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index.feed.received.yesterday — 13 mars 2025

Mac Mini vs. Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: 20+ Differences Compared

13 mars 2025 à 17:35
In 2025, Apple updated the Mac Studio with the M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips. Apple last year refreshed the Mac mini with the M4 and M4 Pro chips, meaning that the ‌Mac Studio‌ faces a formidable competitor that offers "Pro" capabilities at a substantially lower price point.


There are now two desktop Macs and four Apple silicon chip options for users who do not need the expandability of the Mac Pro. The ‌Mac Studio‌ starts at $1,999, overshadowing the $599 starting price of the M4 Mac mini and even the $1,399 starting price of the M4 Pro ‌Mac mini‌, so do you need the performance of the ‌Mac Studio‌, or is the humble ‌Mac mini‌ sufficient for your needs? Our guide helps to answer the question of how to decide which of these two desktop Macs is best for you.

The ‌Mac mini‌ and the ‌Mac Studio‌ share some fundamental features, including a familiar, boxy silver aluminum design, two front-facing USB-C ports along with HDMI and ethernet on the rear, and Apple silicon chipsets. That being said, the two machines have much more in contrast than they do in common, including different chip options, memory capacities, ports, and external display support capabilities.












































































































































‌Mac mini‌ (M4, 2024) ‌Mac mini‌ (M4 Pro, 2024) ‌Mac Studio‌ (M4 Max, 2025) ‌Mac Studio‌ (M3 Ultra, 2025)
M4 chip (made with TSMC's enhanced 3nm (N3E) process) M4 Pro chip (made with TSMC's enhanced ‌3nm‌ (N3E) process) M4 Max chip (made with TSMC's ‌3nm‌ (N3E) process) M3 Ultra chip (made with TSMC's enhanced 5nm (N3B) process)
4.30 GHz maximum CPU clock speed 4.30 GHz maximum CPU clock speed 4.30 GHz maximum CPU clock speed 4.05 GHz maximum CPU clock speed
10-core CPU (4 perform­ance cores + 6 efficiency cores) 12- or 14-core CPU (8 or 10 perform­ance cores + 4 efficiency cores) 14- or 16-core CPU (10 or 12 perform­ance cores + 4 efficiency cores) 28- or 32-core CPU (20 or 24 perform­ance cores + 8 efficiency cores)
10-core GPU 16- or 20‑core GPU 32- or 40-core GPU 60- or 80-core GPU
Improved ray-tracing engine Improved ray-tracing engine Improved ray-tracing engine Ray-tracing engine
120GB/s memory bandwidth 273GB/s memory bandwidth 546GB/s memory bandwidth 819.2GB/s memory bandwidth
16GB, 24GB, or 32GB unified memory 24GB, 48GB, or 64GB unified memory 36GB, 48GB, 64GB, or 128GB unified memory 96GB, 256GB, or 512GB unified memory
LPDDR5X memory LPDDR5X memory LPDDR5X memory LPDDR5 memory
256GB, 512GB, 1TB, or 2TB storage 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB storage 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB storage 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, 8TB, or 16TB storage
16-core Neural Engine, 38 trillion operations per second 16-core Neural Engine, 38 trillion operations per second 16-core Neural Engine, 38 trillion operations per second 32-core Neural Engine, 72 trillion operations per second
Video decode engine Video decode engine Video decode engine Two video decode engines
Video encode engine Video encode engine Two video encode engines Two video encode engines
ProRes encode and decode engine ProRes encode and decode engine Two ProRes encode and decode engines Four ProRes encode and decode engines
Dedicated display engine Dedicated display engine Dedicated display engine
Support for up to three external displays Support for up to three external displays Support for up to five external displays Support for up to eight external displays
Three rear Thunderbolt 4 ports Three rear Thunderbolt 5 ports Four rear Thunderbolt 5 ports Four rear Thunderbolt 5 ports
Two front USB-C ports Two front USB-C ports Two front USB-C ports Two front Thunderbolt 5 ports
Two rear USB-A ports Two rear USB-A ports
Gigabit Ethernet or 10Gb Ethernet port Gigabit Ethernet or 10Gb Ethernet port 10Gb Ethernet port 10Gb Ethernet port
SDXC card slot (UHS-II) SDXC card slot (UHS-II)
Bottom power button Bottom power button Rear power button Rear power button
Starts at $599 Starts at $1,399 Starts at $1,999 Starts at $3,999



Following the ‌Mac mini‌'s redesign last year, the dimensions of the two devices are now radically different, with the ‌Mac Studio‌ dwarfing the ‌Mac mini‌ in every way.



























‌Mac mini‌ ‌Mac Studio‌
Height 2.0 inches (5.0 cm) 3.7 inches (9.5 cm)
Width 5.0 inches (12.7 cm) 7.7 inches (19.7 cm)
Depth 5.0 inches (12.7 cm) 7.7 inches (19.7 cm)
Weight M4: 1.5 pounds (0.67 kg)
M4 Pro: 1.6 pounds (0.73 kg)
M4 Max: 5.9 pounds (2.7 kg)
M3 Ultra: 7.9 pounds (3.6 kg)



Most customers should choose the M4 Pro ‌Mac mini‌ over the M4 Max ‌Mac Studio‌, saving $700 when looking at the base models. There will likely still be substantial savings when it comes to custom configurations.

You should only consider the ‌Mac Studio‌ if you have an professional workflow that can leverage the extreme power of the M4 Max or M3 Ultra, as well as its additional ports and memory options. If you need the ‌Mac Studio‌, you will likely know that you are looking for a highly powerful machine that is capable of supporting specific intense workflows.

If considering the M4 Max or M3 Ultra ‌Mac Studio‌, it's worth bearing in mind that the cheaper machine uses newer chip technology with faster memory, improved ray-tracing, and better single-core performance. For multi-core, graphics, and video processing tasks, the M3 Ultra ‌Mac Studio‌ will still be considerably more capable at tackling intense workloads.

To some extent, purchasing decisions should be driven by budget, but it is worth bearing in mind that any savings on the desktop computer itself can be put toward a good external display such as Apple's Studio Display, which starts from $1,599. For example, an M4 Pro ‌Mac mini‌ paired with a Studio Display comes to $2,898, which is just $899 more than a lone base model ‌Mac Studio‌ and $1,101 less than the M3 Ultra ‌Mac Studio‌ with no display.
Related Roundups: Mac Studio, Mac mini
Related Forums: Mac Studio, Mac mini

This article, "Mac Mini vs. Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: 20+ Differences Compared" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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index.feed.received.before_yesterday

New iPhone 16 Colors Looking Increasingly Unlikely

11 mars 2025 à 17:10
In recent years, Apple has often released new iPhone color options as a mid-product cycle refresh, but the chances of a similar announcement in 2025 are looking increasingly unlikely.


Apple has added new ‌iPhone‌ colors on six occasions in the past, consistently in either the March or April following an ‌iPhone‌'s launch:


  • iPhone 7 and 7 Plus: (PRODUCT)RED (Tuesday, March 21, 2017)

  • iPhone 8 and 8 Plus: (PRODUCT)RED (Monday, April 9, 2018)

  • iPhone 12 and 12 mini: Purple (Tuesday, April 20, 2021)

  • iPhone 13 and 13 mini: Green (Tuesday, March 8, 2022)

  • iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max: Alpine Green (Tuesday, March 8, 2022)

  • iPhone 14 and 14 Plus: Yellow (Tuesday, March 7, 2023)



The last two times Apple released new ‌iPhone‌ color options midway through the year, it did so on the second Tuesday in March—which falls today in 2025.

There are currently no rumors about new color options for the iPhone 16, and it's possible Apple could skip this year like it did for the ‌iPhone‌ XR, ‌iPhone‌ 11, and iPhone 15 in 2019, 2020, and 2024. That being said, Apple has released new colors many more times than it has chosen not to do so since 2017.

The ‌iPhone 16‌ is available in Black, White, Teal, Pink, and Ultramarine. A new red, yellow, purple, or grey seem possible since these have all been offered on ‌iPhone‌ models in the past and are not too similar to any of the existing shades.

Following the launch of the iPhone 16e, as well as a range of new iPads and Macs, we're swiftly approaching the latest likely period for Apple to announce a new color option. There are usually rumors that point to which new color to expect, but with no sign of this, it looks like Apple will probably skip this year's new color option just like it did for the ‌iPhone 15‌.
Related Roundup: iPhone 16
Buyer's Guide: iPhone 16 (Neutral)

This article, "New iPhone 16 Colors Looking Increasingly Unlikely" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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QuickBooks Adds Support for Tap to Pay on iPhone

11 mars 2025 à 16:12
Intuit QuickBooks today announced Tap to Pay on iPhone for QuickBooks Online customers in the United States, allowing small and mid-market businesses to accept in-person contactless payments without additional hardware.


The feature integrates with the QuickBooks mobile and GoPayment iOS apps, enabling businesses to receive payments using only an ‌iPhone‌. Customers can accept contactless credit and debit cards, Apple Pay, and other digital wallets without requiring external devices. Transactions processed through the feature are automatically categorized and reconciled within QuickBooks Online.

By providing a direct, integrated payment solution, Tap to Pay on ‌iPhone‌ is intended to help small businesses receive payments faster, reducing delayed transactions and reliance on invoice processing. The feature also allows businesses to accept immediate payments on open invoices or generate new invoices at the point of sale.

Tap to Pay on ‌iPhone‌ is available exclusively to U.S.-based QuickBooks Online customers with an active QuickBooks Payments plan. The rollout begins today, with wider availability expected in the coming weeks.
This article, "QuickBooks Adds Support for Tap to Pay on iPhone" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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M4 Max and M3 Ultra Mac Studio Reviews: Apple's Most Powerful Mac Ever

11 mars 2025 à 14:50
The new Mac Studio with the M4 Max and M3 Ultra chip launches tomorrow. Ahead of time, the first reviews of the device have been shared by select publications and YouTube channels.


This is the first ‌Mac Studio‌ refresh since the desktop computer was updated with M2 Max and ‌M2‌ Ultra chip options in June 2023. The overall design of the machine has not changed. The front of the computer has two Thunderbolt 5 or USB-C ports depending on the configuration, and an SD card slot, while the rear side has four Thunderbolt 5 ports, an HDMI port, a 10-Gigabit Ethernet port, two USB-A ports, a headphone jack, a power cord connector, and a power button.

With the M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips, the ‌Mac Studio‌ catches up to other newer Macs by gaining hardware-accelerated ray tracing for the first time. It can also now be configured with up to 16TB of SSD storage, up from the previous model's 8TB maximum.

Highlights


M4 Max Chip


With Apple's latest chip technology, the M4 Max ‌Mac Studio‌ mode outpaces the M3 Ultra in single-core performance, despite being considerably cheaper. The Verge's Chris Welch:

It's important to note that there are objective benefits to choosing the M4 Max Mac Studio model. It outpaces the M3 Ultra in single-core performance, which is the most critical element in making most everyday apps feel "fast."


The M4 Max chip was already released last year in the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro. It can be configured with up to a 16-core CPU, up to a 40-core GPU, and up to 256GB of unified RAM. Geekbench 6 benchmark results indicate that the M4 Max is up to 75% faster than the ‌M2‌ Max chip available in the previous-generation ‌Mac Studio‌.

M3 Ultra Chip


The all-new M3 Ultra chip features up to a 32-core CPU, with 24 performance cores and eight efficiency cores, and up to an 80-core GPU. Apple says the M3 Ultra chip is up to 1.5x faster than the previous ‌Mac Studio‌'s ‌M2‌ Ultra chip, which has up to a 24-core CPU. Graphics performance is up to 2x faster than the previous ‌Mac Studio‌ with the ‌M2‌ Ultra chip, which was available with up to a 72-core GPU. The M3 Ultra chip supports up to 512GB of unified RAM, whereas the ‌M2‌ Ultra maxed out at 192GB of unified RAM. The Verge's Chris Welch:

The M3 Ultra chip is overkill for many. If you need this level of power, you already know exactly how you'll get the most from it. It's for visual effects artists and animators. It's for professionals doing ambitious audio and video production work. Are you regularly crunching big medical datasets? Maybe you can use all those cores and memory to their fullest potential. And as AI development continues to flourish, the kitted out configurations with 256GB or 512GB of memory could prove appealing to anyone interested in running sophisticated LLM models locally on their machine.


arsTechnica's Andrew Cunningham:

It's the magnitude of Apple's generation-over-generation updates that makes this Studio refresh feel odd, though. The lower-end Studio gets an M4 Max processor like you'd expect—the same chip Apple sells in its high-end MacBook Pros but fit into a desktop enclosure instead of a laptop. But the top-end Studio gets an M3 Ultra instead of an M4 Ultra. That's still a huge increase in CPU and GPU cores (and there are other Ultra-specific benefits, too), but it makes the expensive Studio feel like less of a step up over the regular one.


Thunderbolt 5 and Improved External Display Support


Following in the footsteps of ‌MacBook Pro‌ and Mac mini models with M4 Pro and M4 Max chips, the ‌Mac Studio‌ now supports Thunderbolt 5. There are four Thunderbolt 5 ports on ‌Mac Studio‌ configurations with the M4 Max chip, and six Thunderbolt 5 ports on configurations with the M3 Ultra chip. Thunderbolt 5 provides up to 120 Gb/s data transfer speeds. Tom's Guide's Alex Wawro:

While the USB-C ports on our Mac Studio M4 Max are capable of transmitting up to 10 GBp/second, the Thunderbolt 5 ports are theoretically capable of achieving up to 120GBp/second in certain conditions. And in standard use Thunderbolt 5 is specced to offer double the bandwidth capacity of Thunderbolt 4 (80 Gbps vs. 40 Gbps), which means it can move more data faster than its predecessors.

The practical payoff is that you can use a higher number of more capable displays via Thunderbolt 5 than Thunderbolt 4, for example, our Mac Studio M4 Max is rated to support up to five external displays (4 @6K/60Hz via Thunderbolt 5, 1 @4K/144Hz via HDMI) while the upgraded M3 Ultra model can supposedly support up to eight (at 6K/60Hz or 4K/144Hz) at once.

Alternatively, our M4 Max review unit can support a single 8K/60Hz display while the M3 Ultra version can support up to four 8K/60Hz displays. So if you really want to be future-proofed against a potential 8K future, the new Mac Studio has you covered.

If I were considering buying one of these Macs in 2025, I'd be more excited about the potential to build the ultimate workstation by investing in a great Thunderbolt 5 dock, along with a good display (honestly, I can live without Thunderbolt 5 speeds for my display needs) and a great Thunderbolt 5 external SSD for moving big files around fast.

And frankly, Thunderbolt 5 gear is still pretty sparse on the market despite the fact that the standard debuted in 2023. While you can buy 8K displays and 8K TVs right now, the fact is that 8K content only started arriving in small doses in 2023, and it's still very rare in Mac apps and streaming services.

So while it's great to get Thunderbolt 5 ports on the most powerful Mac desktop for the first time, it's not a great reason to upgrade unless you're really excited about investing in a lot of Thunderbolt 5 accessories.


Reviews


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The new ‌Mac Studio‌ is available to pre-order now, and it will launch on Wednesday, March 12. In the U.S., pricing continues to start at $1,999 for configurations with an M4 Max chip, and at $3,999 for configurations with an M3 Ultra chip.
Related Roundup: Mac Studio
Buyer's Guide: Mac Studio (Buy Now)
Related Forum: Mac Studio

This article, "M4 Max and M3 Ultra Mac Studio Reviews: Apple's Most Powerful Mac Ever" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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