Performance out of the m series Macs is certainly pretty good for most people. I would buy one for home, though just finished a divorce and frankly, my old system works so I’m not in a big hurry.The new M1/M2/M3 chips are absolutely insane alien tech. A base M2 Mac Mini will exceed the performance of literally almost any Intel-based Mac. They are insane. Only caveat to my statement is the GPU's performance on the base model. It doesn't quite stack up against a discrete GPU, but it's actually kinda close.
Base M2 Mac Minis are $500 on Best Buy at the moment.
Our designer stations are still ~$4000 Intel iMac 5K's. Still waiting for pro versions of the iMac. Bit concerned the GPU's won't be able to provide enough power where we need it to.
Been a Windows guys since forever, biggest gripe about Mac is the Finder tool. Navigating folders, setting networked "aliases/shortcuts, and sidebar shortcuts is clunky and a bit underwhelming versus other levels of polish that Mac has. Windows and Linux both do this well so I'm not sure what the issue is.Performance out of the m series Macs is certainly pretty good for most people. I would buy one for home, though just finished a divorce and frankly, my old system works so I’m not in a big hurry.
I feel like the biggest advantage to an M series mac is the heat, noise, and power specs. My old Mac Pro works just fine with enough power for my stuff - but it will cook a small room, makes fan noise, and sucks down power. I could buy a MacBook today that runs circles around it, has battery life all day, without noise, and with minimal heat output. Graphics performance is not a big selling point for my work, fortunately.
Glad it's not just me! Not so much nowadays, but there used to be a real stigma about using PCs, in that long in the tooth print professionals wouldn't take you seriously. It was like having an embarrassing car...Been a Windows guys since forever, biggest gripe about Mac is the Finder tool. Navigating folders, setting networked "aliases/shortcuts, and sidebar shortcuts is clunky and a bit underwhelming versus other levels of polish that Mac has. Windows and Linux both do this well so I'm not sure what the issue is.
I used to be a Windows / DIY PC guy, but at some point maybe around windows xp it became uninteresting / not a good use of my time to fool with. A majority of audio software and hardware sold today and then is Mac optimized, so it was a logical choice to make the switch when that became my focus. Apple certainly makes sharp choices that I don’t care for as well, so I’m certainly not in love with them, pick what works best for you. When it was time for a new computer at work for print work, I tried to get the owner on board for a new PC but she’d never place the order. When I sent her a Mac, she pressed the buy button. Makes little difference to me, for print work.Been a Windows guys since forever, biggest gripe about Mac is the Finder tool. Navigating folders, setting networked "aliases/shortcuts, and sidebar shortcuts is clunky and a bit underwhelming versus other levels of polish that Mac has. Windows and Linux both do this well so I'm not sure what the issue is.
What's embarrassing is the inability to fix the printer drivers/defaults as well. I love seeing/getting an error when I'm printing to a simple office copier, and being notified that the bypass tray is empty. I can't even dismiss the error. And changing printer defaults is horrible too.
if it is due to the Samsung monitors, but when my computer comes out of sleep mode, the position of my tools in the Adobe CC apps always move to the left side of the screen.
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