not a $900 machine unless he came across a really dumb seller.
I had a feeling this might be the case. The engineers know what they are doing, and I think they struck a real sweet spot between power and efficiency with this model.
what do you mean, can u elaborate pls
What I mean is that the M3 Pro saw the biggest change from its M2 sibling. It’s easy to say things like Apple took away 2 performance cores just to boost profit margins, or to force people to upgrade to the Max chip. But in my opinion, this M3 Pro chip strikes the best balance between improved performance and improved battery life. The performance numbers, battery results, and thermal results in this video seem to back up that statement.
@@robocobrabot Yes, this is exactly why I bought one. It's a new leap in efficiency with its 6 efficiency cores while still very powerful.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I think they want people to buy aka Upspend .
I’d love to see a comparison between the M3 Pro 12/18 and the M3 Max 14/30. I want to know if it’s worth it to spend the extra money or not.
If you do video editing I would go for it because you also get double the encoders. For photo editing the M2 Pro is also a very good choice. Even the binned one as you can see in this video.
Nah, for the price you can get the best windows laptop and a maxed out PC, apple users seem so eager to spend so much money on downgrade after downgrade.
@@marlo8850 I don’t want multiple devices though. I like Macbooks because I enjoy how they work in addition to the devices being significantly powerful, remarkably efficient, and well engineered all in a portable design. Everything plays into it. I’m willing to pay to get all that in one package and have that last me 7-10 years reasonably.
If I really wanted to keep the price low across multiple devices, I would just get a Mac mini and an iPad.
@@marlo8850And you still can’t edit on the go with that windows laptop which requires you to plug into a wall to actually work? Do people not understand what a laptop is for?
@@ghost-user559 The battery argument is BS, both a macbook or my Laptop will last exactly 2 hours before turning off when running a stress test. If the workload isnt heavy mine will last 8 hours or so. Besides if im on the go im either on the train sitting right next to a power outlet, even the trams here have em or im in a car where I should be focused on driving, also on the go is not a good work enviornment id merely do some writing and that I can do with my Ipad, which you could also add on top of the full PC, full laptop bill and still be lower than the M3 max laptop.
Max is so funny. Always trying to find drama and generate excitement regarding benchmarks. I value the testing though!
They test thoroughly but just choose to create content and form opinions at each stage, which is a subjective approach but it’s nice.
Generates more content and controversy.
@@ebubeawachiein other words its srill drama! Wven the pitch of voice is getting much but it does the job nonetheless
it's the fake half-laugh that he injects when he talks that grinds my gears. LOL.
"It's crazy fast... haha and that is crahahazy."
I wonder how local commentators justify clickbait... I add the channel to ignore, and I will be fine without this obvious advertisement.
For Lightroom classic, exporting is typically not a big deal as part of the end of a workflow. However, the denoise function done in the middle of the workflow can bring a system down to it's knees. Would love to see that test.
Export speed is important to me as I shoot sports with deadline live edits to wire. Every second helps. But I agree, the Denoise difference would have been nice to see for sure.
Hey! Can I ask what MacBook you’re using to keep up in your export/import fast!? Looking to work while I travel.
Thanks!
I think there are situations at the margin where 18 vs 16 GB of RAM is a meaningful upgrade.
I’ve noticed a total lack of M2/M3 refurbs in 32/36GB+1 TB configurations.
Great review! There isn't much incentive for M2 Pro owners to upgrade to the M3 Pro of course but I'd say the improvements are substantial enough to discard the "M3 Pro is a dud" nonsense, especially once you also factor in ~20% better battery life and lower surface temps. People upgrading from Intel will be very happy. I just wish they'd offer more than 36 GB of RAM without requiring an M3 Max.
Can you imagine what it would be like upgrading from Intel now? Wow.
Upgrading from an M1 gen just became a lot more interesting. I agree. Great Review!
@@movieblues4614 I still have an intel because the machine would cost me $3.8 grand for what I need. Like the other commentor mentioned, they should allow ram to be increased without requiring higher end chips. The M3 or M3 pro should be allowed to get to 64gb.
@@markw496 No criticism intended. You can pick up an m1 ultra studio w/ 64 gigs of RAM for about 2.8K. On the other hand you could take home a Pro for a few days, and return it if it's RAM limited. Just suggestions.
Which apple stores allow returns? We can't do that in Hong Kong.
For battery comparison: Is the M2 Pro brand new out-of-the-box like the M3 Pro for this comparison? If not, I believe a disclaimer should be made regarding how many months of recharging are on the M2 Pro's life at time of recording
agree
It is about 8 months old so using Apple's 1000 charge cycle to 80% rule, then at worst it will be 95% with one charge a day, but as this is a test machine, probably nearer 100%.
for comparaison m2pro have 1 year of bios and OS optimisation... and like said work more on m3pro during video
I've got a M1 Pro MacBook Pro with 32GB RAM and a 1TB SSD and it's still fast enough for compiling applications and such. Not gonna upgrade to a M3 for a couple percent more performance/efficiency.
Reducing memory bandwidth (that they were so proud of when they introduced it in previous chips) is the biggest blow. But I get it. Probably just a tiny fraction of both users and developers that even make use of that insane bandwidth. I see the M3 as a first generation 3nm product, which they will learn a lot from. I expect big refinements in M4. And as Vision Pro rolls out, we have a new target platform for low power, low heat, max performance. Should motivate them to be on top of the game.
3:20 "M3 Pro can no longer get 8TB of RAM" 💀
Oh my, what a bummer!
@@Wontreplyeverdontbother at least 5 Chrome tabs
And here I am, just happy to have 18GB 😢
Even MKBHD did not see the point to upgrade from M1...
Used/refurbished/stay-with a MBP 14” M1 base model. Best deal for performance/value if you can wait a minute or two😉 Especially if you are in a non-USA country where US$ has made any new MAC crazy priced. I use my MBP M1 for basic work, photo/video editing (no 3D rendering) and it still is fast enough, and has the ports, beautiful display (w/ VIVID app for more nits if needed), battery lasts a day out if needed, and I can’t understand the new color hype except ‘Space Black is the new Space Gray.’
I suspect that the M3 having fewer cores in the M3 Pro vs M2 Pro had to do with yield on the new 3nm process, not meant to be a slight to make the M3 Max look better. Still a shame. Seems the power efficiency gain is greater than the performance loss.
nah, it's definitely to move more players over to the more expensive chip. Apple know how to segment their market.
Max, please do a battery comparison between M3,M3 Pro,M3 Max!
Which configuration of the M3 Pro Macbook Pro is this? They offer an 11cpu/14gpu and a 12cpu/18gpu core version. $1999 vs $2399. How do those compare?
It is 11/14 version, can be seen at 6:58.
I think it's funny they removed extra ram pads to prevent Dosdude from developing a cheap ram upgrade method.
these were nand flash memory , not the ram, the ram is on the cpu soc.
The DAW performance issues aren't limited to Logic. ProTools and Studio One also appear to not use E cores. Reaper and Cubase use both P/E cores and are very close in performance.
I am on an M1 max, so it is much less of an issue as it's 8/2 P/E. For those with a 50/50 split, it's really unfortunate.
Software developer with M1 Pro 16GB here and was thinking about upgrading this year but to see a real difference it would have to be one of the Max versions which is priced a bit to high in my opinion. If it could (really) replace my gaming PC it would be another question, but for now I am holding out one more year. Hopefully we will see a more mature 3nm process and maybe some other upgrades besides the chips. Space black looks nice though
Same here, M1 Pro 14, with 16 GB. No need to upgrade.
Similar situation here, I'd really like to get rid of windows by selling my gaming PC and upgrading my m2 air 8GB to an M3 max, but for now it seems a bit too early to do that. The hardware is already pretty decent, but it's still a gamble as long as we need to use GPT/crossover instead of native ports.
@@sm0nk420 with 8gb you will be short on that actually
@@idontcare_wtf Well, I initially intended to only migrate my music production workflows to the M2 air, I never intended it to take over all the workloads except for gaming, but it handled the other workloads much better than I expected, so I did. But it's using a lot of swap which will eventually grind through the SSD, so I'd need 16 gigs of ram to be safe from doing that. If I'm upgrading though, I think I'll go for the M3 max instead, and sell my gaming pc altogether and settle for translation layers until more native ports are out. I'll lose some framerates in the early stages, but I'll have a much more stable system that costs a lot less power. But I'm still just slowly getting to being committed to do that :D
You should not compare just video export, it is almost the same on all new macs. You should compare, noise reduction, optical flow or any demanding task.
Great video. So pleased with your results. Some reviewers were quick to say the M3 pro was a 'dud' (i.e no better than M2 pro) but you have shown how good it is. Do you think the 16" M3 pro would be much different, maybe thermally better? I upgraded from 2019 Intel MBP so M3 pro MBP is 300% faster on Geekbench score.
Bigger chassis means better thermal normally.
I upgrade from a dual core i5 from 2014... M3pro and 36 of ram. Don't know the percentage but I think is unreal boost 😅
@@davide88rn nice and plenty of ram there.😀 The point is the M3 is an upgrade to tempt out the intel MacBook owners not so much M1 or M2 MacBook owners
@@pauljazzman408 I'm one of those, I would like to wait for an M3 air but I need the laptop now so I'll go all in for an m3pro. I hope is not too much bigger around the world that the air
@@davide88rn if you’re considering the air then the base M3 pro would be a step up. I was really referring to the M3 Pro MacBook Pro (pro pro pro)
I come from a 2019 Macbook Pro 16inch with the strongest i7 and graphics card back then. I can now plug this pc to a monitor without the fans kicking in. I did literally nothing and just let it plugged into my monitor and the machine was running hot after time. On two monitors the fan kicked in so fast.
The difference is even smaller between them if you compare 12 core vs 12 core instead of 10 core vs 11 core.
M2 pro 12 core /19 core 16gb/1tb is the best value tbh
Was the m2 been used before? My m1pro had a dramatic decrease in battery life, so maybe this is the case here too
It seems these days "professionals" are never happy. Which is a shame because there is so much joy to be found in feeling happy. Apple would be foolish not to increase the performance.
Coming from intel(mostly music production), i was basically forced to get the m3max..or get a m2 pro.
look forward to see a solid benchmark of M3 Max 16" compared M1 Max and/or M2 Max^^ (gaming too)
if gaming is a priority you ought to look elsewhere
M3 Pro is the perfect system for a guy like me who just went in the apple mac eco system. The base m3 pro is good because it balances performance and price. It doesn't make sense to buy any other for the use case
A common theme for the gpu, is that it is generally slower in rasterization and compute tasks, but faster in RT workloads, if you test games, gfx bench, UE5, the M3 pro is in unfortunately general slower. Kind of a sidegrade this generation as the base M2 Pro was never slower than the full M1 pro. But if your workload revolves around RT then it’s a no brainer
I mentioned in another comment but the GPU is slower because there are just fewer GPU cores on the M3 Pro. The base model M3 Pro in particularly only has 14 GPU core which is a fair bit lower than M2 Pro base (16 cores). From reviews etc, I think the fully maxed out M3 Pro (18 GPU cores) should perform better than maxed M2 Pro (19 GPU cores) across the board, because the M3 GPU should be strictly better than M2 GPU per core. The dynamic caching feature is there to explicitly make video game / rendering faster as it allows for better utilization of the hardware. (It's harder to write video game shaders that can do that without this feature)
I pulled the plug for M3P and glad that this is my machine... space black color is amazing.
And for $200 more, I think the M3 Pro with 12-Core CPU and 18-Core GPU is going to be a killer machine, specially when it comes out into the Mac Mini 😍
I'd love to see a comparison between these two options.
Ahora la pregunta es: cual recomiendas entre el MACBOOK AIR M2 o MACBOOK PRO M3 ?? Tengo un macbook pro mid 2012 y ya está un poco lento (a pesar que tiene mejoras de SSD y RAM)... Saludos
I can see the M3 Pro not being worth it if you have an M2 pro or even M1 pro for some people, but as I'm going to be coming from an intel i5 macbook pro i think the M3 will be well worth the money, even if its just for the color alone haha
As someone who took delivery of a new 14-inch M2 pro on September 29 (upgrading from a 2014 MacBook Air); this new M3 family of MacBook Pros has been an unexpected and interesting release (lol).
It seems as though apple silicon has bought the mac out of it's slumber, and back onto the 'noticeable improvements every year' bandwagon that iPhones and iPads have experienced since 2010. This is good. Anytime someone needs a new mac, apple will now have good products on offer that will comfortably run the latest software for years to come. We'll just have to get used to apple's regular 'tick, tick, tick' of noticeable and iterative improvements that the mac, honestly, hasn't seen for years.
Was waiting for that comparison and really skeptical about all that criticism before even testing it.
Respect for the “We were wrong”!
they are always wrong. Dont watch early reviews. Wait 2 weeks to save yourself the time with all these RUclips view hustlers.
Just bought a MacBook Pro 16 m1 1TB from local clearance for $1000 after tax. M1 Pro is dirty cheap now, very few reasons to go for the latest.
After not wanting to jump onto the new M1 and dismissing the M2 as an M1.5, I finally jumped in on the M3 w/ a MacBook Pro 14” base M3 w/ 16GB RAM and 1TB storage, which I’ll get to check out next week.
Not 18GB RAM?
@@The12th_ That's only on the Pro/Max
I get stuck on the fact that M2 Pro's 16gb ram is 200gb/s and M3 Pro's 18gb ram is 150gb/s. Which is actually better in terms of ram?? Less information can travel at once with M3, .. but it can.. store more information to be used at any given time compared to M2.. am I understanding this correctly?
So as long as you have software that can take advantage of hardware raytracing, the Pro is a complete beast compared to its predecessor. If not then it's a lot closer.
The wall paper on M3 pro is predominantly black so it might save battery.
apple calculated that the TSMC N3B node would be better than it turned out, so now apple is in a precarious situation
MacBook Pro M3 has fewer transistors than MacBook Pro M2 less bandwidth, fewer ports, fewer fans which causes problems with heat development so that the cpu throttles to mention some changes for the worse for the M3 chip
externally, Apple made no changes to the MacBook Pro 2023
also MacBook Pro and Air need a major overhaul, the last one I think was in 2019
The I Mac also need a major overhaul that it still uses a lightning cable for the accessories, this says something about how often Apple updates
M2 Pro has 40 billion transistors, 200GB/s bandwidth
M3 pro has 37 billion transistors 150GB/s of bandwidth
Not the increase transistor density by about 33% compared to 5 nm TSMC states you should get from 5 nm to 3 nm
"according to TSMC has stated that its 3 nm chips will reduce power consumption by 25-30% at the same speed, increase speed by 10-15% at the same amount of power and increase transistor density by about 33% compared to its previous 5 nm"
but it didn't happen with the N3B node and it affected the M3 for TSMC N3B is not good but apple had no choice but to use this
fuse.wikichip.org/news/7375/tsmc-n3-and-challenges-ahead/?
the 3 nm node apple uses is far from fully developed so the TSMC N3B node is not much better than the M2 node which is based TSMC N5P
even if apple wants the consumer to believe it and try to get customers to buy products based on TSMC N3B just because these are manufactured on 3nm but an unfinished one with a bad prestandard
that new nodes have problems is nothing new just look at Intel
That the N3B node had problems you could already see on the A17 pro chip, it doesn't come close to what TSMC states that the 3 nano meter node should be able to achieve neither in energy efficiency nor in performance and Apple's M3 chip is based on the A17 pro architecture
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 which, according to tests, has the same or better capacity than Apple's M2 chip
those who developed the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 are all former managers of apple's groundbreaking M chip but they got tired of apple's management
Qualcomm Snapdragon is based on TSMC N4 nodes which are now well proven and have good yield
as it stands now the TSMC N4 node is no worse than the TSMC N3B node so Qualcomm's new Snapdragon using TSMC N4 is logical
apple took a chance and jumped on the N3 node too early
with the consequence that this performs worse than what a 3nm node should do according to TSMC and what apple hoped for
TSMC N3B has a very bad yield rate of just 55%, far below the standard which makes this extremely expensive to manufacture now Apple only paying for qualified circuits
TSMC pay the rest TSMC sees it as a development cost to get a working 3 nm production with a reasonable yield rate
technode.com/2023/07/17/tsmcs-3nm-yield-rate-reportedly-just-55-with-apple-only-paying-for-qualified-circuits/
when TSMC has better control of 3nm manufacturing and better yield, which TSMC will probably get with the N3P node that TSMC expects to come out in 2024
i had waited until apple release the M4 or the M5 chip before i had upgraded to a new apple MacBook Pro and kept my M1 M2 I MacBook Pro these are enough for 99% of all users
there are too few advantages to upgrade to an M3 machine at the price apple wants
I'll end with something funny
ruclips.net/video/BeHs9eGzsB8/видео.htmlsi=QzTT4Jv2Aer3L7uE
Nice post!
Interesting data but I disagree with your assessment. I actually think that they anticipated this, and that is why they wanted customers used to binned chips as a standard for Apple devices. Really Apple Silicon has a built in tolerance for faults due to the price brackets and upgrade path of the new systems. They don’t need to maximize yield if most customers are buying binned chips, and very little of their chips ever go to waste with this strategy.
And with the cost of the unbinned chips I don’t see profit margins being an issue, and by the time 3nm lives up to its potential they will have the potential to shrink and provide significant power to their mobile devices. An iPad, iPhone, and MacBook with 3nm, with less power draw, more transistors, and less heat is a future they feel is worth gambling on. Especially with the Vision pro launching soon.
@@ghost-user559
your analysis may well be more correct than mine
what speaks against your analysis is that these decisions are made many years in advance
now apple is working on the architecture of the M6, M7 chip the M5 is already completed
so i maintain that apple and TSMC thought the N3B node would perform better than it did
once apple realized that wasn't the case, it was too late to change the architecture
but apple somehow managed to get TSMC to take the full cost and only paying for qualified circuits so this was a good deal for apple
and this should reduce the cost for apple by huge amounts, but unfortunately this is not reflected in reduced prices for the customer
remember m3/M3 pro there is only 200 buck difference : 2 ventil , 3 thunderbolt , 2 external screen , 20% perf
For lightroom, creating previews is the thing that takes the most time. That would be a really useful, real world benchmark for photographers, and used far more than exporting. Otherwise some great comparisons. Thanks
Same for video editing. I wish we would see how responsive timelines are, stabilization and noise reduction process smoothness and motion design tests in AE. I don’t care about a few minutes or seconds difference i export time personally
@exactly! I'm having such a hard time deciding because I'm a Windows user looking into getting a Mac for my AE motion design work but I need to make sure if it's worth getting the more expensive option. I understand it's almost always better but I'd be putting such a huge dent on my savings. 😅
What are the specs of M3 Pro in this video? How much RAM?
18gb ram
For making the battery comparison fair, you should have used the same wallpapers on both machines. The dark one on the M3 Pro MBP should be much more power saving on the miniLED display 😊
it is affecting, but I guess the impact will not be dominating as this is a heavy duty test
@@MrZerg0403 In this case it may be true, but don‘t forget: Maksim cranked up the brightness to 100%, so the display will contribute significantly to the overall power consumption 🤓
But anyway: very good and interesting comparison 💚
I am deciding to by m3 or m3p purely on battery endurance. Still await for the comparison
@@MrZerg0403 Same for me 😂 I hope MAXTECH will test the battery enduramce using low power mode for the M3 flavour 🤩😌
Thinking about selling off my gaming computer to get a Mac. For normal computer programming, am I better off getting the M1 pro or paying for the M3? Everyone is saying no need to upgrade but I’d like to know if that applies to non-Mac holders as well.
6:51 I think the Metal Compute score is worse on M3 Pro because these are the base models. Base M2 Pro / M3 Pro have 16 and 14 GPU cores respectively, so it's a 12.5% reduction in core count for M3 Pro, which is a lot. If you get the fully maxed out M2 Pro / M3 Pro instead, they have 19 and 18 cores respectively (only 5.3% reduction in core count in M3 Pro), and from other benchmarks I have seen (e.g. from Ars Technica) I think the maxed out M3 Pro still produces better Geekbench Metal score, as each M3 GPU core is faster than the M2 ones.
8:20 The GPU performance improvement in M3 probably isn't due to ray tracing, as the Wild Life Extreme test you are doing doesn't use it I think (this way you get apples-to-apples comparison). It's probably due to generally more efficient GPU especially with the Dynamic Caching feature which allows apps/games to more fully utilize the hardware.
nice comment. Another thing that concerns me about the mbp 14" is whether I should get the m3 max on it. Does m3 max chip on it suffer throttling issue (compared to the 16"), like in previous gen max chip on 14" body?
@@tty2020 Yeah that's a good question. FWIW I think even on M1 Max, each increase in M1 Max core count produces better performance on the 14". They just aren't as good as the 16", but if you say compare 14" 32-core GPU M1 Max to 14" 24-core, the 32-core is still noticeably better (at least this is my observation playing multiplayer Baldur's Gate 3 with a friend side-by-side with identical settings/specs on 14" M1 Max MBPs other then 24 vs 32-core GPUs)
@@BrotherCheng Ah Max just had a new video out that answers exactly my question!
Fyi, lower transistor counts doesn’t mean slower. Could mean they optimized the layouts of the logic gates reducing propagation delays. So less transistor counts
I have an M1 Pro with 32GB and 1TB, it's my go to if I need battery life for a project. Expensive but I never had a problem with it! M3 does look promising!
need advice, what should i choose between M2 Pro 1TB vs M3 Pro 512GB (base model), the M2 Pro 1TB has higher Core, what should i choose? cause the price of both almost the same in my country
As with the 16" M1 Max MBP (which I own), your Mic test reveals the audio to be rather muffled. It's lacking in Loudness versus your regular Mic, as it is versus my own Lav Mic. I am always left wondering why that is. Is it some kind of noise reduction Apple is using? It makes it hard to record the screen on my MBP while talking into the MBP's Mics and later integrating that audio seamlessly into a video I am editing in FCPX, where most of the audio was shot using my LAV mic. Even after boosting the Gain and adding Loudness, the MBP audio still doesn't sound anywhere close to the Loudness and clarity of my regular LAV mic. What are your thoughts about that?
Please note that you were using a black wallpaper on M3 pro. Which reduces the power consumption since they are using amo led screens
Good Review. I have been using my new MBP M3 Pro equipped with the unbinned M3 Pro chip coupled to 36 GB of unified memory and 1 TB of SSD storage. This machine FLYs with all that ram. Suffice it to say, I am one happy new owner of a very nice Space Black 14" MBP. PS Windows 11 on ARM in a Parallels Desktop 19 virtual machine (configured to 4 CPU cores/8 GB or ram) boots in 9 seconds and useful work ia available after 15 seconds from initial boot up. I have been impressed.
Not sure why you'd be surprised by the photo exporting. You showed earlier that the read/write speed of the internal SSD was quicker on the M3 to begin with. As a professional photographer, 15 seconds of export time doesn't mean squat. I want to know that I can breeze through heavy edits in Lightroom Classic with no lag. I want to see how the M3 vs M2 with cataloging, preview building, etc. A simple export test doesn't show me anything, especially when that's primarily going to be read/write speed dictated.
Where can I get the Logic Pro benchmark to test for myself?
github.com/devMEremenko/XcodeBenchmark
As always your videos are great.
However I’ve got one request that nobody had tested yet.
For around the same price what’s best between MacBook 14” M3 Max binned 14 CPU 30 GPU with 96GB 300GB/sec at $3,999 vs M3 Max 16 CPU 30 GPU 64GB 400GB/sec at $3,899 ?
14 inches being more thermally constrained, is it better to have a less powerful chip with more memory or the full chip with 22GB less memory ?
Do 300GB/sec any slower than 400GB/sec in real life ?
Thanks in advance
I think the most telling thing here was the beta software that takes advantage of all the new features. Perhaps folks don’t know that, for instance, when Intel comes out with a new feature or instruction in new processors, they update the Intel Performance Primitives library to use that feature where it can be used. Until the software you’re using gets updated to use the new IPP that uses the new features, you won’t see the most performance increase everywhere.
All of that to say, run these tests again in, say, February, and you may have some different results. And for all the folks out there that need 140 tracks in Logic that can’t afford the extra cash for the Max chip… you need to learn to use your software better. Also, you’re not running a business, you are running a hobby.
Sooo is a MacBook Pro M3 Pro worth buying it? Please let me know with which specifications to get. My current laptop is from the year 2016 he😅
They intentionally reduced the number of cores because it was too fast😂
For the battery life, I think the wallpaper also is a factor. M3 has a darker background image compare to M2, hence M3 uses less power?
But such a big difference for just a wallpaper ?
@@LUKAS-bb4jc Yes, screen is more brighter hence drawing more power from the battery.
Great comparison! I hope the M3 Logic Pro performance can be fixed with a software update. Would it be possible for you guys to add Xcode and Unreal Engine to your comparison test plan for the M3Max?
Yes we will! The issue is that Xcode 15 no longer installs the iOS tools by default so the benchmark wasn’t working. We had to download an additional 7.2GB of files for the iOS tools.
Took way too long with our slow internet, so we had to skip it.
@@MaxTechOfficial Awesome! Thank you for these comparisons and tear downs. They really help me with deciding what to purchase. 👍
Im a fellow logic user and I am about to upgrade. We thinking m2 pro or m3 pro?
Overall if I were upgrading from Mac Mini I would buy the Macbook Pro M3 Pro 18 GB, 1 TB SSD. I find my 512 GB SSD on Mac Mini to be a problem doing very large video editing so 1 TB for me.
Your testing is always super informative. Thanks!
Finally a decent enough review about things that actually matter and not just clickbait nonesense
This is just the comparo I was looking for! I was leaning towards the refurbished M2 Pro, but now am leaning towards the M3 Pro. While not a big gamer per se, I would like to be able to play Baldur's Gate 3. Was worried about the reduced GPU cores on the M3. But it looks like it should handle it just fine, due to the results of all the other tests. Thanks for doing all these tests between the two. Now will keep looking for any deals I can find on the 14" M3 Macbook Pro. Because right now I do think the extra $$ will be worth it in the long run. Thanks!
tbh, i'm playing BG3 on my M1 Pro MBP at Larian's recommended settings (ultra to high) and it runs really well.
I just pulled the trigger on an open box m2 pro 14" for about $500 less than a new m3 pro 14" and after seeing this Im doubting I made the right call. apple rates them both with the same battery life but these guys got a huge difference.
unless you plan on using the ray-tracing cores for something, the new M3 Pro might not be faster in gaming.
You know what would be really AWESOME to see? A video doing a detailed comparison between a top spec Macbook Pro M3Max and a top spec Dell Precision 17"
Buenisimooo pensaba que la m2 pro y la m3 pro estaban a la par pero me equivoqué, como no tengo laptop en si, creo que si me convendrá mas la m3 pro, tocó invertir un poco mas pero se que valdrá la pena para los siguientes 6 años, tambien me gustó mucho la comparativa en cual se sobrecalentaba mas
Still rocking a early 2011 15"
MacBook Pro and still hasn't died!
Thinking of upgrading to a M3 16"
MacBook Pro but not sure what to get but really want to future proof it. Pro or just Max it?
I really enjoy your videos. This one was very interesting, especially the detailed comparison between the M2 Pro and M3 Pro. It was really helpful to learn about their temperature and battery life, as I was curious about that.
Could you please compare the M2 Max and M3 Max next? I'm looking forward to it.
Yes will have that on Wednesday, I believe.
@@MaxTechOfficial Can you please do a comparison with the m2 pro running on low power mode until flat vs the m3 running on low power mode until flat so we can see how much longer runtime the m3 pro gets on lower power mode vs the m2 pro on low power mode thanks.
I would love to see the 2019 MacBook Pro (intel) vs the m3 pro - nobody has done this yet (and that’s what I’m upgrading from and would love to see)!!
Thank you, I was waiting for this review!
I think that for some people, how well, some Virtualisation software works on M3 is a key issue. Mac Intel virtualisation is a big plus for some software, like Revit that people use via Parallels x86 with dedicated AMD graphic cards. How that software works on Macs with M3? Parallels for Apple Silicon runs Windows for ARM, not the x86 version.
Nothing interesting has happened since M1 Pro Macs were released imo, having 10% or 20% performance increase here and there is just not enough. At this rate, I might have to wait for something like M8 for a reason to upgrade.
Well we see 15-20 % improvements each year while having same or better battery life. In case of Max, even 50 % jump just in 10 months. That is something unheard of with Intel (not just on Macs, in general). And in case of Max, it's 100 % higher than M1 Pro. Double the performance in just 2 years.
For many people this means huge, huge time savings. Sure, if you have som peak at 5 minutes taxing the processor, shaving that time to 3 minutes might not mean anything. But if you do that every day multiple times, that's a lot of time saved. If you are doing some intensive calculations for say 2 hours (ie blender animations), cutting that to 45 minutes with RT rendering is HUGE boost.
nice m3 archtitecture; creates a noice balance of efficeiny and performance
but, me good with m1 pro for a looooooong time
For someone who is doing time intensive work, the M3 would be an advantage. But for the average non time intensive work, the M2 is more than sufficient. It all depends what you are going to be using the laptop for.
will m3 pro be good for heavy video edit, photoshop, game development?
Anyone with a M1/M2 Pro has no need to upgrade, this machines can last around 5-7 years with no issues, I have a 16" M1 Pro from week 1 and it's still blazing fast for all I need with full speed SSD and 200GB/s memory bandwidth. I think maybe an M5/M6 Pro will be a nice upgrade for me in the future.
Overall some gains with year over year bumps, but this was a bigger year for the change to 3nm IMO. Plus the M3 Ultra looks to be an absolute beast when it comes to market next year.
This has already been explained. Low yield means that the 2nm wafers have around 40-50% of chips that have subpar cores, so Apple has had to bin them rather than e-waste them and probably add more efficiency cores as the 3nm process has higher yield with the small cores. If Apple had not done this, we would have to wait 6-12 months for yields to get better and by then, the N3E/N3P M4 would be getting ready. Sometimes things don't go to plan but rather than give up again (already delayed by 6 months), they have given us the first taste of 3nm.
Comparing refurbished MacBook Pros, the M3 is just $100 more than the M2 Pro with similar specs. Seems like an easy choice to go for the M3, right?
Thanks for including Figma in your test! 👍🧑💻
I’d like to see a comparison between the binned M1 Pro vs binned M3 Pro. Also M3 Pro vs M3 Max, which I assume is coming soon. Most people upgrading are coming from M1 or older, so the comparison to M2 is incremental at best.
This is a pleasant surprise in favor of the M3 Pro chip MBP. For the M4 Pro chip, I think they should add a couple more p-cores to the unbinned chip making it 8 p-cores and 6 efficiency cores.
You mean the M2? You’d be insane to buy the M3, pay more get less? That’s just dumb.
@@marlo8850 I was saying that I was pleasantly surprised that the M3 pro chip model here did so well than what was originally talk about. I'm not even thinking about buying any M3 model because yes you do get less here thanks to Apple's degrade to this MBP model. I'm personally waiting for the M4 line up and hopefully they go back to where the bandwidth and other specs were like with the M1 and M2 models.
@@XAV-117 my purchase was a windows Laptop more powerful and cheaper than this thing, youre coping and I can chose how much ram I want, I currently have 64Gb or the Apple equivalent of a 2000$ option. I also have 8TB of replacable SSDs which are way faster than the ones apple uses.
@@fitzman7 thats fair, id keep it a bit longer than that, at least 4 years
@marlo8850 Sorry trying to follow you based on what I said as to what you commented. What do you mean keep it longer than that?
Damn… on the fence as wether to choose M3 Pro or M1/M2 Pro. Coming initially from Retina 2013 and made the worst upgrade ever in 2018 with the intel 6 cores. It is a hell editing A7S3 /FX6 footage or drone footage on it. It is ARM time but those machine are more expensive than ever
I'd like to have seen the RAM memory comsumption on both machines. Looking forward for a RAM STRESS TEST 18GB vs 36GB!! 🔥
You Guys are killing me 😭😭😭😭😭
I bought an 8 GB M1 Pro in ‘21, and I LOVE it!!!! I never even thought about getting 16gb. I came from a 2013 mac with 4GB so 8gb was a huge upgrade and seemed perfect.
I got an M2, and I swear my M1 was faster, and it was freezing, so I returned it yesterday.
Now, I’m going to get the M3, and I do not feel confident in my purchase at all 😢
It seems like all reviewers make the We were WRONG video nowadays🤣😂😂
For the speakers test. Just close your eyes and see if you can feel any difference or when the speaker changes. That's the only way one can make out the difference between these 2 speakers in this video. I think they are the same set of speakers in both. No difference.
Specs on paper do not always tell the full story. I never really thought the M3 Pro would be a downgrade. It made logical sense to me Apple picked up performance in other ways to make the chip more efficient. Thats why there is so much more battery life. The M3 Pro is working smarter and not harder.
I'm not really surprised by the FCP last of difference. Nothing in FCP will yet make use of the new GPU technologies and exporting largely is tethered to the built in hardware encoders. There are other ways a NLE utilizes hardware however and exporting is not really much of a benchmark anymore. Exporting only represents a small portion of our process of editing at the very end and in reality it doesn't really matter much if it takes two minutes vs 3 minutes. Where NLE performance really matters is what the system can handle playing back in realtime before falling apart. We need more benchmarks like that. Like the Logic test where we see how much each system can handle before it can no longer playback.
Cope