- Joined
- Jun 21, 2021
- Messages
- 3,121 (2.44/day)
System Name | daily driver Mac mini M2 Pro |
---|---|
Processor | Apple proprietary M2 Pro (6 p-cores, 4 e-cores) |
Motherboard | Apple proprietary |
Cooling | Apple proprietary |
Memory | Apple proprietary 16GB LPDDR5 unified memory |
Video Card(s) | Apple proprietary M2 Pro (16-core GPU) |
Storage | Apple proprietary onboard 512GB SSD + various external HDDs |
Display(s) | LG UltraFine 27UL850W (4K@60Hz IPS) |
Case | Apple proprietary |
Audio Device(s) | Apple proprietary |
Power Supply | Apple proprietary |
Mouse | Apple Magic Trackpad 2 |
Keyboard | Keychron K1 tenkeyless (Gateron Reds) |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift S (hosted on a different PC) |
Software | macOS Sonoma 14.7 |
Benchmark Scores | (My Windows daily driver is a Beelink Mini S12 Pro. I'm not interested in benchmarking.) |
Let's remember what an operating system is: it's a big complicated program that lets multiple other big complicated programs (hopefully) co-exist peacefully on the same system.
If iOS or iPadOS is capable of doing that, that's fine.
Underneath it all, iOS/iPadOS and macOS share much of the same codebase. And let's not forget that "Pro" to Apple is a nebulous adjective. Some people say it's only "Pro" in price. Plenty of evidence for those people.
Anyhow some of these applications are working very well on these iPad Pros. If they didn't I doubt if professionals would be using them. It's not like the iPad Pro is new. They've been around for years and if they were consistently falling short in performance, I'm pretty sure sales would reflect it and the product line would have been canned by now.
Many of the key content creation programs launched with the original iPad Pro: Photoshop, FCP, Logic, etc. For a lot of people the new iPad Pro is a drop-in replacement for an older model to help carry on the same workflow they've had for a while.
Remember that a lot of these aren't devices you'd see someone use in a coffee shop. Many of the sales are to enterprise customers and are used in situations not within the sightline of the average person.
If iOS or iPadOS is capable of doing that, that's fine.
Underneath it all, iOS/iPadOS and macOS share much of the same codebase. And let's not forget that "Pro" to Apple is a nebulous adjective. Some people say it's only "Pro" in price. Plenty of evidence for those people.
Anyhow some of these applications are working very well on these iPad Pros. If they didn't I doubt if professionals would be using them. It's not like the iPad Pro is new. They've been around for years and if they were consistently falling short in performance, I'm pretty sure sales would reflect it and the product line would have been canned by now.
Many of the key content creation programs launched with the original iPad Pro: Photoshop, FCP, Logic, etc. For a lot of people the new iPad Pro is a drop-in replacement for an older model to help carry on the same workflow they've had for a while.
Remember that a lot of these aren't devices you'd see someone use in a coffee shop. Many of the sales are to enterprise customers and are used in situations not within the sightline of the average person.
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