Lee Duna@lemmy.nz to Technology@beehaw.orgEnglish · 1 year ago8GB RAM in M3 MacBook Pro Proves the Bottleneck in Real-World Testswww.macrumors.comexternal-linkmessage-square62fedilinkarrow-up1170arrow-down10cross-posted to: technology@lemmy.worldtechnology@lemmit.online
arrow-up1170arrow-down1external-link8GB RAM in M3 MacBook Pro Proves the Bottleneck in Real-World Testswww.macrumors.comLee Duna@lemmy.nz to Technology@beehaw.orgEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square62fedilinkcross-posted to: technology@lemmy.worldtechnology@lemmit.online
minus-squaremiss_brainfart@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkarrow-up3·1 year agoThe M3 is powerful enough that even 32GB can be a constraint for what you’d be able to run on it
minus-squarelocuester@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up4·1 year agoThat entirely depends on if what you’re running requires lots of ram or is more cpu bound. I wouldn’t conflate the two as directly related.
minus-squaremiss_brainfart@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkarrow-up2·1 year agoThat’s true, but unless you’re 100% sure that you’ll only ever run a workload that fits those specs, I think you’d rather like having the extra memory.
The M3 is powerful enough that even 32GB can be a constraint for what you’d be able to run on it
That entirely depends on if what you’re running requires lots of ram or is more cpu bound. I wouldn’t conflate the two as directly related.
That’s true, but unless you’re 100% sure that you’ll only ever run a workload that fits those specs, I think you’d rather like having the extra memory.