- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
Geez, I just bought my M2!
Enjoy your M2 for what you’re using it for but you’ll have to accept that you’ll never be able to keep up.
With that said, my M1 is still way more than I need.
May as well throw it out now. Actually I’ll take it off your hands and recycle it for free if you want to just send it to me.
I’m excited to see the M3 and what it can do, especially with the rumours from March about the M3’s benchmarks on GeekBench.
According to the [GeekBench 6] test, the M3 performed over 20% faster than both chips [M2 Max and M2 Pro] and scored 3,472 points in the single-core tests and 13,676 points in the multi-core tests. The numbers place the M3 above its predecessor, the M2 Max and M2 Pro [even though the M3 has fewer cores].
Source: https://hypebeast.com/2023/3/apple-m3-chipset-performance-estimation-report
Multi core is impressive but man, that single core score. If true it’s going to signal Apple pulling away from the rest of the industry like they did with mobile chips.
I’m going to wait to see the specs but I’m considering replacing my M1 Max with the M3 Max (when it comes out later) if the new “3nm” process gives significant gains. Do I need an update? Absolutely not, I love my M1 but upgrading has become fun again in a way it stopped being many years ago (~2014-ish or earlier) on Intel.
The M* line of MBP are just so awesome to use.
Gurman does not specifically say Apple will hold an October event, or whether new Macs would arrive via press release.
I seriously doubt it will be just a press release. If anything deserved a press release it was the M2 but no way Apple is going to release a jump to 3nm without an event.