Chadwick Shoults of Creative Video Tips on the M1 Max MacPro vs his Mac Pro for video editing in DaVinci Resolve

Another great video from Chadwick shoults and this one showing just how fast the new M1 Max MacBook Pro is at DaVinci Resolve, which not only says allot about what Apple did, but also what Black Magic Design has done about getting DaVinci to really shine on Apple Silicon.

Man I can’t wait for an Apple Silicon iMac Pro and Mac Pro to really see what these chips can do, and if rumors are right they will likely be M2 Max chips, as the MacBook Air next year is likely to be the first M2.

MacRumors reports on Anandtech’s Deep Dive into the M1 Pro and M1 Max.

MacRumors posted on Anandtech’s Deep Dive in to the M1 Pro and M1 Max. And here is the AndanTech Deep dive.

The chips here aren’t only able to outclass any competitor laptop design, but also competes against the best desktop systems out there, you’d have to bring out server-class hardware to get ahead of the M1 Max – it’s just generally absurd.

Wow, this sounds amazing, as I have said, can’t wait for the Apple Silicon iMac Pro and Mac Pro to see what they can do!

9to5Mac reports that the M1 Max GPU beats an AMD Radeo Pro W6900x in Affinity Benchmark

Filipe Esposito at 9 to 5 first reported on this, from a test by Andy Somerfield at Affinity Photohttps://9to5mac.com/2021/10/25/apple-m1-max-gpu-beats-6000-amd-radeon-pro-w6900x-in-affinity-benchmark/

This is pretty amazing, beating a $6000 GPU from the 2019 MacPro! Wow. So the Apple Silicon iMac Pro and Mac Pro will certainly be impressive machines.

Scott Simmons at Pro Video Coalition review the 16 inch Apple MacBook Pro M1 Max for Video Editors Part 1

Scott Simons has released the first part of a must read review of using the Apple MAcBook Pro M1 Max for Video Editors.

Things sounds great so far, and it really gives me hope for the Apple Silicon iMac Pro and Mac Pro.

Still hope that plug in makers start speeding up the process of re-writing their software for M1. It disturbs me that even companies like Maxon with Red Giant hasn’t upgraded everything to M1 yet, even though it is a subscription, which means they really should be upgrading their applications quickly, because I am paying for them constantly. At least Adobe has the Beta of After Effects working on M1, but it is going to be limited on plug ins for sure.

Appleinser on M1 Pro and M1 Max theoretical GPU Performance VS. AMD and NVIDIA

Malcolm Own at Apple Insider has an article on M1 Pro and M1 Max GPU performance versus Nvidia and AMD.

Now it uses teraflops to compare it to what the equivalent processor is, meaning the top of the line is equivalent to a Radeon RX Vega 56 or GeForce RTX 2080.

Which also means my Radeon Pro Vega 64x, which can do a bout 13.5 teraflops (12.5 teraflows for the 64) is still better, but still slower than a RTX 3060 Ti or above processor.

Apple adds another free update to Final Cut Pro and Logic for the M1 Pro and M1 Max

Yesterday Apple updated both Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro to take advantage of the new MacBook Pro with M1 Pro and M1 Max.

Final Cut Pro has hit version 10.6.

It includes the ability to edit cinematic mode videos. And on the M1 Pro and Max it can not support 7 streams of 8K ProRES at full resolution (they do have a ProRES playback module!) and export ProRES up to 5x faster. And it now has a built in Object tracker

Motion can render 2x faster and cvan play 2 streams of 8K video at 5x the frame rate.

And on the MacBook Pro Compressor can transcode HEVC Video up to 2x faster and transcode ProRES up to 10x faster.

Logic Pro hits version 10.7

And this one focuses on Spacial Audio, with Dolby Atmos Music files.

Always love Apple giving new free upgrades to their software. Now I just hope Adobe gets support for Cinematic Mode soon in Premiere Pro.

The new M1 Pro and M1 Max are what is running the new MacBook Pro 14′ and 16′ as serious editing, color correction and Graphics machine

Apple has announced new M1 based MacBook Pro in 14″ and 16″ with the new M1 Pro and M1 Max chips.

And the rumors were right there is a damn divot for the camera just like the iPhone and iPad.

These are much more pro machines, with a much more pro price. And you had better pay for as much as you can as you will not be upgrading anything after you purchase the machine.

For $1999.00 you get an 14″ with 512 SSD 8 Core CPU, 14 Core CPU and 16GB of memory. It is an additional $400 to move to 32 GB of Memory, and $200 to move to a 10 core CPU, 14 core GPU, or $300 for 10 core cpu, 16 core gpU, $500 to movew to the mac with 10 core CPU and 24 core GPU, or $700 for Max with 10 Core CPU and 32 Core GPU.

Or for $2499 you get the 10 Core CPU, 16 Core GPU and 1 TB SSD with 16 GB of memory, which makes a $200 upgrade to M1 Mac with 24 core GPY or $400 for the Max 32 Core GPU, with the same $400 to go to 32 Gigs gigs of memory.

The 16″ starts at $2499 with 10 core CPU, 16 Core GPU, 16GB of memory and 512 ssd, then $2699 for the Same with 1TB hard drive or $3499 with MAX 10 Core CPU and 32 Core GPU with 32 GB memory and 1 TB SSD, this top model can hace 64 GB of memory for $400 additional, and SSD’s are $400 for 2tb, $1000 for 4tB and an eye watering $22000 for 8TB. So for a top of the line with 2TB SSD and 64 GB of RAM you are talking $4299.00.

Damn I would love to play with one of these and see how well this thing edits, it sounds like the first pro machine that could really handle some high end editing, graphics and color correct. And it gives me hope for the non-portable high end machines.

I do this means when the M2 Pro and Max chips come out, hopefully they will include a 128 RAM version, and have at least 64 cores for video, but maybe even 128. Sure it will be a 10,000 machine at least, but with that and probably 4 cores for ProRES Playback we are talking some serious editing machines!

Apple has introduced the M1 Pro and the M1 Max for the new 14′ and 16′ Macbook Pro

Apple has announced the new M1 Pro and M1 Max variation of the Apple Silicon M1 Chip for the new 14′ and 16′ MacBook Pro.

The CPU in M1 Pro and M1 Max delivers up to 70 percent faster CPU performance than M1, so tasks like compiling projects in Xcode are faster than ever. The GPU in M1 Pro is up to 2x faster than M1, while M1 Max is up to an astonishing 4x faster than M1, allowing pro users to fly through the most demanding graphics workflows

M1 Pro offers up to 200GB/s of memory bandwidth with support for up to 32GB of unified memory. M1 Max delivers up to 400GB/s of memory bandwidth — 2x that of M1 Pro and nearly 6x that of M1 — and support for up to 64GB of unified memory.

M1 Pro also includes dedicated acceleration for the ProRes professional video codec, allowing playback of multiple streams of high-quality 4K and 8K ProRes video while using very little power. M1 Max goes even further, delivering up to 2x faster video encoding than M1 Pro, and features two ProRes accelerators.

Wow, this is certainly more pro than the M1 was, though you do have to deal with the Mac Premium for the high end versions, especially the 64GB M1 Max, but I will talk about that in the next article on the new MacBooks. And if the stats they showed for DaVinci play out, not only will a non portable machine be very impressive (though likely expensive) the inclusion of ProRES accelerators is awesome (though also makes PCI slots seem less and less likely).

DPReview on 5 Big Improvements probably coming to Apple’s next MacBook Pro

DL Cade has a great article on possible new features of the next Apple Silicon MacBook Pro. It is very good read, but a couple of things on graphics really stood out for me.

According to several different leaks, the M1X SOC will be available in 16- and 32-core variants that could offer performance on par NVIDIA’s GTX 1650 and RTX 3070, respectively, while sipping less than half of the wattage. If these rumors turn out to be true, the M1X will offer the most powerful iGPU experience on the market, offering more than enough power for most GPU-accelerated photo and video editing tasks.

However, even if the M1X meets these expectations, we would also love for Apple to bring back support for eGPUs. For now, only Intel-based MacBooks support eGPUs, but according to French publication Mac4ever, M1 Macs can detect eGPUs when they’re connected, just don’t have the necessary drivers to put them to use. This could simply be a holdover for Intel-based Mac users on Big Sur, or it could be an indication that eGPU support is coming for more “professional-grade” users of Apple Silicon Macs. We sincerely hope it’s the latter.

Both of these are exciting. The current M1 scared me without it’s external GPU support and while that might or might not be coming, the possible performance of the GPU cores is fairly impressive, especially if they really make one with a lot more graphics cores. I still hate the ram being shared, and soldered since it will be so expensive, but if you can get at least 128 GB you will likely be pretty damn powerful. All speculation now though.

Blackmagic Design updates DaVinci Resolve to 17.3

Blackmagic has updated it’s DaVinci Resolve software to 17.3.

The big feature is 3x faster with Apple Silicon M1 enabling 8k editing and grading. As well as H.265 encoder enhancements.

It also includes the ability to rotate garbage mattes.

Another great sounding free update. Can’t wait to give it a try.