

- #Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister update#
- #Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister pro#
- #Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister mac#
#Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister pro#
I just want and need to be able to keep several large Final Cut Pro projects on the SSD at the same time. Especially for a MacBook, especially when travel starts up again. That way, when I'm round-tripping the audio for the a-roll before I start cutting it, or I'm finalizing the thumbnail while rendering, I have plenty of headroom for them all.īut also the storage. I don't think I really need 64GB, but 32GB at least, just to have some headroom for Final Cut Pro, Photoshop, iZotope RX8. Even after seeing some blooming on the latest 12.9-inch iPad Pro, the HDR experience is just so much better, I covet it on the MacBook Pro… Also because I'm considering moving these videos to HDR, now that the workflow for HDR videos is getting… if not easier, then more consistent. And I really, really hope it's a mini-LED display.

I want the bigger display for Final Cut Pro. What I'm waiting onįor me, personally, I'm still on the 2019 16-inch Intel MacBook Pro, and I don't plan on upgrading until there's a 16-inch M1X MacBook Pro. So, it's absolutely something you should factor into your buying decisions going forward. And that disparity or lack of feature parity- is something that's only going to continue - only going to increase - over time. The ability to bring new iOS features to the Mac, day and date, something Apple has been… just terribad - a teraflop of bads - about in the past, is a big reason for Apple's transition to the M-series. That includes Live Text, which does real-time, all-the-time image to character translation through machine learning models running on the ANE without any hit to CPU or GPU performance, also Portrait Mode on FaceTime, on-device dictation… even stuff that's currently just too stuttery on Intel, like the big Google Earth globe animation. The first of which doesn't exist on the T2's A10-generation silicon, and the second of which is just four generations less capable. Those are the features that depend on the M1's A14-generation silicon, including the 16-core Neural Engine and image signal processor. Which also means they'll ship with macOS 12 Monterey… and with features that aren't coming to Intel Macs… never mind not soon but not ever. Macos Monterey (Image credit: Apple / iMore)
#Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister mac#
With the Mac mini Pro and iMac Pro salted in somewhere from then on or in between. So it could be earlier, could be November again like last year. Typically, Apple holds an October event for Macs, but since 2021 is the… Joel Schumacher of sequel years, Apple can and will still hold mini-events any damn month they feel like it. The MacBook Pros, we could see as early as this fall. Though, since that's likely going to be the last Mac to go Apple silicon, maybe only right at the WWDC 2022 deadline, who knows?
#Apple wwdc m1x macbook prohollister update#
Now, if your Pro workflow is still Intel-bound, if the software or plugins you're using still haven't been moved over to Apple Silicon - Like the Canon XF AVC codec I'm using for these videos! - especially any in-house or in-studio custom code for your DIY Mandalorean Volume sets, or whatever, then you may actually want an Intel Mac that'll last you as long as possible, so you can transition to an M3 or M4 generation Mac when you and all your software are really good and ready to.Įspecially a Mac Pro, which I was guessing would see at least one more update to the latest Xeon and Big Navi chipsets, but so far, so no joy. If it's a Mac Pro - the only Mac Pro - then, hopefully, everything the current Intel Mac Pro can do but in smaller, more massively multicore M-series package. It probably won't work for Target Display Mode, RIP, but certainly will with the upcoming Universal Control and AirPlay to Mac features. If it's an iMac - a high-end iMac - again, similar high-end options but maybe an even bigger display, up to 32-inches bigger. You know, for you NASA… or Ozymandias types…

If it's a Mac mini - a high-end Mac mini - you'll have similar higher-end options, including an easier time hooking up more displays. Also, rumor has it, more ports - MagSafe, HDMI, SDXC. 32 GB or 64GB RAM options, up to 8TB storage options. If it's a MacBook Pro you're waiting on - a high-end MacBook Pro - the 13-inch should be going to 14-inches, and both that and the 16-inch might be getting mini-LED displays for true high dynamic range output - HDR.
