That Apple’s M1 processor is a real pass in terms of power of processing and efficiency energetic is already more than spoken and written. And if we put surnames to the name of M1, such as Max, the thing is already bigger words.
And where the difference in processing power is most noticeable are with powerful software that squeezes the most painted processor based on good. One of those applications is without a doubt Lightroom from Adobe. A new test with this software shows what a MacBook Pro can do with an M1 Max.
CNET has just published a report demonstrating what a MacBook Pro can do with the processor M1 Max under heavy workload with Lightroom. With a powerful image editor like Adobe’s, Apple demonstrates how far your MacBook Pro’s processor can go.
The article shows us a comparison between a 16-inch MacBook Pro with the 10-core M1 Max chip and 32 GB of RAM with the MacBook Pro Intel i7 of 2019. The test has been carried out with a complex workload in photo editing.
The test in question was merging six 30-megapixel photos into one panoramic image. And it was done 4.8 times faster on the new Apple Silicon MacBook Pro, taking an average of 14 seconds compared to 67 for the model with an Intel chip.
Another test with less workload was merging three 30 megapixel photos into one HDR image. It took 22 seconds on the Intel MacBook and only 12 seconds with the M1 Max processor, almost half the time. In all the tests carried out with Adobe Lightroom, the Apple Silicon won the street compared to the MacBook Pro Intel i7 with the same 32 GB of RAM.