I’ll update this as I have time to, but for starters, rounded to the nearest 50:Ģ021 16” M1 Max, 8TB: ~7,350 write, ~5,500 readĢ021 16” M1 Pro, base: ~4,800 write, ~4,950 readĢ020 13” M1, 2TB model: ~3,150 write, ~2,850 readĢ019 16” Intel, 8TB: ~2,150 write, ~2,850 readĢ017 15” Intel, 1TB: ~1,650 write, ~1,700 readĢ013 13” Intel, 250GB: write test starts out around 270 to 300 MB/s but quickly drops to ~110 MB/s, read is ~460 MB/s. Blackmagic RAW Speed Test: 12:1 8K Metal 12:1 8K CPU Photoshop PugetBench: Overall Score Premiere Pro PugetBench: Overall Score CrossMark: Overall Productivity Creativity. The MacBook Pro 14-inch with M2 Pro hit 5,293 MBps reads and 6,168 Mbps. That said, I use it very infrequently, typically only when I encounter a need for the legacy OS. The Blackmagic disk speed test gauges SSD performance by measuring both read speed and write speed in MBps. The test was performed using Blackmagics Disk Speed Test application on an M1 Max (10-core CPU, 32-core GPU) model with 64GB of RAM and a 2TB flash drive. ![]() ![]() The MacBook Air is running Sierra, and it’s still blazingly-fast for day-to-day usage with its 1.3 GHz Core i5, 4GB RAM, and 250 GB SSD… as long as you don’t try to edit video or have a ton of applications open at once.
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