Need Advice on Choosing the Right Apple Device for Productivity and Creativity

Hello Apple Community,


I hope you all are doing well!


I want to buy a new Apple device and could really use some advice. I work extensively with both productivity tools and creative applications, and I want to make sure I choose the best device to suit my needs. Here are a few details about what I'm looking for:


1. Productivity: I use apps like Microsoft Office, Skype, and various project management tools daily. I need a device that can handle multitasking efficiently without lag.


2. Creativity: I frequently work with video editing (capcut). A high-resolution screen and powerful GPU would be beneficial.


3. Portability: While I mostly work from my home office, I do travel occasionally and would prefer something lightweight and easy to carry around.


4. Battery Life: A long battery life is important as I often work on the go and may not always have immediate access to power outlets.


I've been considering the MacBook Pro, iPad Pro, and the iMac, but I'm not sure which one would be the best fit for my needs. Any recommendations or experiences you could share would be greatly appreciated. If there are any other devices I should consider, I'd love to hear about them as well.


Thank you in advance for your help!


MacBook Air (M3, 2024)

Posted on Jun 23, 2024 6:44 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 23, 2024 7:25 AM

I'm guessing that a MacBook Pro with a Pro or Max chip – not a base M1/M2/M3 chip – would be the way to go.


The MacBook Pro chassis will get you a mini-LED backlit screen (with HDR support for pre-recorded content), a HDMI port, a SDXC card slot, and cooling fans.


A Pro or Max chip will get you

  • Better multi-core CPU performance
  • Better GPU performance
  • The ability to drive two external displays with the lid open. Most Mac notebooks with base M1/M2/M3 chips can only drive one external display. Even the M3 MacBook Airs can only drive a second display (with fewer options) when their lids are closed.
  • A third USB-C (Thunderbolt) port missing on the MacBook Airs and on MBPs with base M1/M2/M3 chips


A Max chip will get you

  • More hardware video encoding engines – which may be useful IF you can make good use of them
  • The ability to drive four external displays with the lid open


You can get pretty much the same computing choices in either a 14" MBP or a 16" MBP. There's not an enormous difference in price (if everything else is configured the same way), so this is more about screen size vs. weight.

5 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 23, 2024 7:25 AM in response to sheikh_mustafa

I'm guessing that a MacBook Pro with a Pro or Max chip – not a base M1/M2/M3 chip – would be the way to go.


The MacBook Pro chassis will get you a mini-LED backlit screen (with HDR support for pre-recorded content), a HDMI port, a SDXC card slot, and cooling fans.


A Pro or Max chip will get you

  • Better multi-core CPU performance
  • Better GPU performance
  • The ability to drive two external displays with the lid open. Most Mac notebooks with base M1/M2/M3 chips can only drive one external display. Even the M3 MacBook Airs can only drive a second display (with fewer options) when their lids are closed.
  • A third USB-C (Thunderbolt) port missing on the MacBook Airs and on MBPs with base M1/M2/M3 chips


A Max chip will get you

  • More hardware video encoding engines – which may be useful IF you can make good use of them
  • The ability to drive four external displays with the lid open


You can get pretty much the same computing choices in either a 14" MBP or a 16" MBP. There's not an enormous difference in price (if everything else is configured the same way), so this is more about screen size vs. weight.

Jun 23, 2024 7:08 AM in response to sheikh_mustafa

Do all of the applications that you want to run have full-blown versions that run on the iPad Pro, under iPadOS? If not, that could decide things in favor of some sort of Mac right there.


If you do a lot of video editing, you're probably going to want a lot of RAM (24 – 32 GB) and a lot of storage space. You can't upgrade RAM or internal storage after purchase … but you can add external storage. So while you would want enough internal storage space to work on active video projects, you could plan on archiving finished projects to external drives to cut down on internal storage needs.


You said that a long battery life is important – but then mentioned an iMac, a computer that does not operate off a battery. So what type of portability are you looking for?

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Need Advice on Choosing the Right Apple Device for Productivity and Creativity

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.