expiredPharmDao posted Aug 27, 2022 05:08 AM
Item 1 of 6
Item 1 of 6
expiredPharmDao posted Aug 27, 2022 05:08 AM
Apple MacBook Pro (2021): M1 Pro, 14" Liquid Retina XDR, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD
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Productivity is very subjective. Old school .exes, you're better off with Windows, but if you're not living in the 90s, most things run in a browser these days.
https://www.costco.com/macbook-pr...13178.html
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16" MBP on the secondhand market are selling for a song. Nobody wants Intel anymore, so if you do, you should be able to find many options.
I'm guessing that is why people are selling those models cheap. That and the mostly useless Touch Bar making the machine less desirable.
I'm guessing that is why people are selling those models cheap. That and the mostly useless Touch Bar making the machine less desirable.
I'm guessing that is why people are selling those models cheap. That and the mostly useless Touch Bar making the machine less desirable.
iwheela
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I don't turn up the speakers all the way but they could stand to have higher volume overall.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank nartana1
Believe me, I'd like to "call BS" on the testing as well. I've used Apple notebooks and tablets for nearly two decades professionally and personally. I want the M1/M2 products to work for what I do but I need footage to transfer at the same *real-world* speeds as every other machine I use. I don't expect speeds as listed on paper, no rational person does. But, I think we all expect a 2022 MacBook Pro to transfer around the same speeds as 2018 MacBook Pro, or a PC Desktop, or any other USB-C 3.1 Gen2 workflow.
The post of mine you replied to contains multiple links to multiple data sets, all of which are consistent with the following documentation:
https://eclecticlight.c
I'm not sure if any of us provided "pictures" but there's lots and lots of *data* and it's got *nothing* to do with what's "on paper" but rather, what's relative to every machine's I/O capabilities in real-world usage. Every other machine does "x" transfer speeds while the M1/M2 machines consistently lag behind by 20-50 percent. That's inconsequential for some, but it's a non-starter for others. Nobody's saying you should not buy a M1/M2 machine. In fact, I love *every other thing* about the M2 Air that I owned for a week. But the I/O speeds ought to keep up with 4-5 year old Apple machines in rea-world usage, right?
I feel like I provided solid citations of really solid testing and data points. It was all right there. I've added an additional link, above. Best I can do.
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