Apple Silicon FAQs

toggle iconIs it true Apple previously designed their own CPUs before the A and M-series?
Yes, before Apple was using Intel CPUs for their Macs, Apple collaborated with Motorola and IBM on the PowerPC CPU line. While we don’t have much details on the PowerPC chips themselves, we have information on some of the Macs that used the PowerPC CPUs in a post Millennium retrospective.
What kind of power do M series chips consume?
What is a "binned" versus "non-binned" Apple M chip?
What is a SoC (System on Chip)?
What is the difference between the iPhone Bionic and the M-series chips?
Why did Apple release the M3 Ultra instead of the M4 Ultra?
Does the base M4 used in the new Mac mini provides levels of performance comparable to a previous "pro" level chip?
How is the M4 different from previous Apple Silicon?
Tell me more about the M4 base chip?
Why did Apple switch away from Intel?
If I have an Intel based Mac, what are the benefits of upgrading to the M-series?
What is an Apple M-series processor?

System Configuration

toggle iconHow much Memory do I need for My Mac?

With Apple’s new baseline of 16 GBytes of RAM on their M4 or newer devices, 80% of users can comfortably run dozens of browser tabs and a single primary app such as Photoshop, Lightroom, or Figma without experiencing any performance issues. Most people won’t need to get upgraded RAM except…

If you’re a “power user” running Photoshop and Figma at the same time, plus have 30-40 tabs open, upgrading your RAM to 24 to 32 GBytes RAM will keep your system from having to use swap space on the SSDs.

If you’re running local LLMs and have Final Cut Pro or Premiere plus After Effects, Figma, and Lightroom all running at the same time, 48 to 64 GBytes of RAM should smoothly support your workflow.

The most extreme of users will need 128 Gbytes RAM, all the way up to 512 Gbytes RAM on the Mac Studio M3 Ultra for those who run the largest LLMs.

How much SSD/Hard Drive Space do I need for My Mac?
Can you upgrade the storage on Apple Silicon devices?

Learn how we use the benchmarks.