MacBook Pro with new M5 Pro and M5 Max

(apple.com)

412 points | by scrlk 4 hours ago ago

395 comments

  • jbellis 2 hours ago ago

    I chased down what the "4x faster at AI tasks" was measuring:

    > Testing conducted by Apple in January 2026 using preproduction 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Air systems with Apple M5, 10-core CPU, 10-core GPU, 32GB of unified memory, and 4TB SSD, and production 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Air systems with Apple M4, 10-core CPU, 10-core GPU, 32GB of unified memory, and 2TB SSD. Time to first token measured with an 8K-token prompt using a 14-billion parameter model with 4-bit quantization, and LM Studio 0.4.1 (Build 1). Performance tests are conducted using specific computer systems and reflect the approximate performance of MacBook Air.

    • azinman2 2 hours ago ago

      Seems very reasonable to me

      • tux3 2 hours ago ago

        A bit strange to use time to first token instead of throughput.

        Latency to the first token is not like a web page where first paint already has useful things to show. The first token is "The ", and you'll be very happy it's there in 50ms instead of 200ms... but then what you really want to know is how quickly you'll get the rest of the sentence (throughput)

        • jbellis 2 hours ago ago

          As far as benchmarketing goes they clearly went with prefill because it's much easier for apple to improve prefill numbers (flops-dominated) than decode (bandwidth-dominated, at least for local inference); M5 unified memory bandwidth is only about 10% better than the M4.

        • GeekyBear 2 hours ago ago

          In previous generations, throughout was excellent for an integrated GPU, but the time to first token was lacking.

          • danudey 2 hours ago ago

            So throughput was already good but TTFT was the metric that needed more improvement?

            • zamadatix an hour ago ago

              To add to the sibling "good is relative" it also depends what you're running, not just your relative tolerances of what good is. E.g. in a MoE the decode speedup means the speed of prompt processing delay is more noticeable for the same size model in RAM.

            • convenwis 2 hours ago ago

              Good is relative but first token was clearly the biggest limitation.

        • case540 2 hours ago ago

          I assume it’s time to first output token so it’s basically throughput. How fast can it output 8001 tokens

        • fragmede 2 hours ago ago

          No you don't. Not as a sticky mushy human with emotions watching tokens drip in. There's a lot of feeling and emotion not backed by hard facts and data going around, and most people would rather see something happening even if it takes longer overall. Hence spinner.gif, that doesn't actually remotely do a damned thing, but it gives users reassurance that they're waiting for something good. So human psychology makes time to first token an important metric to look at, although it's not the only one.

          • MrDrMcCoy an hour ago ago

            Some kinds of spinners serve as a coal-mine canary indicating if the app has gotten wedged. Not hugely useful, but also not entirely useless.

      • nabakin an hour ago ago

        I would consider it reasonable if this was 4x TTFT and Throughput, but it seems like it's only for TTFT.

  • Tangokat 4 hours ago ago

    "Scaling up performance from M5 and offering the same breakthrough GPU architecture with a Neural Accelerator in each core, M5 Pro and M5 Max deliver up to 4x faster LLM prompt processing than M4 Pro and M4 Max, and up to 8x AI image generation than M1 Pro and M1 Max."

    Are they doubling down on local LLMs then?

    I still think Apple has a huge opportunity in privacy first LLMs but so far I'm not seeing much execution. Wondering if that will change with the overhaul of Siri this spring.

    • butILoveLife 4 hours ago ago

      I think its just marketing, and the marketing is working. Look how many people bought Minis and ended up just paying for API calls anyway. (Saw it IRL 2x, see it on reddit openclaw daily)

      I don't mind it, I open Apple stock. But I'm def not buying into their rebranding of integrated GPU under the guise of Unified Memory.

      • jsheard 4 hours ago ago

        > Look how many people bought Minis and ended up just paying for API calls anyway. (Saw it IRL 2x, see it on reddit openclaw daily)

        Aren't the OpenClaw enjoyers buying Mac Minis because it's the cheapest thing which runs macOS, the only platform which can programmatically interface with iMessage and other Apple ecosystem stuff? It has nothing to do with the hardware really.

        Still, buying a brand new Mac Mini for that purpose seems kind of pointless when a used M1 model would achieve the same thing.

        • ErneX 4 hours ago ago

          It’s exactly that. They are buying the base model just for that. You are not going to do much local AI with those 16GB of ram anyway, it could be useful for small things but the main purpose of the Mini is being able to interact with the apple apps and services.

          • rafaelmn 2 hours ago ago

            16GB should be enough for TTS/Voice models running locally no ? I was thinking about having a home assistant setup like that where the voice is local and the brain is API based

          • chaostheory 3 hours ago ago

            No one is buying a base model Mac for local LLM. Everyone is forgetting the PC prices have drastically increased due to RAM and SSD. Meanwhile, Macs had no such price change… at least for the models that didn’t just drop today. Mac’s are just a good deal at the moment.

            • jsheard 3 hours ago ago

              > Meanwhile, Macs had no such price change

              Yeah because Mac upgrade prices were already sky high, long before the component shortage. 32GB of DDR5-6000 for a PC rocketed from $100 to $500, while the cost of adding 16GB to a Mac was and still is $400.

              • AnthonyMouse 15 minutes ago ago

                I'm kind of curious how Apple's supply contracts actually work, because it's currently more attractive to buy a Mac with a lot of RAM than it usually is, relative to a PC. So if it's "we negotiated a price and you give us as much RAM as we sell machines" the company supplying the RAM is getting soaked because they're having to supply even more RAM to Apple for a below-market price.

                But if the contract was for a specific amount of RAM and then people start coming to Apple more for high RAM machines, they're going to exhaust their contract sooner than usual and run out of cheap memory to buy. Then they have to decide if they want to lower their margins or raise the already-high price up to nosebleed levels.

            • briffle 3 hours ago ago

              the new models cost $200 more for each 8GB of Ram you add.. Ouch...

        • re-thc 3 hours ago ago

          > Aren't the OpenClaw enjoyers buying Mac Minis because it's the cheapest thing which runs macOS

          That's likely only part of the reason. Mac Mini is now "cheap" because everyone exploded in price. RAM and SSD etc have all gone up massively. Not the mention Mac mini is easy out of the box experience.

          • CrazyStat 3 hours ago ago

            It's not cheap, though. Two weeks ago I bought a computer with a similar form factor (GMKtec G10). Worse CPU and GPU but same 16GB memory and a larger SSD for 40% the price of a base mac mini ($239 vs $599). It came with Windows preinstalled, but I immediately wiped that to install linux. Even a used (M-series) mac mini is substantially more expensive. It will cost me about an extra penny per day in electricity costs over a mac mini, but I won't be alive long enough for the mac mini to catch up on that metric.

            I considered the mac mini at the time, but the mac mini only makes sense if you need the local processing power or the apple ecosystem integration. It's certainly not cheaper if you just need a small box to make API calls and do minimal local processing.

            • stanmancan 3 hours ago ago

              It's cheap for what you get.

              If you just need "a small box to make API calls and do minimal local processing" you an also just buy a RPI for a fraction of the price of the GMKtec G10.

              All 3 serve a different purpose; just because you can buy a slower machine for less doesn't mean the price:performance of the M1 Mac Mini changes.

              • kllrnohj 43 minutes ago ago

                > you an also just buy a RPI for a fraction of the price of the GMKtec G10.

                Sadly not really. The Pi 5 8gb canakit starter set, which feels like a more true price since it's including power supply, MicroSD card, and case, is now $210. The pi5 8gb by itself is $135.

                A 16gb pi5 kit, to match just the RAM capacity to say nothing of the difference in storage {size, speed, quality} and networking, is then also an eye watering $300

            • nicoburns 3 hours ago ago

              If you need the CPU power in the Mac Mini then it is a pretty good price-to-performance ratio.

            • re-thc 3 hours ago ago

              > It came with Windows preinstalled, but I immediately wiped that to install linux.

              Do you really need Openclaw now? And not claude code + zapier or Claude code + cron?

              That's the point. If you have worse CPU and GPU Windows will be sluggish (it's bloated).

        • philistine 3 hours ago ago

          There are so few used Mac Mini around, those are all gone and what is left is to buy new.

          • jermaustin1 3 hours ago ago

            Worse than that, they hold their value, so buying a used M1 mini is still a few hundred bucks, and saving $200-300 by purchasing a 5 generation older mini seems like a bad deal in comparison.

          • someperson 2 hours ago ago

            Just like with GPUs and Bitcoin they'll be a flood of old hardware on the market eventually.

        • BeetleB 3 hours ago ago

          Can't they simply run MacOS on a VM on existing Mac hardware?

          • sneak an hour ago ago

            Not if you want it to be able to use the hardware identifiers to register for use with iMessage.

          • shuckles 3 hours ago ago

            You aren’t going to run a network connected 24/7 online agent from a laptop because it’s battery powered and portable.

        • llmslave 4 hours ago ago

          yes, and its funny that all these critical people dont know this

      • rafram 3 hours ago ago

        Why not? The integrated GPUs are quite powerful, and having access to 32+ GB of GPU memory is amazing. There's a reason people buy Macs for local LLM work. Nothing else on the market really beats it right now.

      • mleo 4 hours ago ago

        My M4 MacBook Pro for work just came a few weeks ago with 128 GB of RAM. Some simple voice customization started using 90GB. The unified memory value is there.

      • lizknope 3 hours ago ago

        Jeff Geerling had a video of using 4 Mac Studios each with 512GB RAM connected by Thunderbolt. Each machine is around $10K so this isn't cheap but the performance is impressive.

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4_RsUxRjKU

        • Greed 3 hours ago ago

          If 40k is the barrier to entry for impressive, that doesn't really sell the usecase of local LLMs very well.

          For the same price in API calls, you could fund AI driven development across a small team for quite a long while.

          Whether that remains the case once those models are no longer subsidized, TBD. But as of today the comparison isn't even close.

          • jazzyjackson 2 hours ago ago

            It’s what a small business might have paid for an onprem web server a couple of decades ago before clouds caught on. I figure if a legal or medical practice saw value in LLMs it wouldn’t be a big deal to shove 50k into a closet

          • ttoinou 3 hours ago ago

            With M3 Max with 64GB of unified ram you can code with a local LLM, so the bar is much lower

      • tcmart14 an hour ago ago

        I'm not really into AI and LLMs. I personally don't like anything they output. But the people I know who are into it and into running their own local setups are buying Studios and Minis for their at home local LLM set ups. Really, everyone I personally know who is doing their build your own with local LLMs are doing this. I don't know anyone anymore buying other computers and NVIDIA graphics cards for it.

      • threatofrain 3 hours ago ago

        The biggest problem with personal ML workflows on Mac right now is the software.

        • cmdrmac 3 hours ago ago

          I'm curious to know what software you're referring to.

      • Hamuko 4 hours ago ago

        I've tried to use a local LLM on an M4 Pro machine and it's quite painful. Not surprised that people into LLMs would pay for tokens instead of trying to force their poor MacBooks to do it.

        • atwrk 4 hours ago ago

          Local LLM inference is all about memory bandwidth, and an M4 pro only has about the same as a Strix Halo or DGX Spark. That's why the older ultras are popular with the local LLM crowd.

        • usagisushi an hour ago ago

          Qwen 3.5 35B-A3B and 27B have changed the game for me. I expect we'll see something comparable to Sonnet 4.6 running locally sometime this year.

        • freeone3000 3 hours ago ago

          I’m super happy with it for embedding, image recog, and semantic video segmentation tasks.

        • giancarlostoro 4 hours ago ago

          What are the other specs and how's your setup look? You need a minimum of 24GB of RAM for it to run 16GB or less models.

          • jazzyjackson 2 hours ago ago

            Tokens per second is abysmal no matter how much ram you have

          • SV_BubbleTime 3 hours ago ago

            This is typically true.

            And while it is stupid slow, you can run models of hard drive or swap space. You wouldn’t do it normally, but it can be done to check an answer in one model versus another.

          • Hamuko 3 hours ago ago

            48 GB MacBook Pro. All of the models I've tried have been slow and also offered terrible results.

        • andoando 2 hours ago ago

          Local LLMs are useful for stuff like tool calling

    • whizzter 4 hours ago ago

      We had a workshop 6 months ago and while I've always been sceptical of OpenAI,etc's silly AGI/ASI claims, the investments have shown the way to a lot of new technology and has opened up a genie that won't be put back into the bottle.

      Now extrapolating in line with how Sun servers around year 2000 cost a fortune and can be emulated by a 5$ VPS today, Apple is seeing that they can maybe grab the local LLM workloads if they act now with their integrated chip development.

      But to grab that, they need developers to rely less on CUDA via Python or have other proper hardware support for those environments, and that won't happen without the hardware being there first and the machines being able to be built with enough memory (refreshing to see Apple support 128gb even if it'll probably bleed you dry).

      • fny 4 hours ago ago

        I feel like the push by devs towards Metal compatibility has been 10x than AMD. I assume that's because the majority of us run MacBooks.

        • davidmurdoch 4 hours ago ago

          Who is "us" in this case? Majority of devs that took the stack overflow survey use Windows:

          https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2025/technology/#1-computer-...

          • AdamN 3 hours ago ago

            That's the broad developer community. 90%+ of the engineers at Big Tech and the technorati startups are on MacOS with 5% on Linux and the other 5% on Windows.

            • davidmurdoch 3 hours ago ago

              Source?

            • re-thc 3 hours ago ago

              > 90%+ of the engineers at Big Tech and the technorati startups

              The US 1s? Is that why we have Deepseek and then other non-US open source LLMs catching up rapidly?

              World view please. The developer community is not US only.

              • seanmcdirmid 3 hours ago ago

                You’ll see a lot of MacBooks in Beijing’s zhongguangcun where all the tech companies are, but they also have a lot of students there as well, so who knows. You need to go out to the suburbs where Lenovo has offices to stop seeing them. I know Apple is common in Western Europe having lived there for two years (but that was 20 years ago, I lived in China for 9 years after that).

                It wouldn’t surprise me if the deepseek people were primarily using Mac’s. Maybe Alibaba might be using PCs? I’m not sure.

          • pdpi 4 hours ago ago

            I think it's reasonable to say that the people responding to surveys on Stack Overflow aren't the same people who work on pushing the state of the art in local LLM deployment. (which doesn't prove that that crowd is Apple-centric, of course)

            • davidmurdoch 3 hours ago ago

              Perhaps. Though Windows has been the majority share even when stack overflow was at it's peak, and before.

          • JCharante 3 hours ago ago

            Majority of devs are in the global south I presume

        • pjmlp 2 hours ago ago

          Which majority?

          I certainly only use Macs when being project assigned, then there are plenty of developers out there whose job has nothing to do with what Apple offers.

          Also while Metal is a very cool API, I rather play with Vulkan, CUDA and DirectX, as do the large majority of game developers.

          • whizzter 2 hours ago ago

            Honestly though, gamedevs really are among the biggest Windows stalwarts due to SDK's and older 3d software.

            Only groups of developers more tied to Windows that I can think of are probably embedded people tied due to weird hardware SDK's and Windows Active Directory dependent enterprise people.

            Outside of that almost everyone hip seems to want a Mac.

            • pjmlp 2 hours ago ago

              80% of the desktop market has to have their applications developed by someone, at least until software replicators replace them.

              Everyone hip alright, or at least those that would dream to earn a salary big enough to afford Apple taxes.

              Remember there are world regions where developers barely make 1 000 euros per month.

        • well_ackshually an hour ago ago

          The only "push" towards Metal compatibility there's been has been complaints on github issues. Not only has none of the work been done, absolutely nobody in their right mind wants to work on Metal compatibility. Replacing proprietary with proprietary is absolutely nobody's weekend project. or paid project.

        • whizzter 3 hours ago ago

          I think that might be partly because on regular PC's you can just go and buy an NVidia card insteaf of fuzzing around with software issues, and for those on laptops they probably hope that something like Zluda will solve it via software shims or MS backed ML api's.

          Basically, too many choices to "focus on" makes non a winner except the incumbent.

      • freeone3000 3 hours ago ago

        Torch mlp support on my local macbook outperforms CUDA T4 on Colab.

      • pjmlp 2 hours ago ago

        Except CUDA feels really cozy, because like Microsoft, NVidia understands the Developers, Developers, Developers mantra.

        People always overlook that CUDA is a polyglot ecosystem, the IDE and graphical debugging experience where one can even single step on GPU code, the libraries ecosystem.

        And as of last year, NVidia has started to take Python seriously and now with cuTile based JIT, it is possible to write CUDA kernels in pure Python, not having Python generate C++ code that other tools than ingest.

        They are getting ahead of Modular, with Python.

    • caycep an hour ago ago

      Given all the supply issues w/ Nvidia, I think Apple's AI strategy should be - local AI everything (not just LLMs), but also make Metal competitive w/ CUDA. Their ace in the hole is the unified memory model.

    • woadwarrior01 3 hours ago ago

      > Are they doubling down on local LLMs then?

      Neural Accelerators (aka NAX) accelerates matmults with tile sizes >= 32. From a very high level perspective, LLM inference has two phases: (chunked) prefill and decode. The former is matmults (GEMM) and the latter is matrix vector mults (GEMV). Neural Accelerators make the former (prefill) faster and have no impact on the latter.

    • tiffanyh 3 hours ago ago

      > Are they doubling down on local LLMs then?

      Apple is in the hardware business.

      They want you to buy their hardware.

      People using Cloud for compute is essentially competitive to their core business.

    • Lalabadie 4 hours ago ago

      There already are a bunch of task-specific models running on their devices, it makes sense to maintain and build capacity in that area.

      I assume they have a moderate bet on on-device SLMs in addition to other ML models, but not much planned for LLMs, which at that scale, might be good as generalists but very poor at guaranteeing success for each specific minute tasks you want done.

      In short: 8gb to store tens of very small and fast purpose-specific models is much better than a single 8gb LLM trying to do everything.

      • Munachi1869 3 hours ago ago

        Probably possible for pure coding models. I see on-device models becoming viable and usable in like 2-3 years on device

    • aurareturn 4 hours ago ago

        Are they doubling down on local LLMs then?
      
      Neural Accelerator was present in iPhone 17 and M5 chip already. This is not new for M5 Pro/Max.

      Apple's stated AI strategy is local where it can and cloud where it needs. So "doubling down"? Probably not. But it fits in their strategy.

    • maherbeg 39 minutes ago ago

      Honestly, they can keep waiting for another year or two for on-device models at the size they're looking for to be powerful enough.

    • Aurornis 4 hours ago ago

      The hardware capabilities that make local LLMs fast are useful for a lot of different AI workloads. Local LLMs are a hot topic right now so that’s what the marketing team is using as an example to make it relatable.

    • Someone1234 4 hours ago ago

      Apple's AI strategy really kind of threads the needle cleverly.

      "AI" (LLMs) may or may not have a bubble-pop moment, but until it does Apple get to ride it on these press releases and claims. But if the big-pop occurs, then Apple winds up with really fantastic hardware that just happens to be good at AI workloads (as well as general computing).

      For example, image classification (e.g. face recognition/photo tagging), ASR+vocoders, image enhancement, OCR, et al, were popular before the current boom, and will likely remain popular after. Even if LLM usage dries up/falls out of vogue, this hardware still offers a significant user benefit.

      • lamontcg an hour ago ago

        LLM usage is not very likely to "dry up".

        What is more likely to happen though is that it doesn't take multiple $10B of datacenter and capital to build out models--and the performance against LLM benchmarks starts to max out to the point where throwing more capital at it doesn't make enough of a difference to matter.

        Once the costs shrink below $1B then Apple could start building their own models with the $139B in cash and marketable securities that they have--while everyone else has burned through $100B trying to be first.

        Of course the problem with this strategy right now is that Siri really, really sucks. They do need to come up with some product improvements now so that they don't get completely lapped.

      • ChrisGreenHeur 4 hours ago ago

        those things could likely just run fine on the gpu though

        • Someone1234 4 hours ago ago

          They could run fine on the CPU too. But these are mobile devices, therefore battery usage is another significant metric. Dedicated hardware is more energy efficient than general hardware, and GPU in particular is a power-hog.

          • vel0city 3 hours ago ago

            Exactly. It's the same thing as video or audio encoding and decoding. Sure the CPU could do it, potentially use the GPU, but having actual hardware encoders and decoders for the most common codecs will save a lot of energy.

        • Nevermark an hour ago ago

          Not if GPU RAM is a limiter. Which it is for most models.

          Unified memory is a serious architectural improvement.

          How many GPUs does it take to match the RAM, and make up for the additional communication overhead, of a RAM-maxed Mac? Whatever the answer, it won’t fit in a MacBook Pro’s physical and energy envelopes. Or that of an all-in-one like the Studio.

    • ivankra 4 hours ago ago

      But memory bandwidth (bottleneck for LLM inference) is only marginally improved, 614 GB/s vs 546 GB/s for M4/M5 Max - where is this 4x improvement coming from?

      I think I'll pass on upgrading.

      • singhrac 4 hours ago ago

        It’s prompt processing so prefill - that’s compute bound not memory.

    • Sharlin 4 hours ago ago

      "Apple Intelligence is even more capable while protecting users’ privacy at every step."

      Remains to be seen how capable it actually is. But they're certainly trying to sell the privacy aspect.

      • re-thc 3 hours ago ago

        > Remains to be seen how capable it actually is.

        It's the best. We all turned it off. 100% privacy.

    • game_the0ry 4 hours ago ago

      > Are they doubling down on local LLMs then?

      Honestly, I think that's the move for apple. They do not seem to have any interest in creating a frontier lab/model -- why would they give the capex and how far behind they are.

      But open source models (Kimi, Deepseek, Qwen) are getting better and better, and apple makes excellent hardware for local LLMs. How appealing would it be to have your own LLM that knows all your secrets and doesnt serve you ads/slop, versus OpenAI and SCam Altman having all your secrets? I would seriously consider it even if the performance was not quite there. And no need for subscription + cli tool.

      I think apple is in the best position to have native AI, versus the competition which end up being edge nodes for the big 4 frontier labs.

    • blueTiger33 2 hours ago ago

      have you seen that github repo where they unlock the true power of NE?

      • recov 2 hours ago ago

        Have a link?

    • meisel 3 hours ago ago

      What % of users actually care that much about local LLMs? It appears to still be an inferior (though maybe decent) service compared to ChatGPT etc., and requires very top-end hardware. Is privacy _that_ important to people when their Google search history has been a gateway to the soul for years? I wonder if these machines would cost significantly less (or put the cost to other things, e.g. more CPU cores) without this emphasis on LLMs.

      • barrell 3 hours ago ago

        Privacy is definitely not a cern for the layman, but it is for lots of people, especially pro users. I also haven’t made a google search in years.

        I also haven’t seen any improvements in the frontier models in years, and I’m anxiously awaiting local models to catch up.

    • icar 3 hours ago ago

      Didn't they announce a partnership with Google Gemini?

    • andy_ppp 4 hours ago ago

      It is simply marketing nonsense - what they really mean (I think) is they support matrix multiplication (matmul) at the hardware level which given AI is mostly matrix multiplications you'll get much faster inference (and some increase in training too) on this new hardware. I'm looking forward to seeing how fast a local 96gb+ LLM is on the M5 Max with 128gb of RAM.

      • manmal an hour ago ago

        We've already established in this thread that memory bandwidth isn't that much greater than M4 Max - 12%? However, I wonder if batched inference will benefit greatly from the vastly improved compute. My guess is that parallel usage of the same model will be a couple times faster. So, single "threaded" use not that much better, but say you want to run a lot of batch jobs, it'd be way faster?

    • jahller 4 hours ago ago

      looks like this will be their angle for the whole agentic AI topic

    • general_reveal 4 hours ago ago

      It’s not necessarily doubling down on local. The reality is your LLM should be inferencing every tick … the same way your brain thinks every. Fucking. Nano. Second.

      So yes, the LLM should be inferencing on your prompt, but it should also be inferencing on 25,000 other things … in parallel.

      Those are the compute needs.

      We just need compute everywhere as fast as possible.

    • ignoramous 3 hours ago ago

      > doubling down on local LLMs

      Do think it'll be common to see pros purchasing expensive PCs approaching £25k or more if they could run SoTA multi-modal LLMs faster & locally.

    • m3kw9 3 hours ago ago

      A useful llm that needs 64gb of ram and mid double digit cores is not useful for 99% of their customers. The LLMs they have on iphone 17's certainly cannot do anything useful other than summerization and stuff. It's a hardware constraint that they have.

    • jmyeet 4 hours ago ago

      Apple absolutely has a massive opportunity here because they used a shared memory architecture.

      So as most people in or adjacent to the AI space know, NVidia gatekeeps their best GPUs with the most memory by making them eye-wateringly expensive. It's a form of market segmentation. So consumer GPUs top out at 16GB (5090 currently) while the best AI GPUs (H200?) is 141GB (I just had to search)? I think the previou sgen was 80GB.

      But these GPUs are north of $30k.

      Now the Mac Studio tops out currently at 512GB os SHARED memory. That means you can potentially run a much larger model locally without distributing it across machines. Currently that retails at $9500 but that's relatively cheap, in comparison.

      But, as it stands now, the best Apple chips have significantly lower memory bandwidth than NVidia GPUs and that really impacts tokens/second.

      So I've been waiting to see if Apple will realize this and address it in the next generation of Mac Studios (and, to a lesser extend, Macbook Pros). The H200 seems to be 4.8TB/s. IIRC the 5090 is ~1.8TB/s. The best Apple is (IIRC) 819GB/s on the M3 Ultra.

      Apple could really make a dent in NVidia's monopoly here if they address some of these technical limitations.

      So I just checked the memory bandwidth of these new chips and it seems like the M5 is 153GB/s, M5 Pro is ~300 and M5 Max is ~600. I was hoping for higher. This isn't a big jump from the M4 generation. I suspect the new Studios will probably barely break 1TB/s. I had been hoping for higher.

      • fridder a few seconds ago ago

        It will be interesting to see the specs on an m5 ultra. Probably have to wait until WWDC at the earliest to see it though

      • SirMaster 3 hours ago ago

        >So consumer GPUs top out at 16GB (5090 currently)

        5090 has 32GB, and the 4090 and 3090 both have 24GB.

      • ericd 3 hours ago ago

        Hard to get 6000+ bit memory bus HBM bandwidth out of a 512 or 1024 bit memory bus tied to DDR... I think it's also just tough to physically tie in 512 gigs close enough to the GPU to run at those speeds. But yeah, I wish there was a very competitive local option, too, short of spending $50k+.

    • lynx97 4 hours ago ago

      The topic is MacBook, so my criticism is a little off. However, I really dont believe in this "local LLM" promise from Apple. My phone already gets noticeably warm if I answer 5 WhatsApp messages. And looses 5% of battery during the process. I highly doubt Apple will have a useable local LLM that doesn't drain my battery in minutes, before 2030.

      • cosmic_cheese 4 hours ago ago

        Something is not right if WhatsApp is seriously draining your phone like that. Admittedly I’m not a big WhatsApp user my iPhone hasn’t had any trouble like that with it.

        • jakeydus 3 hours ago ago

          Yeah is OP using an iPhone X?

    • kilroy123 4 hours ago ago

      I've been so disappointed in Apple's lack of execution on this. There is so much potential for fantastic local models to run and intelligently connect to cloud models.

      I just don't get why they're dropping the ball so much on this.

      • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

        Because it won’t sell enough hardware to matter to them.

        They aren’t dropping the ball, they are being smart and prudent.

        • kilroy123 an hour ago ago

          Downvote all you want. Point blank, they are dropping the ball.

    • neya 3 hours ago ago

      > I still think Apple has a huge opportunity in privacy first LLMs

      This correlation of Apple and privacy needs to rest. They have consistently proven to be otherwise - despite heavily marketing themselves as "privacy-first"

      https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/jul/26/apple-con...

      • matthewfcarlson an hour ago ago

        I think it's all about relativity. Are they private compared to an open source privacy focused OS like grapheneOS and the fantastic folks running that project? No. Are they more private than a company like meta or google who has much worse incentives for privacy than Apple? Probably.

        Do I wish Apple was way more transparent and gave users more control over gatekeeper and other controversial features that erode privacy? Absolutely.

      • 4fterd4rk 3 hours ago ago

        I think it's a little telling that the best you can do is a seven year old article.

        • neya 2 hours ago ago

          So, somehow now they are the beacons of privacy and we should just ignore their history of spying on their users?

        • lern_too_spel 2 hours ago ago

          No other company makes you tell them every application you install on your device. No other company makes you tell them every location you read from your GPS sensor.

      • chaostheory 3 hours ago ago

        Not for everything. Apple has initially focused on edge AI that runs locally per device. It didn’t work out well the first try, but I would still bet on them trying again once compute catches up. Besides, they still have a better track record than the other tech giants.

  • wincy 4 hours ago ago

    I typed “RAM” to search for it and boy they hammer home how lucky I am to be getting 1TB SSD standard, but no mention of RAM anywhere on this page. Anyway, the MacBook Pro starts with 16GB of RAM. It’s $400 to go from 16GB to 32GB.

    Interestingly, 36-128GB models are showing as “currently unavailable” on the store page, and you can’t even place an order for them right now? But for anyone curious, it’s quoting $5099 for the 128GB RAM 14” MacBook Pro model.

    • jsheard 4 hours ago ago

      > It’s $400 to go from 16GB to 32GB.

      No change from the previous models then, 16GB->32GB was already $400. They're cutting into their previously enormous margins to keep the prices stable, rather than hiking the prices to maintain their margins.

      • philistine 3 hours ago ago

        They bought the fab time for that RAM 2-3 years ago. Apple is renowned for their foresight and preparation. We'll eventually see price increases from Apple's RAM upgrade, but we're not there yet.

      • daveidol 3 hours ago ago

        Their margins may not have changed actually. https://youtu.be/IGCzo6s768o

      • niwtsol 3 hours ago ago

        This is not exactly correct. If you have an M5 Pro chip instead of m5 Chip - I just built a 16inch, M5 Pro chip, it is $400 to go from 24 -> 48gb. An additional $200 ($600 over base) to go to 64gb. So the memory prices change based on chip. M5 Max Chip starts with 48gb of memory.

        • abhikul0 an hour ago ago

          M5 Max starts at 36GB memory at $3599. M4 Max started at the same memory at $3199. They have doubled the default storage from 1TB to 2TB, that's a $400 increase I'm paying even if I don't want the extra 1TB.

      • sgt an hour ago ago

        In practice, you can really go a long way on 16GB on a Mac with unified memory. I like to say it's comparable to 32GB during the old Intel days.

        • jsheard 37 minutes ago ago

          RAM is still RAM, the switch from crusty HDDs to fast NVMe SSDs may have helped to smooth things over when you spill into swap but it's not going to do miracles.

      • carefree-bob an hour ago ago

        Apple's previous policy of price gouging for RAM means no need to raise prices yet, they still have a buffer.

      • aroman 2 hours ago ago

        They raised the base price by $200.

    • jeroenhd 4 hours ago ago

      I know RAM is scarce and everything, but doubling down on LLM local acceleration with all of that dedicated silicon while at the same time sticking with Apple's traditional lack of RAM availability makes for a very weird product proposition to me.

    • raincole 4 hours ago ago

      > M5 Pro supports up to 64GB of unified memory with up to 307GB/s of memory bandwidth, while M5 Max supports up to 128GB of unified memory with up to 614GB/s of memory bandwidth

      Isn't this it?

      • wincy 3 hours ago ago

        Ah yeah you’re right, thanks. I tried to at least make my post useful and pull up prices for the different tiers. Overall, those prices are surprisingly competitive now compared to the rest of the laptop market!

    • stetrain 4 hours ago ago

      On the M5 Pro tier (not the base M5 tier that was released last November), the base memory is 24GB.

      My M3 Pro from a few years ago for the same price had 18GB.

    • armsaw 3 hours ago ago

      Preorders open tomorrow according to the store page. You can’t order the base RAM model today, either.

    • tonyedgecombe 4 hours ago ago

      >Anyway, it starts with 16GB of RAM. $400 to go from 16GB to 32GB

      Interesting that this hasn't budged since the memory shortages appeared.

      • lm28469 3 hours ago ago

        They sell you 1gb LPDDR5X for $25 while buying it at $5, don't worry for their margins...

      • WarmWash 4 hours ago ago

        Fair chance that Apple has price/purchase agreements already in place. Consumers are left to fight over the excess capacity after megabuyers get their orders filled.

      • mschuster91 4 hours ago ago

        > Interesting that this hasn't budged since the memory shortages appeared.

        Apple has had enough war chests with the ability of buying the entirety of TSMC's new capacity years in advance in the past.

        If I were to guess, Apple locked in their entire BOM and production capacity two years ago. That's something even the large players cannot replicate because they run cash-lean and have too many different SKUs, and the small players (Framework, System76, even Steam) are entirely left to the forces of the markets.

    • kylec 3 hours ago ago

      Apple doesn't tend to use "RAM" in their marketing materials, they usually use "memory", which appears 9 times in the press release.

    • aurareturn 4 hours ago ago

      It starts at 16GB for the base M5 and 24GB for the Pro/Max. It's been like this.

    • edvinasbartkus 4 hours ago ago

      on Silicon Mac's it's never called RAM, it "unified memory"

      • lxgr 4 hours ago ago

        I'm honestly just glad they don't brand this as "1016 MB of unified memory". Swap and ramdisks are a thing, after all...

    • 2OEH8eoCRo0 4 hours ago ago

      Insane for the "Pro" to have only 16GB of memory. My 11 year old Intel i3 laptop has 16GB of memory.

      • detritus 3 hours ago ago

        Don't these integrated ARM-based SoCs make much better use of RAM as opposed to old Intel-based boards? That's my understanding, anyway.

        • wincy 3 hours ago ago

          My wife’s 8GB MacBook Air crashed yesterday with Firefox and Find My open and nothing else because of running out of RAM, so, sort of, but they’re not magic. (Find My was using 3GB of memory!)

          • nozzlegear 2 hours ago ago

            So Firefox was using 5gb? There's your problem.

            • wincy 2 hours ago ago

              It’s a losing battle me trying to tell my wife to close her Firefox tabs, haha, but yes, Firefox does use a lot of ram when you have 500 tabs. Maybe I’ll get her a 64GB MacBook Pro for the premium web browsing experience she so desires!

              • qudat 2 hours ago ago

                Tabs as bookmarks, people keep falling into this trap, my wife included

                • nozzlegear an hour ago ago

                  I do it myself and I'm sure a lot of people on HN do too. But I've tried to embrace the "zen" of closing all tabs lately and it's been nice. If I really want to find something later I can search my history or, like you said, just bookmark it.

        • 2OEH8eoCRo0 3 hours ago ago

          The benefits are in speed not capacity.

        • dawnerd 3 hours ago ago

          More to do with the faster storage allowing you to swap without noticing it as much. There was this whole trend when m1 first came out of people saying it didn't matter if you got the lowest spec because the ssd was so fast it made up for the lack of ram... totally ignoring that swapping like that was destroying their drives really fast.

    • TheCapeGreek 4 hours ago ago

      Apple's RAM price bumps were already insane, now they'll get worse.

      • ezfe 4 hours ago ago

        They’re literally not changing

        • hu3 4 hours ago ago

          It did change. They bumped $200 on the entire line. So even the 16GB version is more expensive.

          I'd love to have customers like Apple. Bumps $200: "it didn't change!!!"

          And no power adapter included.

          • SirMaster 3 hours ago ago

            You mean bumped $100. M4 MacBook Pro and M5 MacBook Pro started at $1599 with 512GB SSD.

            Now it starts at $1699, a $100 bump but comes with a 1TB SSD. Previously it would have cost $1799 for the 1T SSD, so it's a $100 bump on base price but you are also getting 1TB SSD for $100 less than before.

          • ezfe 2 hours ago ago

            The base storage increased as well, and the upgrade prices for RAM are the same, which is where the real issue was.

          • nozzlegear 2 hours ago ago

            > I'd love to have customers like Apple. Bumps $200: "it didn't change!!!"

            Try making a good product that people love?

          • vile_wretch 3 hours ago ago

            The EU forbids them from including power adapters. They're still included everywhere else.

            • hu3 33 minutes ago ago

              I can buy a laptop right now close to home and it comes with power adapter.

            • Romario77 an hour ago ago

              EU doesn't forbid including. The new law requires there to be an option without the adapter. If the manufacturer chooses so they can have an option with and without the adapter.

            • gambiting 2 hours ago ago

              Except that it's literally not true and people are repeating it for some stupid reason, I assume you just never actually looked it up - laptops are specifically excluded from that regulation, and in fact Apple does bundle a power adapter with their laptops, just not on the cheapest models.

          • mschuster91 3 hours ago ago

            > And no power adapter included.

            To be fair, ever since the advent of high power USB-C PD that really, really is not needed any more, way too many power bricks are effectively e-waste.

            People already have USB-C power bricks and docks everywhere and unlike pre-USB-C generations, you can use them not just across different generations of hardware, but across vendors as well.

            • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

              I doubt if that many have USB-C high power bricks unless they are upgrading from another USB-C laptop.

          • re-thc 3 hours ago ago

            > It did change. They bumped $200 on the entire line.

            I wonder if that would happen regardless of RAM, e.g. for tariffs etc.

  • manofmanysmiles 4 hours ago ago

    I love the following section of their copy:

    > Even More Value for Upgraders

    > The new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro and M5 Max mark a major leap for pro users. There’s never been a better time for customers to upgrade from a previous generation of MacBook Pro with Apple silicon or an Intel-based Mac.

    I read as "Whoops we made the M1 Macbook Pro too good, please upgrade!"

    I think I will get another 2-5 years out my mine.

    Apple: If you document the hardware enough for the Asahi team to deliver a polished Linux experiene, I'll buy one this year!

    • dawnerd 3 hours ago ago

      My 32gb m1 max was probably the best purchase I've made. Still plenty of headroom in performance left in this beast. Wonder what reason they'll use to end software support in the future. Bet it'll be some security hardware they make up for the sake of forcing upgrades.

      • kobalsky 2 hours ago ago

        my tinfoil hat theory is that they make small features depend on new hardware.

        for example, let's say the new os depends on m5's exclusive thumbnail generator accelerator, and let's say it improves speed by a 20%.

        now, your M1 notebook than on previous OSes uses standard gpu acceleration for thumbnails will not have this specialized hardware acceleration, it will have software fallback that will be 90% slower.

        you won't notice it a first thought because it's stuff, fast, but it eats a bit of the processor.

        multiply this by 1000 features and you have a slow machine.

        I don't know how else to explain how an ipad pro cannot even scroll a menu without stuttering, it's insane how fast these things were on release

        • compounding_it 2 hours ago ago

          yes pretty much this. make useless features use up resources and make basic scrolling slow.

          the Liquid Glass for example probably is not so great when it comes to resources. Probably works better with latest metal and hardware blocks on the GPU in M5 as opposed to using GPU cores and unified memory on 8gb M1 making latest macOS work not so great. I have the M1 8gb air and it is really slow on Tahoe. It was snappy just a couple of years ago on a fresh install.

        • danielxt 2 hours ago ago

          It's not tinfoil, that's just how publicly traded companies work - increasing the share value

    • Nevermark an hour ago ago

      > I read as "Whoops we made the M1 Macbook Pro too good, please upgrade!"

      As there target for that marketing, I can report it hits home!

      But objectively, there is nothing wrong with my current experience at all.

      I have never had that experience over many generations and types of machines. The M1 keeps looking better and better in hindsight.

      —-

      Looking forward, either the M5 is the next M1, a bump of good that will last. Or Apple will be really firing on all cylinders if it can “obsolete” the M5 anytime soon.

    • ramijames 2 hours ago ago

      I've been on a Macbook M1 Pro since 2022 (bought refurbished on Amazon for cheap) and it's still such a powerhouse. It doesn't struggle at all with anything that I throw at it. Kind of amazing.

      Nothing has broken and I consistently get 4-6 hours of heavy work time while on battery. An amazing machine for the price I paid.

    • jeanlucas 3 hours ago ago

      Well, I just upgraded from Intel late last year. There are lots of users still on Intel :)

      • bsimpson 3 hours ago ago

        There was a magical window at Google where you could be issued an iMac Pro 5k. (To this day, the standard issue monitor is still 1440p.)

        ~9 years later, there are a lot of people still using it as their main machine, waiting until we get kicked off the corp network for lack of software support.

        • bombcar an hour ago ago

          Was that one of the ones that could do "target display mode" and become a monitor for another machine?

          • bsimpson 39 minutes ago ago

            Nope - they removed that feature, so now come the end of the year, they're all e-waste.

            It feels really stupid to have to throw away a perfectly capable machine with 64GB of RAM in 2026.

    • seanalltogether 3 hours ago ago

      Same, in fact the only reason right now that I would upgrade my m1 pro is if they threaten to change the design by getting rid of the hdmi or sd card slot, or doing something stupid like when they added the touch bar. I was locked into my old intel pro for so long because of all the bad hardware choices they were making.

      • virgildotcodes 3 hours ago ago

        You may get your wish with all the rumors of a touch screen on the M6 MBPs.

        • throwforfeds 3 hours ago ago

          Love that they didn't learn anything from the touchbar.

          • spiderice 2 hours ago ago

            Comparing the touchbar to a touch screen is silly

            • throwforfeds an hour ago ago

              I guess I'm just a luddite that spends my life on a CLI or text editor. Taking my hands away from my keyboard to leave finger prints on my screen just doesn't make sense to me.

              I think people that do do tasks where a touch screen makes sense are probably just doing most of their work on an iphone or an ipad anyway.

              Now gesture control on VR/AR setups? Sure, that feels like a new human/computer interaction system that makes sense. Jabbing at my laptop screen with one hand on my keyboard, not so much.

            • kjkjadksj an hour ago ago

              You are right the touch screen is even more stupid

              • speedgoose an hour ago ago

                It’s not. I had a thinkpad with a touchscreen and while I used the touchscreen seldomly, it was useful in some applications. Notably to easily develop touch based applications.

                I have a M1 MacBook Pro with the touch bar since. It’s crap. I remember the keynote where they introduced it and a DJ mixed music using it. It was ridiculous that it got approved.

    • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

      I read it the same way. I should've gotten way more RAM back when I got my M1 and RAM was still cheap although this was of course before the LLM boom so there was no way to really know.

      • marpstar 3 hours ago ago

        I maxed my M1 out when I bought it because I was frustrated with the 16GB max in the previous machines. I use my machine for all sorts of things and some days you just don't feel like exiting apps to make space for new ones.

        I still don't have a strong urge to upgrade. I could probably get by on 32GB (like my work-issued machine is) but 64GB is the right amount of headroom for me.

  • bob1029 3 hours ago ago

    I feel like Apple pulled an Instant Pot with the M1 MacBook Pro. I still haven't had a single situation where I felt like spending more money would improve my experience. The battery is wearing out a bit, but it started out life with so much runtime that losing a few hours doesn't seem to matter.

    • swyx an hour ago ago

      > The battery is wearing out a bit, but it started out life with so much runtime that losing a few hours doesn't seem to matter.

      this is my exact opposite experience. my M3 Max from 2 years ago now has <2hrs battery life at best. wondering if any experts here can help me figure out what is going on? what should i be expecting?

      • 1123581321 an hour ago ago

        What is your maximum capacity in Settings > Battery Health? What processes are running with significant CPU? What's the typical temperature of the laptop according to a stats app? (Temperature is a good proxy for general energy use.)

        I'm typing this on an M3 Max; its max battery capacity is 88%. I've got some things running (laptop average temp is 50-55C, fans off), screen is half brightness, and it's projected to go from 90% to 0% in five hours. I don't usually baby it enough to test this, but 8-10 hours should be achievable.

      • speedgoose an hour ago ago

        Also check which apps use the energy.

    • willis936 2 hours ago ago

      I just bought this model in the past year for $600 and it still feels like a great bargain.

    • ireflect 2 hours ago ago

      Same. It looks like battery replacement from ifixit is not too difficult, so I plan to do that when the time comes.

      Incidentally, I just switched to Asahi Linux, but that was for software quality and openness reasons, rather than anything to do with performance.

    • rfwhyte an hour ago ago

      You can very easily replace the battery yourself for less than $100 USD too if it ever becomes enough of an issue that you feel you actually need to do something about it. My M1 Max is at about 88% battery health, but it still gets 4X-6X longer on battery (At full performance too boot) compared to my old PoS Razer laptop, so I likely won't be replacing my battery any time soon.

    • darknavi 2 hours ago ago

      I wish this sort of thing was encouraged in the modern capitalist technology space.

      Unfortunately, number always must go up (and the rate at which the number goes up, also must go up).

  • dirk94018 4 hours ago ago

    On M4 Max 128GB we're seeing ~100 tok/s generation on a 30B parameter model in our from scratch inference engine. Very curious what the "4x faster LLM prompt processing" translates to in practice. Smallish, local 30B-70B inference is genuinely usable territory for real dev workflows, not just demos. Will require staying plugged in though.

    • fotcorn 3 hours ago ago

      The memory bandwith on M4 Max is 546 GB/s, M5 Max is 614GB/s, so not a huge jump.

      The new tensor cores, sorry, "Neural Accelerator" only really help with prompt preprocessing aka prefill, and not with token generation. Token generation is memory bound.

      Hopefully the Ultra version (if it exists) has a bigger jump in memory bandwidth and maximum RAM.

    • hu3 4 hours ago ago

      What about real workloads? Because as context gets larger, these local LLMs aproxiate the useless end of the spectrum with regards to t/s.

      • Someone1234 3 hours ago ago

        I strongly agree. People see local "GPT-4 level" responses, and get excited, which I totally get. But how quickly is the fall-off as the context size grows? Because if it cannot hold and reference a single source-code file in its context, the efficiency will absolutely crater.

        That's actually the biggest growth area in LLMs, it is no longer about smart, it is about context windows (usable ones, note spec-sheet hypotheticals). Smart enough is mostly solved, combating larger problems is slowly improving with every major release (but there is no ceiling).

      • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

        That should be covered by the harness rather than the LLM itself, no? Compaction and summarization should be able to allow the LLM to still run smoothly even on large contexts.

        • hu3 34 minutes ago ago

          Sometimes it really needs a lot of data to work.

    • storus 4 hours ago ago

      4x faster is about token prefill, i.e. the time to first token. It should be on par with DGX Spark there while being slightly faster than M4 for token generation. I.e. when you have long context, you don't need to wait 15 minutes, only 4 minutes.

    • fulafel 2 hours ago ago

      The marketing subterfugue might be about this exactly, technically prompt processing means the prefill phase of inference. So prompt goes in 4x as fast but generates tokens slower.

      This seems even likely as the memory bandwidth hasn't increased enough for those kinds of speedups, and I guess prefill is more likely to be compute-bound (vs mem bw bound).

    • eknkc 4 hours ago ago

      I find time to first token more important then tok/s generally as these models wait an ungodly amount of time before streaming results. It looks like the claims are true based on M5: https://www.macstories.net/stories/ipad-pro-m5-neural-benchm... so this might work great.

    • barumrho 3 hours ago ago

      100 tok/s sounds pretty good. What do you get with 70B? With 128GB, you need quantization to fit 70B model, right?

      Wondering if local LLM (for coding) is a realistic option, otherwise I wouldn't have to max out the RAM.

      • super_mario 2 hours ago ago

        I run gpt-oss 120b model on ollama (the model is about 65 GB on disk) with 128k context size (the model is super optimized and only uses 4.8 GB of additional RAM for KV cache at this context size) on M4 Max 128 GB RAM Mac Studio and I get 65 tokens/s.

        • abhikul0 an hour ago ago

          Have you tried the dense(27B,9B) Qwen3.5 models? Or any diffusion models (Flux Klein, Zimage)? I'm trying to gauge how much of a perf boost I'd get upgrading from an m3 pro.

          For reference:

            | model                          |       size |     params | backend    | threads |            test |                  t/s |
            | ------------------------------ | ---------: | ---------: | ---------- | ------: | --------------: | -------------------: |
            | qwen35 ?B Q5_K - Medium        |   6.12 GiB |     8.95 B | MTL,BLAS   |       6 |           pp512 |        288.90 ± 0.67 |
            | qwen35 ?B Q5_K - Medium        |   6.12 GiB |     8.95 B | MTL,BLAS   |       6 |           tg128 |         16.58 ± 0.05 |
          
            | model                          |       size |     params | backend    | threads |            test |                  t/s |
            | ------------------------------ | ---------: | ---------: | ---------- | ------: | --------------: | -------------------: |
            | gpt-oss 20B MXFP4 MoE          |  11.27 GiB |    20.91 B | MTL,BLAS   |       6 |           pp512 |        615.94 ± 2.23 |
            | gpt-oss 20B MXFP4 MoE          |  11.27 GiB |    20.91 B | MTL,BLAS   |       6 |           tg128 |         42.85 ± 0.61 |
          
            Klein 4B completes a 1024px generation in 72seconds.
  • nsbk 4 hours ago ago

    The hardware looks amazing! Too bad they will ship with Tahoe installed. I’m not upgrading until I see in which direction the next Mac OS release goes

    • carlmr 4 hours ago ago

      I've upgraded to Tahoe at 26.2, zero complaints from my side. Haven't had any runaway memory leaks or similar that were reported.

      • jillesvangurp 3 hours ago ago

        Same here. I know some people are unhappy with some of the UX tweaks but honestly I don't notice much of it. The whole liquid glass thing is a bit gimmicky. Other than that, I don't see much difference. The rounded corners on windows are a bit silly. But I don't spend a lot of time fiddling with windows. Most of my windows are maximized (not full screen). I'm sure there are other issues people dislike that I just haven't noticed.

        I use my laptop for development. I don't actually use most of the built in applications. My browser is Firefox, I use codex, vs code, intellij, iterm2, etc. Most of that works just fine just as it did on previous versions of the OS. I actually on purpose keep my tool chains portable as I like to have the option to switch back to Linux when I want to. I've done that a few times. I come back for the hardware, not the OS.

        In my experience, if you don't like Apple's OS changes that is unfortunate but they don't seem to generally respond to a lot of the criticism. Your choices are to get further and further out of date, switch to something else, or just swallow your pride. Been there done that. Windows is a "Hell No" for me at this point. I'll take the UX, with all the pastel colors that came and went and all the other crap that got unleashed on macs over the last ten years. Definitely a case of the grass not being greener on Windows. Even with the tele tubby default desktop in XP back in the day.

        I can deal with Linux (and use that on and off on one of my laptops). However, that just doesn't run that well on mac hardware. And any other hardware seems like a big downgrade to me. Both Windows and Linux are arguably a lot worse in terms of UX (or lack thereof). Linux you can tweak. And you kind of have to. But it just never adds up to consistent and delightful. Windows, well, at this point liking that is probably a form of Stockholm Syndrome. If that doesn't bother you, good for you.

        So, Mac OS it is for me as everything else is worse. I've in the past deferred updates to new versions of Mac OS as well. Generally you can do that for a while but eventually it becomes annoying when things like homebrew and other development toys start assuming you run something more recent. And of course for security reasons you might just not drag your feet too long. Just my personal, pragmatic take.

      • arianvanp 4 hours ago ago

        Closing Tabs in Safari till takes more than a second though. And if you hold Cmd-W to close all of them it just completely locks up and crashes. Still not fixed since the release of Safari 26.

        Literally unusable

        • herpderperator a minute ago ago

          This sounds like swap needing to be swapped in and then released. Check your memory usage.

        • nozzlegear 4 hours ago ago

          Never had this problem, been on Tahoe since it released. My safari tabs are buttery, silken smooth.

        • AdamN 3 hours ago ago

          Works fine for me. I wonder if you have some extension or script on one of the sites you use slowing down the tab closure.

        • alwillis 4 hours ago ago

          I’ve been running the macOS 26.4 beta and have none of these issues.

          • nhubbard 4 hours ago ago

            I will say that 26.4 beta 2 was the first time I've regretting using betas since Sonoma beta 2. The Sonoma beta ruined the firmware on my machine and Apple had to replace the logic board; the latest Tahoe beta broke all networking on my machine and I had to erase the installation to fix everything. I've since dropped off the beta train for the time being.

            I already left the beta train on my iPhone because I had too many issues getting my grocery apps to allow me to place orders without going to my laptop and doing it in a web browser.

        • Analemma_ 3 hours ago ago

          I'm on an M4 Pro MacBook-- basically the fastest computer you could buy from Apple before today-- and opening/closing the tab sidebar in Safari on Tahoe takes multiple seconds, even if I have only 4-6 tabs open, and seems to drop to 5 FPS. It's comically bad.

          It's so bad I switched back to Chrome. I had thought Chrome had a major battery life penalty compared to Safari on Macs, but I checked more up-to-date info and apparently that's outdated.

    • satoqz 4 hours ago ago

      This. I have been a big (and loud) fan of M-series hardware from the beginning, but if Apple is going to keep making their software worse, I will find myself lingering on older generations that run Asahi Linux or going back to a traditional x86_64 laptop instead of buying into new generations.

    • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

      The next macOS will be touch screen centric with elements getting bigger when you're close to touching them, rumors say. That being said, I run Tahoe and it works perfectly fine to me, I am not sure what issues people have with it. Sure, some corner radii aren't exactly the same but I honestly couldn't give less of a shit as long as it runs the programs I need.

      • nsbk 3 hours ago ago

        Safari routinely using 20+ Gb of memory with a handful of tabs open. Safari tabs refusing to close. Unresponsive System Settings window. Random application freezes and crashes, Apple Music not playing music. This is on a 32Gb M1 Max. My M1 Air on Sequoia doesn't experience any of these issues, even if it has half the unified memory.

        • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

          I never had any of those issues, but then again I don't use Safari or other Apple apps like music.

          • nsbk 2 hours ago ago

            The fact that avoiding Apple-made software provides an overall better user experience is very telling

            • satvikpendem 2 hours ago ago

              Not necessarily, because I never used Apple apps, it's not like I'm avoiding them now because they're ostensibly buggy (as others don't seem to have the same issues in this thread).

    • gas9S9zw3P9c 2 hours ago ago

      I moved away from mac because of the OS and couldn't be happier. The hardware may be great but non-Apple hardware is fine too, and Linux is significantly better experience than MacOS these days.

    • pier25 3 hours ago ago

      Yeah this is a real issue with these new Macs. I would wait until macOS 27 to see the direction Apple takes.

    • hu3 4 hours ago ago

      Just yesterday, my colleague's mac Time Machine couldn't recover backup and they had to reinstall everything.

      But I think this predates Tahoe.

      • zarzavat 3 hours ago ago

        Silent corruption has been a feature of Time Machine for the last 19 years. But haven't you seen the new glass effects, isn't it cool?

  • aurareturn 4 hours ago ago

    Whoah, both the Pro and Max CPUs feature 18 cores. This hasn't happened since M1 Pro/Max. This is a surprise.

    Also, the mix of cores have changed drastically.

    - 6 "Super cores"

    - 12 "Performance cores"

    I'm guessing these are just renamed performance and efficiency cores from previous generations.

    This is a massive change from the M4 Max:

    - 12 performance cores

    - 4 efficiency cores

    This seems like a downgrade (in core config but may not be in actual MT) assuming super = performance and performance = efficiency cores.

    • klausa 3 hours ago ago

      I don't think the "new" Performance cores are just "renamed" "E" / "Efficiency" cores; Apple has retroactively renamed the baseline M5 nomenclature to say it has "10-core CPU with 4 super cores and 6 efficiency cores"; so they're clearly keeping the "efficiency cores" nomenclature around.

      I think this is a new design, with Apple having three tiers of cores now, similar to what Qualcomm has been doing for a while.

      I think how it breaks down is:

      - "Super" are the old "P" cores, and the top tier cores now

      - "Performance" cores are a new tier and seen for the first time here, slotting between "old" P and E in performance

      - "Efficiency" / "E" are still going to be around; but maybe not in desktop/Pro/Max anymore.

      • aurareturn 3 hours ago ago

        Interesting. This is clearly a big CPU change if so. I wonder why no E cores. I’m sure E cores would be more efficient at OS tasks than the new performance cores.

        For example, 6 super, 8 performance, and 4 efficiency.

        • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

          Another commenter stated the P cores can be scaled down to be E cores dynamically, so why not?

          • bombcar an hour ago ago

            I wonder if they'll get to good enough scaling from E to Super where they don't really need to distinguish anymore?

          • aurareturn 2 hours ago ago

            P cores would take up more die space.

    • aurareturn 26 minutes ago ago

        Whoah, both the Pro and Max CPUs feature 18 cores. This hasn't happened since M1 Pro/Max. This is a surprise.
      
      Replying to my own post. In hindsight, this shouldn't be any surprise because these chips are now chiplets. Apple is connecting a CPU die with a GPU die. This means they're designing just one CPU die rather than two. An Ultra would just be two of these CPU dies.
    • netruk44 4 hours ago ago

      I think super cores are a new type/tier of core, not a rename of performance.

      The base M5 has super/efficiency cores.

      The Pro and Max have super/performance cores.

    • jacobp100 3 hours ago ago

      I was looking into this. The M5 performance cores can be scaled down to match efficiency cores in performance and power usage.

      I believe they lower the clock speed, limit how much work is done in parallel on each core, and limit how aggressive the speculative execution is so less work is wasted.

      • aurareturn 2 hours ago ago

          The M5 performance cores can be scaled down to match efficiency cores in performance and power usage.
        
        Source for this?
    • cced 4 hours ago ago

      So they renamed performance to mean efficiency and are now using super in place of performance?

      • petu 3 hours ago ago

        Super is old "performance" core:

        > The industry-leading super core was first introduced as performance cores in M5, which also adopts the super core name for all M5-based products

        But new "performance" is claimed to be new design (= not just overclocked efficiency core from M5?):

        > M5 Pro and M5 Max also introduce an all-new performance core that is optimized to deliver greater power-efficient, multithreaded performance for pro workloads.

        quotes from https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/03/apple-debuts-m5-pro-a...

  • GeekyBear an hour ago ago

    The most interesting change for the M5 Pro and Max is Apple moving to a bonded chiplet strategy from a single monolithic die.

    > The tech giant says the chips are engineered around its new Fusion Architecture, an advanced design that merges two dies into a single, high-performance system on a chip (SoC), which includes a powerful CPU, scalable GPU, Media Engine, unified memory controller, Neural Engine, and Thunderbolt 5 capabilities.

    https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/03/apple-unveils-m5-pro-and-m...

    They also replaced the efficiency cores on the CPU chiplet with a new higher performance design.

    > The CPU now features six “super cores,” which is Apple’s term for its highest-performance cores, alongside 12 all-new performance cores. Collectively, the CPU boosts performance by up to 30% for pro workloads.

  • testfrequency 4 hours ago ago

    I have a fairly maxed out M2 Ultra (24 cores, 192GB RAM), and still cannot get this machine to choke on anything.

    I have not once felt the need to upgrade in years, and that’s with doing pretty demanding 3D and LLM work.

    • prodigycorp 4 hours ago ago

      If there’s anything this past three years has taught me, it’s that modern cpus can performantly do every task except for streaming text over the internet.

      • hobofan 2 hours ago ago

        I'm pretty sure that's just LLMs tendency to replicate bad React patterns.

    • Aurornis 4 hours ago ago

      I have a powerful older Mac that doesn’t really “choke” on anything, but I could always use more speed.

      The high memory Macs have been great for being able to run LLMs, but the prompt processing has always been on the slow side. The new AI acceleration in these should help with that.

      There are also workloads like compiling code where I’ll take all the extra speed I can get. Every little bit of reduced cycle time helps me finish earlier in the day.

      And then there’s gaming. I don’t game much, but the M1 and M2 era Apple Silicon feels sluggish relative to what I have on the nVidia side.

    • _jab 4 hours ago ago

      I've found current-generation Macs so capable that I've switched to using a Macbook Air. Would strongly recommend - it's still a powerful machine and it's significantly lighter and cheaper.

    • aurareturn 4 hours ago ago

         and that’s with doing pretty demanding 3D and LLM work.
      
      It definitely chokes with larger models that can fit the 192GB of RAM. Prompt processing is a big bottleneck before M5.
      • magicalist 4 hours ago ago

        > It definitely chokes with larger models that can fit the 192GB of RAM

        M5 Max maxes out at 128GB, so that will have to wait for the eventual M5 Ultra anyways.

    • Sharlin 4 hours ago ago

      AI video generation can fairly easily choke anything that's not NVIDIA's flagship model. Even the latest local image gen models are so large that they can be frustratingly slow with non-optimal hardware even if they fit in the VRAM. IIRC when I had an M2, it was about 4x slower at running the venerable Stable Diffusion (and SDXL) than my meager RTX 3060.

      • testfrequency 4 hours ago ago

        I do not do anything with AI Video, but I imagine running this locally would be a hog on a Mac - especially if not optimised for Metal.

    • replwoacause 4 hours ago ago

      Sounds pretty beefy. What kind of local LLM is that thing capable of running? Does it open up real alternatives to cloud providers like OpenAI and Claude, or are the local models this hardware is capable of running still pretty far behind?

    • mikert89 4 hours ago ago

      Yeah I have an M1 Max, and I really want to upgrade, but there’s no reason to.

    • carlosjobim 4 hours ago ago

      You might have confused Hacker News with your e-mail inbox again. This is an Apple press release, directed to everybody in the world who might be interested in a new computer or their first computer.

      • testfrequency 4 hours ago ago

        What’s with the attitude? My machine is aging like a fine wine, I’m acknowledging how resilient their custom silicon is despite the world demanding more and more compute.

        • carlosjobim 4 hours ago ago

          It was a joke, should have put a smiley face. But every thread on a new Apple product here on HN have the same "why should I upgrade" comment, forgetting that there are people who might have very old devices they want to upgrade, or they might want to switch from Windows/Android to Apple.

          Even if a new device is a small upgrade from last year's model, it can be a giant upgrade for other people.

          • ffreire 2 hours ago ago

            Are you one of the folks thinking of upgrading? If so, from what generation? What makes you excited? Isn't this a more interesting way to have the conversation?

          • testfrequency 4 hours ago ago

            Got it. I guess it feels unfair to gaslight people who are celebrating not needing upgrades, anecdotally sharing their experiences - because some people just need a new computer for xyz reason in time.

  • jtfrench 27 minutes ago ago

    Was hoping to see Apple break the 128GB barrier in a laptop that they previously set, though 128GB is still pretty sweet for local LLM inference on consumer hardware. My 128GB M3 Max is still shredding tokens pretty well (with that annoying slow initial prompt processing), so no major complaints there. I guess the question is, given access to the same amount of RAM, does the M5 really do an order-of-magnitude better than 128GB on a M3 or M4?

  • pixelesque 4 hours ago ago

    Interesting that they're showing VFX/CG software (Autodesk MAYA and Foundry Nuke) so prominently - obviously people using "Pro" machines are the target audience for this, but both of those apps (any many others in the industry) use Qt for the interface, rather than being totally platform-native.

    • klabb3 3 hours ago ago

      Contrary to HN popular belief, there are neither incentives nor benefits to building native ui apps, for neither consumer nor professional apps. The exception is apps that only make sense on a single platform, such as window management and other deep integration. On iOS/macos you have a segment of indie/smaller apps that capture a niche market of powerusers for things like productivity apps. But the point is it makes no sense for anything from Slack, VSCode, Maya, DaVinci Resolve, and so on, to build native UIs. Even if they wanted to build and maintained 3 versions, advanced features aren’t always available in these frameworks. In the case of Windows, even MS has given up on their own tech, and have opted to launch webview based apps. Apple is slightly more principled.

      • dagmx an hour ago ago

        Qt delegates to native UI in a lot of cases. I think a lot of people who rail against native UI fail to delineate between native UI and first party frameworks. Using third party frameworks, even cross platform ones, does not mean you lose out on native UI elements.

      • trymas 3 hours ago ago

        I am not an apple framework expert, but some things in apple ecosystem are nice.

        CoreImage - GPU accelerated image processing out of the box;

        ML/GPU frameworks - you can get built-in, on device's GPU running ML algorithms or do computations on GPU;

        Accelerate - CPU vector computations;

        Doing such things probably will force you to have platform specific implementations anyway. Though as you said - makes sense only in some niches.

      • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

        Strong disagree. I think Microsoft’s decision to wrap web apps for the desktop is one of the stupidest they have ever made. It provides poor user experience, uses more battery power and needs more memory and CPU to be performant and creates inconsistencies and wierd errors compared to native apps.

        • cosmic_cheese 41 minutes ago ago

          The increased adoption of webviews has resulted in a death by a thousand cuts effect on Windows 11 performance. The speed bump that comes from going from an up to date Windows 11 install to a up to date Windows 10 install on the same machine is stunning… W10 is much more snappy in every regard despite being nearly identical functionally speaking.

          I won’t try to claim that Electron and friends have no place is software development but we absolutely should be pushing back harder against stuffing it everywhere it possibly can be.

          • bigyabai 28 minutes ago ago

            > but we absolutely should be pushing back

            Every modern desktop uses webviews in some capacity. macOS renders many apps with webviews, GNOME uses gjs to script half the desktop. The time to push back was 10-20 years ago, it's too late to revert now.

    • trymas 3 hours ago ago

      Similar thoughts with first image of Capture One, when apple bought Pixelmator/Photomator a year ago.

      I think I read somewhere long time ago that Capture One is also using Qt for GUI, though cannot find this anymore, so probably not true.

  • heurs 3 hours ago ago

    Honest question. Is it possible to install an earlier version of macOS on these machines? Liquid glass looks so.. unprofessional to my eyes. And I hear it's also unstable.

    • zffr 31 minutes ago ago

      Yes. This page has several ways to get older macOS versions: https://support.apple.com/en-us/102662, but the earliest macOS version you can use on Apple Silicon is macOS 11.

      If you move your home directory to a different disk partition, you can even share it between two different macOS versions!

    • dmix 3 hours ago ago

      You barely see any liquid glass on Tahoe. I keep my dock hidden and it's just the icons mostly which aren't that different than before.

    • adamtaylor_13 3 hours ago ago

      That's a big part of what's keeping me from upgrading. Every time I look at my wife's iPhone I'm dumbfounded by just how bad the liquid glass looks.

      It's the first time I've ever been so repulsed by a design that I actively avoid it just... out of sheer preference.

    • Hasz 3 hours ago ago

      accessibility settings can turn off some (but not all) of the garish animations, transparencies, etc.

    • philistine 3 hours ago ago

      I have a base M5 since last year. You cannot, no. It is literally impossible. Do with that what you will.

    • icambron 3 hours ago ago

      It does look terrible, but I haven't found it to be unstable, personally

  • pcurve 4 hours ago ago

    $200 price bump across the board. The cheapest 16" is now $2699 and 14" Pro $2199. I think it's a fair price considering M2Pro 14" was $1999 (though it was discounted) only had 512GB and 16GB RAM.

    • SirMaster 3 hours ago ago

      It's not $200 across the board. M4 MacBook Pro and M5 MacBook Pro started at $1599 with 512GB SSD.

      Now it starts at $1699, a $100 bump but comes with a 1TB SSD. Previously it would have cost $1799 for the 1T SSD, so it's a $100 bump on base price but you are also getting 1TB SDD for $100 less than before.

      • pcurve 3 hours ago ago

        To clarify, I meant, model with Pro chip, not just Macbook Pro name.

        For example, up until MacBookPro M2, MacBookPro M2 came with M2 Pro chip.

        However, starting with M3, Apple lowered the MacBookPro MSRP to $1599, but its base configuration was downgraded to M3 chip from M3 Pro. To get the M3 Pro, you had to pay $1999. There's substantial performance between the two.

        Same with M4. To get the M4 Pro chip, you had to pay $1999.

        Now to get M5 Pro chip, it's $2199. Still a good value, but just saying it's a deviation from the trend.

        • aurareturn 2 hours ago ago

          With how much more expensive SSDs and RAM are recently, I’d say this is a great deal.

  • otterley 3 hours ago ago

    I checked the fine print on the product website: by “up to 4x faster LLM prompt processing,” they’re specifically referring to time to first token. So it’s not about token generation rate (tokens per second).

    • aurareturn 2 hours ago ago

      Yes. This is known. They added neural accelerators, aka Tensor core equivalent, in the GPU. This will make prompt processing competitive vs similar class GPUs.

    • jasonjmcghee 3 hours ago ago

      It would probably be worth finding a more friendly way to market this, but it's a reasonable / accurate way to say it.

      The prompt processing sped up.

      Not the output generation.

      M4 was notoriously slow at this compared to DGX etc.

  • reenorap 2 hours ago ago

    "The new MacBook Pro gets up to 24 hours of battery life, giving Intel-based upgraders up to 13 additional hours"

    I have a Intel-based 2019 Macbook Pro still and I have NEVER in its lifetime gotten even half of what they are claiming here. These days if I run it from battery I might get 90 mins.

    That said I had a maxed out Macbook Pro M4 Max on order but just cancelled it right now and will get this new M5 Max one for basically the same price. Once I saw that they didn't up the price of memory (I don't know how it doesn't affect them) I canceled my order.

    • cryptoegorophy 2 hours ago ago

      I had intel MacBook Pro. It is a NIGHT and DAY difference. I wish I didn’t get the 16gb of memory though. It is ok, but running 5-10 cursor ai agents at the same time does start to choke the memory. Battery is absolutely amazing! And the best part - it stays cold!! No more irritated from heat fingers when using touchpad.

  • LetsGetTechnicl 13 minutes ago ago

    I have absolutely no need and yet I want ittttt

  • hrmtst93837 4 hours ago ago

    > M5 Pro supports up to 64GB of unified memory with up to 307GB/s of memory bandwidth, while M5 Max supports up to 128GB of unified memory with up to 614GB/s of memory bandwidth.

    This is the important statement. 614GB/s is quite decent, however a NVIDIA RTX 5090 already offers 1,792 GB/s (roughly 3x) of memory bandwidth, for comparison.

    • Someone1234 3 hours ago ago

      You're right a $3600 graphics card is worse than a $2600 laptop; but from my perspectives they're very different products. Not least of all because even at $3600 for a RTX 5090 you still have the whole rest of the computer left to purchase.

      • whywhywhywhy 2 hours ago ago

        Max version with the 614GB/s is a $3599 laptop

    • lm28469 3 hours ago ago

      > NVIDIA RTX 5090 already offers 1,792 GB/s

      You can buy two m5 pro base model for the same price as a single 5090...

      • dylan604 3 hours ago ago

        That's a fun comparison, but can you run those 2 m5 pros in parallel to accomplish 2x the work? Otherwise, you just told me you can buy 2 toyota corollas for the price of 1 F-150 while trying to convince me you can haul your boat behind both corollas at the same time.

        • lm28469 3 hours ago ago

          You can also buy a 64gb mini, save $1k and do more work than what you could do with a single 5090.

          In Europe I can get a 128gb mac studio m4 max for 300 euros more than a 5090 (for which you still need to buy a power supply, motherboard, cpu , &c.)

          • hrmtst93837 3 hours ago ago

            But the inference on the mac studio m4 max will be slower than on the 5090, even though you can load larger models.

            • lm28469 2 hours ago ago

              All I'm saying is that the comparison doesn't make sense. The 5090 is faster on a small subset of tasks if attached to a computer which ends up being 3x the price of a m5 machine that fit the same model or the same price as a machine that fits models 5x bigger

              • dylan604 2 hours ago ago

                So you're saying that buying 2 Corollas for the cost of 1 Ferrari engine would be better? Even though the Ferrari engine is much more powerful, it's useless without the rest of the car.

    • bachittle 2 hours ago ago

      The RTX 5090 only has 32gb of VRAM. So the tradeoff is NVIDIA is for blazing speed in a tiny memory pool, but Apple Silicon has a larger memory pool at moderate speed.

      • 827a 2 hours ago ago

        Or, there's the DGX Spark, which effectively neutralizes both of these trade-offs, and is the same price as the RTX 5090.

        • ofcrpls an hour ago ago

          For reference, DGX Spark is at 273 GB/s

        • Keyframe an hour ago ago

          It's not 5090 performance though.

          • bigyabai 22 minutes ago ago

            Nothing stops you from plugging in a 5090. Nvidia ships ARM64 GPU drivers.

    • asdhtjkujh 3 hours ago ago

      I imagine the upcoming M5 Ultra will be competitive in this regard. The M3 Ultra already has 819GB/s and it's two generations behind.

  • boriskourt 4 hours ago ago

    Nice starting storage bump

      MacBook Pro with M5 Pro now comes standard with 1TB of storage, while MacBook Pro with M5 Max now comes standard with 2TB. And the 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 now comes standard with 1TB of storage.
    • zarzavat 4 hours ago ago

      It's not exactly a bump if they raise prices at the same time, though with the RAM situation I'm not mad.

      • SirMaster 3 hours ago ago

        Well 1TB MacBook Pro used to cost $1799, now 1TB is the base model and costs $1699, so it's actually a $100 price drop for 1TB storage.

  • mathverse 4 hours ago ago

    Nano-texture is worth the upgrade if you are on a macbookpro whatever M<cpu> and dont have it.

    For those of us with astigmatism it's really night and day experience.

    • napo 3 hours ago ago

      I was considering it but got cold feet when I've been told that you could damage it when cleaning it. When I open/close my laptop I leave a ton of finger prints. I'm not too good with delicate hardware stuff.

      • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

        Why are you touching the screen when you open/close your laptop??? Do you close your car doors with the window?

        • petrbela 2 hours ago ago

          My screen gets fingerprints from the keyboard, maybe that's what he meant.

  • przemelek 25 minutes ago ago

    Still why especially for Pro there is still version with 24 GB of RAM? It is scary....

  • upmind 28 minutes ago ago

    It doesn't feel like much has changed from the previous gen? Just a new chip + memory?

    • awestroke 28 minutes ago ago

      What did you expect?

  • MBCook 3 hours ago ago

    Can someone comment on the new dual die thing they’re promoting for how they make the M5 Pro and M5 Max chips?

    How is that different from the silicon interposer they were using before?

    The big change is the two dies don’t have to fabbed next to each other in a single wafer, which is fantastic for costs and yields. But would this affect the interconnect speed somehow?

    How would the two be wired together?

    Could this mean the Ultra comes back in M6 since it would be easier to fab?

    • wmf an hour ago ago

      the new dual die thing they’re promoting for how they make the M5 Pro and M5 Max chips?

      It's chiplets just like GB10, Strix Halo, etc. One die has the CPU and the other die has the GPU.

      How is that different from the silicon [bridge] they were using before?

      It's probably similar.

      the two dies don’t have to fabbed next to each other

      They never were; this is a widespread misunderstanding.

      But would this affect the interconnect speed somehow?

      Apple never documented the internal interconnect for the M4 Pro/Max and now they don't document it for the M5 Pro/Max so we don't know. It's probably better to read reviews and avoid theorycrafting and backseat driving.

    • mixtureoftakes 2 hours ago ago

      Curious about that as well.

      They seem to market it as a technological advancement, which it is, but rather than being excited im actually worried about hidden latencies that could come with that approach. Have you found any interesting info on that yet?

  • brtkwr 4 hours ago ago

    Why doesn't this excite me anymore?

    • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

      Because the M1 was too good, a qualitative leap over previous Macs and really every other laptop and even some desktops back in 2020. Now, Apple Silicon is just iterative.

    • replwoacause 4 hours ago ago

      Me either. I guess it's just fatigue, at least for me. I also don't really get that excited by new LLM releases either. Not to say the tech isn't impressive, but I guess all the hype has me inured.

    • neom 4 hours ago ago

      For me going way back, it was exciting when I had to save a bit (but not too much!) for a new 512 DIMM, and when I opened the box and smelled the chip smell, put it in always worried I was going to fuck it up, and then computer literally felt faster that next boot...that was pretty fun!! Now it's like oh great $5k for a slab of stone that can do pretty much anything, neat. I still think computers are cool, just not particularly exciting.

    • lm28469 3 hours ago ago

      Because it's the same shit every year for the past 5 years with the M line. 2010 to 2015 was a major improvement, 2015 to 2020 was a major improvement, now they pretty much solved the computer/laptop problem for 99% of people. I'm on a 16gb m1 air, I see absolutely no reason to update.

      • trymas 5 minutes ago ago

        Watch this video if you have time: https://youtu.be/6AtTk3XoQVs

        TL;DW: 2010s intel mac era laptops have seen at very best 35% single core CPU performance over in 5 years time! This happens almost every year now with M line macs.

        Rant:

        Retina macs were great and had great form factor over unibody macs. Touch-bar macs in the mid 2010s was IMHO a disaster. Terrible keyboard, poorer thermal capacity, missing essential ports, adapters galore.

        But when it comes to performance - early 2010s macbooks with dedicated gpus had serious overheating issues.

        Retina macbooks were decent, both form factor and performance.

        Touch-bar macs were totally abysmal, all performance gains over previous generations was all through pumping more heat. CPUs constantly pegged at 90C+, cannot have laptop on your lap, Apple planning and delaying release schedules around intel fumbling their tik/tok cycles (as far as i remember some macs did not get any improvements for 2 years+ if not way more). Upgrades sometimes were total jokes, because of thermal throttling there was no point to put more hardware than it could work with. From reviews buying higher level cpu sometimes didn’t give noticeable real life gains because, again, thermal throttling kicking in instantly. 2020 intel macbook pro has fans spinning almost all the time. Having a remote call - your battery is dead in 2h max (essentially 1% per 1min).

        M1 mac gave insane perceived performance boost - no noticeable throttling. Macbook airs are fully passively cooled, never heard M Macbook pro with fans screeching.

        Also real full work day battery doing real work without power adapter at full performance. Cool to touch most of the time.

        I made homework for a job in 2020 on a 2013 personal macbook. Apart from memory footprint - I could not feel noticeable difference on development experience. Editing images was frustrating on both. With M macs - its silent, smooth fast.

        Number of parallel cores matching best intel cpus on base models, GPU blowing any mobile gpu in price range out of the water with thermal capacity to peg it 100% no problem. Unified memory for those GPUs to do what you could only imagined doing on GPUs that cost 3 times more than the macbook.

        It’s a such excellent architecture that yeah - it’s “boring” you can nitpick about M69 Ultra Pro Max performance, but take a base MBP of any M line and it blows almost any laptop out of the water, even to this day.

    • akd 2 hours ago ago

      Because a Macbook M1 is fast enough to do anything and most people aren't running local LLMs

    • tacker2000 2 hours ago ago

      It excites me, since I am finally going to replace my 2019 Intel MacBook Pro!

    • righthand 4 hours ago ago

      Because it was always a vapid distraction from life.

  • FBISurveillance 4 hours ago ago

    Note: no power adapter included.

    • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

      Not true everywhere. Only where required by law, so complain to your government.

  • fl0ki 2 hours ago ago

    For those who don't already know, you can get a lot of PC gaming performance out of these machines using Sikarugir. You can install all of Steam via winetricks and go from there, or launch DRM-free games directly.

    https://github.com/Sikarugir-App/Sikarugir

  • jftuga 3 hours ago ago

    I wonder how this compares to my M4 air with 10 GPU cores and 32 MB of RAM. My system can only run ~14B sized models at any reasonable speed. The accuracy of these sized models can be underwhelming. I am looking forward to a time when it would be nice to run models locally at a reasonable price, at a reasonable speed and with reasonable accuracy. I don't think we are there just yet.

  • taf2 2 hours ago ago

    Considering these max out at 128GB of unified ram my guess is the hope of an M5 Ultra with 1TB of unified ram is unlikely to come true... Super disappointing.

  • post_break 3 hours ago ago

    My M3 Pro with 18gb of ram still feels like a beast. The only thing I can make it suffer with so far is generating meshes from 3D scanning, and even then I'm just patient. Apple is suffering from success with these older laptops, it's a tough sell to upgrade, even from the M1 Max folks.

    • mixtureoftakes 2 hours ago ago

      I mean, they had to make them good because of the new cpu architecture, but since the emulation worked so well and overall adoption was really fast it now is a problem for them as a company. A really good problem to have though

  • egwor 4 hours ago ago

    I thought that new models were typically released in October. Have I misremembered or is this an unusual timing vs previous years? If so, I wonder why the earlier release?

    • chippiewill 4 hours ago ago

      They didn't update them last October is why.

      I think at this point Apple will just release new versions of laptops whenever new CPU revisions and yields allow. M5 Pro wasn't ready for October so delayed until now.

    • ErneX 4 hours ago ago

      You remember well, they didn’t update these last fall.

      And another rumor said these are going to be updated again this fall but I’m not sure about that. With OLED screens and M6 (supposedly).

    • afavour 4 hours ago ago

      Increasing component prices perhaps? Get some sales in before you have to jack up the sale price.

      • alwillis 3 hours ago ago

        Prices aren’t likely to change. Even when the tariffs were on, Apple’s prices didn’t change; they gave up some margin.

        They also probably had RAM contracts in place far enough in advance to avoid the worst of the price spikes.

    • cheschire 4 hours ago ago

      Maybe they want people to have more money available for the new phones later this year, since that market is in decline.

    • layer8 4 hours ago ago

      M6 is rumored to be released in Q4.

  • addaon 2 hours ago ago

    Is the M5 Max the first laptop with significantly more memory bandwidth than the M1 Max? Looks like about a 20% jump… might finally be time to re-benchmark CFD workloads.

  • miohtama 4 hours ago ago

    But is it powerful enough to run Liquid glass?

    • MattDamonSpace 4 hours ago ago

      /s I assume but it’s crazy to me that LG runs on the watch

      • Y-bar 4 hours ago ago

        Apple TV 4K can’t run the Liquid Glass interface without stuttering, turning off transparency restores fluid (heh!) animations.

    • layer8 4 hours ago ago

      Unlikely.

  • owenpalmer 3 hours ago ago

    The screenshot of running LM Studio alongside Maya is a massive hardware flex.

    Wish it was Blender though ;)

  • abiraja 3 hours ago ago

    I just bought a M5 Macbook Pro 2 weeks ago. Thinking of returning it and getting a M5 Pro with the same configuration but only $200 more. How should I compare M5 vs M5 Pro?

    • mixtureoftakes 2 hours ago ago

      You'll get slightly more performance and ever so slightly less battery life. I'd do it

  • lenerdenator 25 minutes ago ago

    I barely push my M2 Pro MBPs. Most of my wants aren't hardware-related, they're software-related. How it runs some games from 10-20 years ago very well, but only through hacky compatibility layers that shouldn't be necessary. How some parts of the OS have gotten "out of sync" with each other.

    Actually, I can think of one hardware want: have they gotten it to where you can do external GPUs and the like more easily?

    Would still buy one over any other laptop on the market today for what I use them for.

  • roblh 3 hours ago ago

    Kinda funny that the top image is capture one when Apple literally owns Photomator and gives you the option of bundling it when you buy.

  • mpalmer 4 hours ago ago

    I'm done buying Macs until they prove they can ship an OS

  • jwr 3 hours ago ago

    I would probably upgrade my MacBook Pro at once, if it wasn't for the Tahoe disaster. Now, not so much, I'm inclined to wait until next year.

  • alexpham14 3 hours ago ago

    Yeah, this feels like the annual “nice, but do I actually need it?” refresh if you’re already on an M4 Pro.

    • BugsJustFindMe 2 hours ago ago

      I'm on an M1 Pro and it's still a "nice, but do I actually need it?". They've done too well on the hardware side.

  • whywhywhywhy 3 hours ago ago

    $5000 laptop you have to pay to add a power adapter… gratuitous penny pinching from Tim Cook's Apple.

    It's one of those things, yes if I'm spending that much on a laptop I can afford to spend $80 on the adapter too, but does it feel good as a customer to do that or are you souring the experience of buying from you just to earn a few more dollars.

    • kylec 3 hours ago ago

      I'm assuming you're in the EU or UK, Apple is required by law to not include a power adapter:

      https://appleinsider.com/articles/25/10/15/eu-gets-what-it-a...

      In the US they provide one in the box free of charge.

      • whywhywhywhy 2 hours ago ago

        Does the law say they have to charge for it.

    • mort96 3 hours ago ago

      This is one thing I don't really blame Apple for, and I think everyone else will follow suit -- and not just because Apple is doing it.

      The EU requires that users must be able to buy a device without a charger. It's a huge supply chain challenge to add two variants of every single SKU, one with a charger and one without. So the obvious solution is to sell the charger separately, since you need that regardless, and always sell the device without a charger. You avoid having two variants of everything that way.

      Now, you could maybe argue that Apple should default to bundle a charger with your laptop, so that you'd have to uncheck a "bundle charger" checkbox on their website. But do you really care whether your laptop costs $2200 and you can buy a charger for $60 or your laptop costs $2260 and you can save $60 by removing the charger?

      You can make an argument that doing it Apple's way hides a price increase. And yeah, that's probably fair. But it's not like Apple is afraid of non-hidden price increases either.

    • wpm 3 hours ago ago

      I have a huge tote box full of power bricks, most of them white Apple ones. I have a stack of 60-90W Apple USB-C ones too that I don't use cause they only have one port and are larger and worse than modern GaN units that can do 140W on one port while also pushing 30 or 60 on the others.

      So, if you want one of mine, you can have one. On me. Because I'm fucking drowning in the things and appreciate not having to deal with another one.

  • whizzter 4 hours ago ago

    128gb of memory, it's a nice change for Apple not to lag in that department for once, wonder what such a machine will cost though.

    • jeroenhd 4 hours ago ago

      Checking Apple's store, I can't find a cheaper configuration than $5100 for the M5 + 128GiB version.

      Here in Europe, including 21% VAT, that's €6.124,00 ($7.094,35 equivalent).

      Because of pricing strategies and such, the 128GiB version comes with a 2TiB SSD at minimum, and also requires the M5 Max (not Pro) at its highest configuration.

      Not sure if this is new, but it should be noted that these laptops don't come with a charger any more.

      • alwillis 3 hours ago ago

        In the US, power adapters are included:

            70W USB-C Power Adapter (included with M5 Pro with 16-core GPU)
        
            96W USB-C Power Adapter (included with M5 Pro with 20-core GPU, configurable with M5 Pro with 16-core GPU)
        
            USB-C to MagSafe 3 Cable (2 m)
      • adastra22 2 hours ago ago

        Because your countries mandate no power adapter for some stupid ewaste reason.

    • snowchaser 4 hours ago ago

      In US, going to 128 GB from 32 is $1500 extra. However 32 GB is only offered with the 32 core version and 128 only with the 40 core version.

    • joshstrange 2 hours ago ago

      They've offered 128gb of RAM since at least the M3.

    • Sharlin 4 hours ago ago

      At today's prices, the memory will probably cost more than the rest of the hardware combined :P

    • Detrytus 4 hours ago ago

      128gb was there for a while. I am kind of disappointed they do not have 256gb option.

      • ajdude 4 hours ago ago

        I was really hoping to see 512gb but I guess they don't want it to cut into the sales of the Studio.

      • vardump 3 hours ago ago

        No 256 GB model, so no purchase. What a shame.

      • varispeed 4 hours ago ago

        Same here. If the had 256GB option I'd pull a trigger. Now I might be looking for alternatives.

  • kwanbix 4 hours ago ago

    I wonder if it is good to just get one and run Linux on a VM. Would that work better than an x64? Anybody knows?

    • pbmonster 3 hours ago ago

      Why would you want to do that? Do you like the hardware that much, and also that much more than just an M2 (soon M3) running Asahi?

      Linux in a VM would work with the usual caveats. Periphery like the built-in webcam most likely won't work. Getting codecs and DRM to run will be pain and you'll be back to use macOS for that quickly (but that's just standard pain of ARM Linux).

  • sarmike31 4 hours ago ago

    An ”unrivaled experience” with MacOS Tahoe…

  • __mharrison__ 2 hours ago ago

    So below 128gb is the sweet spot for local LLMs...

  • smallstepforman an hour ago ago

    Can Apple marketing please reduce the insane quantity of adjectives in its releases, it has been nauseating to read for decades and sickens me when visiting their sites. Early exit from me and ex-OSX dev for over a decade, wont be back until their core culture changes.

  • MagicMoonlight 3 hours ago ago

    You have to pay separately for the charger now. £99, what a bargain.

    • SirMaster 3 hours ago ago

      Or just don't but an Apple charger? You can get a perfectly fine small 100W GAN USB-C charger for like $30 on Amazon.

    • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

      Since that is required by law, I suggest moving.

      • gib444 an hour ago ago

        Which part of the law requires it to be £99 (or £1 even?). Can you cite it?

  • dev0p 2 hours ago ago

    I am only interested in one thing: what's the best local AI model it can run?

  • tristor 3 hours ago ago

    I am very excited by this, but I am a bit dampened that the maximum memory available is 128GB. I was really hoping for 256GB, which would allow me to run frontier models locally. I think with 128GB it's still feasible to use this with something like Qwen3-Coder-Next and MiniMax-M2.5, but things like Kimi-K2.5 will require significant quantization to fit and model performance will really suffer.

    I'm really wanting to build proper local-first AI workflows at home, and I think Apple has an opportunity to make that possible in a way other companies aren't really focused on, but we need significantly larger memory capabilities to do it, which I know is tough in the current memory market but should be available for a cost.

    • vardump 3 hours ago ago

      Tell me about it. I checked the page thinking whether I should go for 256 GB or 512 GB RAM model.

      128 GB maximum.

      Sigh.

  • user3939382 3 hours ago ago

    And your native CLI tools will continue to be from 2011 with 0 attention paid to the dev experience until it’s Swift, and we’ll continue to lock you out of running programs from other human beings we didn’t approve without a 6 step ritual in the OS. Oh and all apps will continue to constantly phone home i.e. pay for the machine so Google Adobe and Microsoft can run updaters and telemetry on it all day.

    • cmdrmac 3 hours ago ago

      Good point about the telemetry part. I've been using Little Snitch for the past few years and just block all the telemetry calls.

    • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

      Or don’t use Google, Adobe or Microsoft software if that bothers you? And how is that Apple’s fault?

  • jansan 4 hours ago ago

    The performance numbers are impressive, but I do not get the on-board AI spin. What is it used for?

    • alwillis 3 hours ago ago

      If you’re working on something sensitive, you may not want to share it with OpenAI or Anthropic.

      You can run open source models like Kimi K or Qwen locally. Apple recently updated Xcode 26.3 to support local models.

    • satvikpendem 3 hours ago ago

      Local LLMs. Lots of people buy Macs due to their unified memory which obviates the need to buy a much more expensive GPU to get the same amount of VRAM.

    • layer8 4 hours ago ago

      Image Playground

    • boringg 4 hours ago ago

      marketing.

  • DGAP 4 hours ago ago

    $5k machine for developers to just run claude code while they browse Reddit.

    • hrmtst93837 3 hours ago ago

      With an additional $200/month subscription from Anthropic, because they noticed that the Kimi K2.5 they were able to run on their M5 comes nowhere close to matching Opus 4.6.

  • pwython 4 hours ago ago

    Well that's. Just. Great. I bought a 64GB M4 Max MBP last month. I'm past the 14-day return window. I figured the M5 was near, but assumed M5 Max would come a bit later. Not sure where I came up with that.

    • gjm11 an hour ago ago

      You can console yourself with the fact that your laptop, unlike one of the new ones if you'd bought that instead, can run macOS Sequoia (without "Liquid Glass") rather than Tahoe.

    • dylan604 3 hours ago ago

      This is always the gamble with buying a Mac. Either purchase right when the new is released, or be on the fence of your new becoming old a couple of weeks after purchase.

    • rapfaria 3 hours ago ago

      Not sure either since M5 base has been available for months now

      • pwython an hour ago ago

        Ah yes, that's right. I was looking at the M5 model last month wondering why there was no 64GB option.

    • abiraja 3 hours ago ago

      M5 has been out since last year, no?

  • tamimio 3 hours ago ago

    I will wait for the new mac mini instead

  • MagicMoonlight 3 hours ago ago

    They’re giving us extra storage… but they’ve put the price up by 200, which is as much as they charged for the storage anyway.

    • NetMageSCW 3 hours ago ago

      Why do you think the price went up by $200?

  • exabrial 2 hours ago ago

    > MacBook Pro and the Environment

    LOL. is it repairable? probably not.

  • justin66 3 hours ago ago

    “An Unrivaled Experience with macOS Tahoe”

  • varispeed 4 hours ago ago

    Only 128GB. I was hoping they'd do 256GB version. Disappointing.