Apple: Apple Mac Studio review
Move over Mac Pro
The Mac Studio is a fantastic addition to the Mac family. Its laser-like focus
on creative professionals means it won’t be for everyone, but if you’re after
a powerful and compact creative workstation, you’ll love this.
Check Amazon
Pros:
+Compact
+Powerful
+Plenty of ports
+Essentially silent
Cons:
-Pricey
-Non-upgradable
-Mouse and keyboard not included
SPEC SHEET
Here is the Mac Studio configuration sent to TechRadar for review:
- CPU: Apple M1 Ultra (20-core)
- Graphics: Integrated 64-core GPU
- RAM: 128GB Unified SDRAM
- Storage: 2TB PCIe SSD
- Ports: 6x Thunderbolt 4 (USB-C), 2x USB-A, HDMI, 10Gb Ethernet, 3.5mm headphone jack, SDXC card slot
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5
- Weight: 7.9 pounds (3.6kg)
- Size: 3.7 x 7.7 x 7.7-inches (9.5 x 19.7 x 19.7 cm)
When Apple revealed the Mac Studio at its March Event, most folks were taken
by surprise. There had been rumors about a new MacBook Air, and possibly a new
M2 chip, but no one expected an entirely new Mac.
But that’s exactly what we got. After years of feeling like Apple lost
interest in its Mac devices, preferring to lavish attention on its iPhones and
iPads, the company seems to have fallen back in love with computers. Apple
Macs are now some of the most exciting devices the company is currently
producing, and the new Apple Studio Display is a welcome part of the
family.
A huge part of this is the M1 chip. In 2020, Apple ditched Intel and released
a MacBook Air, MacBook Pro and Mac mini all powered by its own M1 hardware. It
was a huge success, offering excellent performance and power efficiency, and
in late 2021, Apple expanded on the silicon with the M1 Pro and M1 Max chips,
which offered drastically more performance, and launched alongside the MacBook
Pro 14-inch (2021) and MacBook Pro 16-inch (2021).
The Mac Studio, being a desktop PC aimed at professional creatives, comes with
a choice of the M1 Max or the brand-new M1 Ultra – which is essentially two M1
Max chips connected via a low-latency interface. This doubles the amount of
unified memory, as well as the number of CPU and GPU cores, and in some cases
offers almost twice the performance of the M1 Max.
The M1 Ultra-equipped Mac Studio, then, is for people who need a PC to hande
heavy-duty workloads, such as rendering complex 3D scenes and animations or
quickly compiling and testing code across numerous virtualized devices (to
check how a game works on various generations of smartphones, for example).
While not quite the most powerful Mac Apple has ever made, it’s certainly
encroaching on the Mac Pro’s space.
Price and availability
All this power comes at a price, and the M1 Max version starts at $1,999 /
£1,999 / AU$3,099. That doesn’t seem outrageously expensive, but if you want
one with an M1 Ultra – and we imagine most people considering a Mac Studio
will be after that version – then you’ll need to shell out at least $3,999 /
£3,999 / AU$6,099.
The Mac Studio isn’t for mainstream users, but if you’re a professional
looking for a powerful PC, then it certainly has its charms.
Chief among those is the design. The Mac Studio is an impressively compact
machine, around the size of one and a half Mac minis stacked on top of each
other. This makes it easy to place on a desk or behind a monitor, making it
look good in home offices and studios. It’s also easily portable if you want
to take it between locations. The combination of compact design and powerful
performance goes a long way to justifying the high price tag, and the fact
that Apple has made such a powerful and small PC really is impressive.
Mac Studio on wooden desk
(Image credit: Future)
As we like to see with PCs for creative professionals, Apple has included a
good selection of ports, including an all-important SD Card reader in the
front.
In our tests, the Mac Studio performs beautifully, handling 8K video editing
extremely well and utilizing advanced AI-powered photo editing tools in Adobe
Photoshop. Even more impressive, it does all this quietly – a testament to the
power efficiency of Apple’s M1 chips, as well as the thermal design of the Mac
Studio.
If you’re a creative professional looking for a powerful and compact PC to
work on, the Mac Studio is going to be a very tempting investment. Apple
should be commended for what it’s achieved with this, but for mainstream
users, you’re probably better off looking elsewhere.
Price and availability
The Mac Studio starts at a hefty $1,999 / £1,999 / AU$3,099 for the model with
the M1 Max, certainly making it a pricey prospect.
Meanwhile, the Mac Studio with the new M1 Ultra chip, 64GB of unified memory
and 1TB SSD will cost a huge $3,999 / £3,999 / AU$6,099. This could put a lot
of people off.
If you want to go all-out, the maximum spec with the M1 Ultra, 128GB memory
and 8TB SSD will cost you an eye-watering $7,999 / £7,999 / AU$12,099. That's
still cheaper than the most expensive Mac Pro, however.
Apple’s ageing Mac Pro workstation starts at $5,999 / £5,499 / AU$9,999, with
configuration options that can add tens of thousands of dollars or pounds to
the price. Compared to this, the Mac Studio looks a lot better value for
people looking for a professional-grade creative workstation, especially
considering the performance benefits the M1 Ultra brings.
The price of the Mac Studio also shows that this isn’t a device aimed at
mainstream users. Instead, this is strictly for PC professionals, especially
in the creative industries. For other people, the latest Mac mini (M1, 2020)
is a much better proposition, and starts at $699 / £699 / AU$1,099.
However, if you need the power of the M1 Ultra chip, the Mac Studio is
currently the only device that comes with it, and it’s available to pre-order
right now, with deliveries starting March 18. However, we’re already seeing
huge demand for the device, leading to longer wait times for delivery.
(Image credit: Future)
Design
If you're a fan of the Mac mini, then you'll like the design of the Mac
Studio; it looks like a beefed-up version of its little brother. It's built
from a single aluminum extrusion, and has a square footprint of 7.7 inches and
a height of 3.7 inches, making this an impressively compact computer
considering the power on offer.
Compared to other workstation desktop PCs, the size of the Mac Studio is
remarkable, and is even smaller than the Corsair One i300, one of our favorite
compact PCs. This is due to the M1 Max or M1 Ultra chips that power the Mac
Studio. Apple’s M1 SoC (system on a chip) includes the processor (CPU),
graphics (GPU) and unified memory, among other things, in a single package
that takes up less space than the separate components powering a traditional
PC would.
We’ll go into what the M1 Ultra brings performance-wise in a bit, but the
bottom line is that you’re just not going to get another PC of this
performance level in such a compact chassis. For people who have a small
amount of space to work on, or who like minimalist setups, the Mac Studio is
going to really appeal.
(Image credit: Future)
While both the M1 Max and M1 Ultra Mac Studios have the same dimensions of 3.7
x 7.7 x 7.7-inches (9.5 x 19.7 x 19.7 cm), the M1 Ultra model is noticeably
heavier, weighing 7.9 pounds (3.6kg) compared to the M1 Max model’s weight of
5.9 pounds (2.7kg). This is because the M1 Ultra needs a large copper thermal
module, while the M1 Max, which runs cooler, uses a lighter aluminum heatsink.
But even the heavier Mac Studio is perfectly easy to carry around and install
wherever you like, especially compared to traditional desktop PCs.
All that power in such a small space does have heat implications, and to keep
things cool, double-sided blowers channel airflow through the Mac Studio.
Combine that with the power-efficient design of the M1 Max and M1 Ultra chips
and you have a small PC that can handle intensive tasks without overheating.
It’s certainly an impressive feat.
The Mac Studio also comes with a good range of connectivity options. There's
four Thunderbolt 4 ports, a 10Gb Ethernet port, two USB-A ports, an HDMI port
and audio jack on the back, plus Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0.
An SD card slot on the front, along with two USB-C ports, round out the
offering and should give most people plenty of scope for connecting their
peripherals and devices; it’s good to see Apple continue to offer plenty of
connectivity with its professional-grade hardware. If you have the M1 Ultra
model, you can plug in four Pro Display XDR monitors and a 4K TV as well.
The front-facing ports make plugging stuff into them nice and easy if the Mac
Studio is stashed away somewhere, but the power button is on the back, which
can be a bit fiddly.
The power supply is also built into the Mac Studio, so there’s no ugly
external power brick, which some compact PCs use to try to keep overall size
down as much as possible.
If you watched Apple’s March Event, where it announced the Mac Studio
alongside the Studio Display monitor, you’ll have likely heard the term
‘modular’ bandied about. Before you get too excited -- Is the Mac Studio
upgradable? Can multiple Mac Studios be daisy-chained together like Mac minis
can into some uber-powerful super computer? -- we have some bad news. By
‘modular’, Apple just meant that the Mac Studio doesn’t come with a display,
or a keyboard or mouse. Yeah.
While buying a computer without a monitor is commonplace, some people will be
peeved that the $3,999 / £3,999 / AU$6,099 doesn’t come with a keyboard and
mouse. Apple will say this allows you to use the Mac Studio with the keyboard
and mouse you already have and rely on, but if you don’t currently have those
peripherals, you’ll need to factor in the price of extra peripherals. There’s
no HDMI cable, either, so if you don’t have any of those to hand, you’re going
to have a very expensive – though undeniably stylish – paperweight until you
do.
BENCHMARKS
Here’s how the Apple Mac Studio performed in our suite of benchmark tests:
- Cinebench CPU: Single-Core: 1,519; Multi-core: 30,054
- Geekbench 5 Single-Core: 1,776; Multi-Core: 32,637
- Handbreak (1080p, Fast): 54.53fps
- Blender monster: 5,697
- Blender junkshop: 270
- Blender classroom: 265
When Apple announced the Mac Studio, it threw out some big claims, including
that it's 50% faster than the MacBook Pro 13-inch with M1 chip, and offers 3.4
faster graphics than the most powerful iMac.
It's also apparently 80% faster than a Mac Pro with a 28-core Intel Xeon
processor, and can support up to 18 streams of 8K ProRes video.
These boasts refer to the capabilities of the Mac Studio with the new M1 Ultra
chip, which is the model we have for review, and likely to be the model most
serious creatives are tempted by.
Before we get into the details of how the Mac Studio lives up to Apple’s
claims, or if it falls short, we should give a shout out to the M1 Ultra,
which really is remarkable. The M1 Ultra is essentially two M1 Max chips
connected together using a super-fast and low latency connection known as
UltraFusion.
When the M1 Max launched alongside the new MacBook Pro 14-inch and MacBook Pro
16-inch late last year as the most powerful chip Apple had ever designed, it
actually featured the UltraFusion connection – which no one spotted.
This clever bit of forward thinking has allowed Apple to produce the M1 Ultra
without altering the M1 Max. This means greater yields, as Apple doesn’t have
to make new chips from scratch, which should avoid the sort of stock shortages
we’ve seen with other chips recently.
With the Mac Studio aimed at creative professionals, and using the M1 Ultra
comprised of two M1 Max chips, which have already shown how good they are for
creative workloads in the new MacBooks, it’s perhaps little surprise to learn
that the Mac Studio is a formidable machine when it comes to video editing,
coding and 3D modeling, in particular.
When it comes to video, the Mac Studio puts in performance that easily rivals,
and sometimes surpasses, desktop PCs with discrete professional graphics
cards. This is impressive enough before you even factor in the compact size of
the Mac Studio. It has the graphical grunt to handle 18 streams of 8K footage
on the fly (which we tried for ourselves in Premiere Pro, allowing us to view,
edit and add effects without having to wait for anything to render. The
smoothness of the footage, even with numerous 8K elements on screen at once,
is incredibly impressive – at one point the Mac Studio was putting through 8
billion pixels per second, and it coped admirably.
(Image credit: Future)
While 8K video editing, especially using multiple 8K sources, is probably more
intensive than what a lot of people are going to need, it’s good to see just
how far we can push the Mac Studio. This performance headroom also means this
should be an excellent performer for years to come, and that future-proofness
goes some way to justifying the price, and minimizes the issue of the Mac
Studio not being upgradable.
Being able to edit such high-resolution footage on the fly, rather than having
to wait for effects to load, or to render scenes before you preview, then
re-render if you make any changes, also makes a big difference to your
workflow. You will likely find yourself working much faster, and if you can
complete projects earlier and take on more work, then the Mac Studio suddenly
becomes a much more attractive investment.
Being able to work on and edit complex 3D scenes and models is also a
game-changer, and the M1 Ultra-powered Mac Studio again handles things with
aplomb. With our review model coming with 128GB of unified RAM, it means the
M1 Ultra’s GPU can take advantage of this large amount of super-fast memory.
With this, we saw the Mac Studio load up an incredibly detailed 3D scene that
took up more memory than most discrete professional PC GPUs come with. For 3D
animators and designers who really want to let their imaginations run wild
without bumping up against hardware limits, the possibilities the Mac Studio –
and certainly the M1 Ultra – are incredibly exciting.
Again, the ability to edit your scenes, move light sources or adjust cameras
and textures and see your changes instantly is such an incredibly useful boost
to your productivity that you may wonder how you ever coped without it.
The processing power of the M1 Ultra also deserves praise here. From quickly
compiling and testing code, while also running multiple emulated instances to
test your apps on a variety of devices, to using advanced AI and machine
learning in Photoshop, the Mac Studio does an excellent job. In the latter’s
case, this is thanks to the Neural Engine, which in the M1 Ultra features
32-cores. Apple claims that this allows it to run 22 trillion operations a
second to help accelerate machine learning tasks. It’s also twice the amount
of cores that come with the M1 Max.
Again, it’s best to see this in action. We used a variety of tools in
Photoshop that rely in machine learning, and the results were very impressive.
Quickly swapping out the sky for a more impressive cloud-filled look takes a
matter of seconds. Doing these manually would take much longer, and it’s here
that the extra power of the M1 Ultra is a real benefit.
This doesn’t mean the Mac Studio with M1 Max is not worth buying, however.
While we don't have one of those Mac Studio configurations, we’ve seen what
the M1 Max can achieve in the latest MacBook Pro, and it’s still a fantastic
chip, and still overkill for many. If you don’t need this kind of power for
advanced professional uses, something more affordable, like the Mac mini, is a
better choice. But, if you do need this power, the fact that Apple has made a
PC the size of the Mac Studio so capable is very impressive indeed. It also
remained incredibly quiet while we used it, even during intensive workloads.
(Image credit: Future)
Buy it if…
You’re a creative professional
The Mac Studio is great in intensive workloads in creative apps like Premiere
Pro and DaVinci Resolve.
While the Mac Studio is larger than the Mac mini, it’s not that much larger.
It’s seriously impressive how compact this thing is.
You don’t want to upgrade for a long time
The performance of the Mac Studio means you’re unlikely to need anything more
powerful for a long, long time.
Don't buy it if…
You don’t need the power
This may make sense, but the Mac Studio really isn’t a mainstream device.
Unless you’re a creative professional, you won’t need this Mac.
You like to upgrade
As with other Apple devices, the Mac Studio can’t be opened and tinkered with.
Instead, go for a tower PC, or even a new Mac Pro, when one gets announced.
You’re on a budget
The Mac Studio is a pricey investment – and it doesn’t even come with a mouse
or keyboard.
( Image credit Future)
An SD card niche on the front, along with two USB-C anchorages, round out the
immolation and should give utmost people plenitude of compass for connecting
their peripherals and bias; it’s good to see Apple continue to offer plenitude
of connectivity with its professional- gradehardware.However, you can plug in
four Pro Display XDR observers and a 4K Television as well, If you have the M1
Ultra model.
The front- facing anchorages make plugging stuff into them nice and easy if
the Mac Studio is stockpiled down nearly, but the power button is on the
reverse, which can be a bit fiddly.
The power force is also erected into the Mac Studio, so there’s no
unattractive external power slipup, which some compact PCs use to try to keep
overall size down as important as possible.
Still, where it blazoned the Mac Studio alongside the Studio Display examiner,
you ’ll have likely heard the term‘modular’ mooted about, If you watched
Apple’s March Event. Before you get too agitated-- Is the Mac Studio
upgradable? Can multiple Mac Studios be daisy- chained together like Mac minis
can into some uber-important super computer?-- we've some bad news.
By‘modular’, Apple just meant that the Mac Studio does n’t come with a
display, or a keyboard or mouse. Yeah.
While buying a computer without a examiner is commonplace, some people will be
irritated that the$/£/AU$ does n’t come with a keyboard and mouse. Apple will
say this allows you to use the Mac Studio with the keyboard and mouse you
formerly have and calculate on, but if you do n’t presently have those
peripherals, you ’ll need to factor in the price of redundant peripherals.
There’s no HDMI string, either, so if you do n’t have any of those to hand,
you ’re going to have a veritably precious – though incontrovertibly swish –
paperweight until you do.
( Image credit Future)
Performance
Marks
There’s how the Apple Mac Studio performed in our suite of standard tests
- Cinebench CPU Single- Core;Multi-core
- Geekbench 5 Single- Core;Multi-Core
- Handbreak (1080p, Fast)54.53 fps
- Blender monster
- Blender junkshop 270
- Blender classroom 265
When Apple blazoned the Mac Studio, it threw out some big claims, including
that it's 50 faster than the MacBook Pro 13- inch with M1 chip, and offers3.4
faster plates than the most important iMac.
It's also supposedly 80 faster than a Mac Pro with a 28- core Intel Xeon
processor, and can support up to 18 aqueducts of 8K ProRes videotape.
These boasts relate to the capabilities of the Mac Studio with the new M1
Ultra chip, which is the model we've for review, and likely to be the model
most serious creatives are tempted by.
Before we get into the details of how the Mac Studio lives up to Apple’s
claims, or if it falls short, we should give a cry out to the M1 Ultra, which
really is remarkable. The M1 Ultra is basically two M1 Max chips connected
together using asuper-fast and low quiescence connection known as UltraFusion.
When the M1 Max launched alongside the new MacBook Pro 14- inch and MacBook
Pro 16- inch late last time as the most important chip Apple had ever
designed, it actually featured the UltraFusion connection – which no bone
spotted.
This clever bit of forward thinking has allowed Apple to produce the M1 Ultra
without altering the M1 Max. This means lesser yields, as Apple does n’t have
to make new chips from scrape, which should avoid the kind of stock dearths we
’ve seen with other chips lately.
With the Mac Studio aimed at creative professionals, and using the M1 Ultra
comprised of two M1 Max chips, which have formerly shown how good they're for
creative workloads in the new MacBooks, it’s maybe little surprise to learn
that the Mac Studio is a redoubtable machine when it comes to videotape
editing, rendering and 3D modeling, in particular.
When it comes to videotape, the Mac Studio puts in performance that fluently
rivals, and occasionally surpasses, desktop PCs with separate professional
plates cards. This is emotional enough before you indeed factor in the compact
size of the Mac Studio. It has the graphical grunt to handle 18 aqueducts of
8K footage on the cover (which we tried for ourselves in Premiere Pro,
allowing us to view, edit and add goods without having to stay for anything to
render. The smoothness of the footage, indeed with multitudinous 8K rudiments
on screen at formerly, is incredibly emotional – at one point the Mac Studio
was putting through 8 billion pixels per second, and it fared admirably.
( Image credit Future)
While 8K videotape editing, especially using multiple 8K sources, is
presumably more ferocious than what a lot of people are going to need, it’s
good to see just how far we can push the Mac Studio. This performance headroom
also means this should be an excellent pantomime for times to come, and that
unborn-proofness goes some way to justifying the price, and minimizes the
issue of the Mac Studio not being upgradable.
Being suitable to edit similar high- resolution footage on the cover, rather
than having to stay for goods to load, or to render scenes before you
exercise, alsore-render if you make any changes, also makes a big difference
to your workflow. You'll probably find yourself working much briskly, and if
you can complete systems before and take on further work, also the Mac Studio
suddenly becomes a much more seductive investment.
Being suitable to work on and edit complex 3D scenes and models is also a
game- changer, and the M1Ultra-powered Mac Studio again handles effects with
aplomb. With our review model coming with 128 GB of unified RAM, it means the
M1 Ultra’s GPU can take advantage of this large quantum ofsuper-fast memory.
With this, we saw the Mac Studio load up an incredibly detailed 3D scene that
took up more memory than utmost separate professional PC GPUs come with. For
3D animators and contrivers who really want to let their imaginations run wild
without hitting up against tackle limits, the possibilities the Mac Studio –
and clearly the M1 Ultra – are incredibly instigative.
Again, the capability to edit your scenes, move light sources or acclimate
cameras and textures and see your changes incontinently is such an incredibly
useful boost to your productivity that you may wonder how you ever fared
without it.
The processing power of the M1 Ultra also deserves praise then. From snappily
collecting and testing law, while also running multiple emulated cases to test
your apps on a variety of bias, to using advanced AI and machine literacy in
Photoshop, the Mac Studio does an excellent job. In the latter’s case, this is
thanks to the Neural Machine, which in the M1 Ultra features 32- cores. Apple
claims that this allows it to run 22 trillion operations a alternate to help
accelerate machine literacy tasks. It’s also twice the quantum of cores that
come with the M1 Max.
Again, it’s stylish to see this in action. We used a variety of tools in
Photoshop that calculate in machine literacy, and the results were veritably
emotional. Snappily switching out the sky for a more emotional pall- filled
look takes a matter of seconds. Doing these manually would take much longer,
and it’s then that the redundant power of the M1 Ultra is a real benefit.
This does n’t mean the Mac Studio with M1 Max isn't worth buying, still. While
we do not have one of those Mac Studio configurations, we ’ve seen what the M1
Max can achieve in the rearmost MacBook Pro, and it’s still a fantastic chip,
and still overabundance formany.However, commodity further affordable, like
the Mac mini, If you do n’t need this kind of power for advanced professional
uses. But, if you do need this power, the fact that Apple has made a PC the
size of the Mac Studio so able is veritably emotional indeed. It also remained
incredibly quiet while we used it, indeed during ferocious workloads.
( Image credit Future)
Buy it if …
You ’re a creative professional
The Mac Studio is great in ferocious workloads in creative apps like Premiere
Pro and DaVinci Resolve.
You want a compact PC
While the Mac Studio is larger than the Mac mini, it’s not that much larger.
It’s seriously emotional how compact this thing is.
You do n’t want to upgrade for a long time
The performance of the Mac Studio means you ’re doubtful to need anything more
important for a long, long time.
Do not buy it if …
You do n’t need the power
This may make sense, but the Mac Studio really is n’t a mainstream device.
Unless you ’re a creative professional, you wo n’t need this Mac.
You like to upgrade
As with other Apple bias, the Mac Studio ca n’t be opened and tinkered with.
Rather, go for a palace PC, or indeed a new Mac Pro, when one gets blazoned.
You ’re on a budget
The Mac Studio is a precious investment – and it does n’t indeed come with a
mouse or keyboard.
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