Macbook Pro: More SSD or More Unified Memory?

I’m starting college in the fall and planning on majoring in computer science. I’m trying to decide which Macbook Pro to buy. I’m set on the M3 Pro chip, but I can’t decide on everything else. I was originally planning on getting the 11-core CPU, 14-core GPU and either upgrading from 18 GB of unified memory to 36 GB or going from 512SSD to 1TB SSD, but I don’t want to upgrade both if I don’t have to. Which is more important as a CS student who, hopefully, wants this computer to last past my four years of school - more unified memory or more SSD?

Posted on Jul 9, 2024 11:25 AM

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Posted on Jul 9, 2024 11:47 AM

As neither can be upgraded after the computer is on the assembly line, the real asnswer is "both." If only on is possible, I go for more storage. 18GB RAM is generous.


But there may be a much more basic issue at play here. Does the CS department in the Uni you plan to attend have classes that require Windows?


My son, now an engineer for one of the biggest component suppliers, did most of his uni course with a Macbook Pro. Even then some coding courses used Win-only software.


Fortunately the profs were Mac-friendly and let him do the coding using Terminal. It was a pain for him but he made good grades.


Then his last year a new prof chose to use apps that were Win-only, and work could no longer be done through Terminal. We bought yet another computer so he could finish his degree. His Mac did not have the disk space to run Win though Boot Camp or emulation.


That was NOT known when he originally asked. Profs have the choice of books and materials to use. A new one comes in and, bingo, what the counselor told you when you entered study may no longer apply. Approach carefully.


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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 9, 2024 11:47 AM in response to dakton

As neither can be upgraded after the computer is on the assembly line, the real asnswer is "both." If only on is possible, I go for more storage. 18GB RAM is generous.


But there may be a much more basic issue at play here. Does the CS department in the Uni you plan to attend have classes that require Windows?


My son, now an engineer for one of the biggest component suppliers, did most of his uni course with a Macbook Pro. Even then some coding courses used Win-only software.


Fortunately the profs were Mac-friendly and let him do the coding using Terminal. It was a pain for him but he made good grades.


Then his last year a new prof chose to use apps that were Win-only, and work could no longer be done through Terminal. We bought yet another computer so he could finish his degree. His Mac did not have the disk space to run Win though Boot Camp or emulation.


That was NOT known when he originally asked. Profs have the choice of books and materials to use. A new one comes in and, bingo, what the counselor told you when you entered study may no longer apply. Approach carefully.


Jul 9, 2024 2:40 PM in response to dakton

if you don't have enough RAM memory, your projects can only run in slow motion, simulating the RAM Memory you need on disk. Buy lots.


if you run out of File Storage space, you can recover by keeping an external drive in your desk und using it for big projects, with less portability.


You MUST buy the AppleCare Plus plan. The glass of the screen is NOT covered under the standard warranty.

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Macbook Pro: More SSD or More Unified Memory?

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