Mac Studio
Apple launched Mac Studio, and as we speculated before, it employs architectural optimization, UltraFusion, to boost performance. While the advertisement is for studio use, it's clear the performance can easily cover vast areas of pro uses. It's reasonable to envisage, say, graphics departments within corporations will happily adopt Mac Studio to improve productivity. Mac Studio fills the gap between entry-level Macs and future Mac Pro. In some way, Mac Studio reminds people of the notorious Mac Pro 2013, but the lack of configurability may be justifiable given extended connectivity for peripherals.
The outstanding hardware, however, can not succeed alone without quality software. It's well-known that recent macOS releases are very buggy, which may significantly impact pro workflows. As every serious Apple user knows, Apple can not be trusted with critical data, because software unreliability may wipe out all previous efforts. Lack of well-written developer documentation exacerbates the already bad situation. It does seem that Apple needs to up its game in software.
Apple's carefully crafted image is a marketing legend, but we hope that technical aesthetics will prove its value in the end.
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