The New Mac Studio Features Appleβs Most Powerful Silicon Yet

Apple's Mac Studio has the option for either a M4 Max or M3 Ultra chip, but either way itβs set to take over your desktop space.
In addition to a new M4-powered MacBook Air, Apple on Wednesday launched a new Mac Studio, its desktop computer for professionals who need top-of-the-line performance. The company is trying something new with the Mac Studio as it lets you choose between the M4 Max or the M3 Ultra. The Mac Studio starts at $1,999. Preorders [β¦]
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Appleβs first Mac Studio refresh in nearly two years is a welcome update, injecting fresh life into two computers that were still getting by with M2 chips. But the company took a bit of a strange approach to the update, giving an M4-series Max chip to the lower-end Studio but an M3 Ultra chip to the high-end model.
These processors are both performance upgrades from the M2 Max and M2 Ultra, and the M3 Ultra is so huge that it should have no trouble outrunning the M4 Max despite its slightly older CPU and GPU architecture. But itβs still a departure from past practice, where Apple would keep the Studioβs chip generation in lockstep.
CPU P/E-cores | GPU cores | RAM options | Memory bandwidth | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Apple M3 Ultra (low) | 20/8 | 60 | 96/256GB | 819.2GB/s |
Apple M3 Ultra (high) | 24/8 | 80 | 128GB/256GB/512GB | 819.2GB/s |
Apple M2 Ultra (high) | 16/8 | 76 | Up to 192GB | 819.2GB/s |
Apple M1 Ultra (high) | 16/4 | 32 | Up to 128GB | 819.2GB/s |
When asked why the high-end Mac Studio was getting an M3 Ultra chip instead of an M4 Ultra, Apple told us that not every chip generation will get an βUltraβ tier. This is, as far as I can recall, the first time that Apple has said anything like this in public.
Β© Apple
Apple announced its first Mac Studio updates in nearly two years today, a few months after bringing the M4 and M4 Pro chips to the Mac mini.
As before, Apple offers a lower-end and a higher-end configuration of the Mac Studio. The lower-end model is pretty much what you expect: It gives you the same M4 Max processor Apple introduced in the high-end MacBook Pro last year. It has up to 16 CPU cores (10 P-cores, 4 E-cores), up to 40 GPU cores, and a 16-core Neural Engine.
The $1,999 base model comes with 14 CPU cores (10 P-cores, 4 E-cores), 32 GPU cores, 36GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. That model's RAM can't be upgraded until you step up to the fully-enabled M4 Max, which also gets you 48GB of RAM for $300. From there, the desktop can be upgraded with either 64GB or 128GB of RAM, same as the MacBook Pro.
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