Apple's all-new M3 MacBook Pro
AppleApple's new14- and 16-inch M3-powered MacBook Pro laptops are out, and they are total powerhouses. And they are, as you'd expect, expensive.
Reassuringly expensive.
But what if you wanted to configure yourself the most expensive MacBook Pro that you could? How expensive does "expensive" really get?
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For users who truly need the power, not as much as you'd think.
The new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros come with a choice of M3, M3 Pro, and M3 Max chips. Choose the power you need depending on your workload.
View at AppleOK, so the14-inch M3 laptops start at$1,599 and features the M3 chip with 8GB of unified memory and 512GB of SSD storage.
That's a good start, but here we're looking to spend money, so we need to go for the most expensive stock system offered and start to customize that.
That would be the16-inch M3 Max unit , with its whopping 16-core CPU, massive 40-core GPU, 48GB of unified memory, and a full 1TB of SSD storage.
The M3 chip lineup
AppleThis will set you back$3,999. Now,$4K is$4K, but as fast as high-end, high-performance laptops powered by cutting-edge silicon go, it's not crazy expensive.
But can we make a "crazy expensive" MacBook Pro?
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Apart from adding software -- and how much fun is that? -- there are only two things we can configure about this system, and both of these upgrades give us an insight into Apple pricing.
First, is RAM, or as Apple called it here, unified memory.
We can bump this up from an acceptable 48GB to an outrageous 128GB for a cool$1,000. So that's$1,000 for 80GB of additional unified memory, which works out at$12.50 per gigabyte.
The other upgrade is storage. Going from 1TB base storage to 8TB will set you backan additional$2,200 for the extra 7TB, or approximately$314 per terabyte.
Not cheap, but also not outrageous either.
And there we have it. A fully loaded M3 Max MacBook Pro willset you back $7,199 . Sure, a lot of money for a system, but this is a powerhouse of a system that will leave the competition in its dust.
For the majority of users -- even those who push their hardware hard -- this is overkill. But if you have demanding workloads, and you want those workloads done fast, this system will pay for itself in no time.