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Benchmark testing has indicated that the 256GB variant of the 13-inch MacBook Pro with M2 chip offers slower SSD performance than its M1 equivalent, ...
Benchmarks reveal that the SSD inside the entry-level MacBook Pro M2 model is 34% slower than the M1 model for write speed, while the difference in read speed is up to 50%.
While benchmarks of the 256GB SSD may show a difference compared to the previous generation, the performance of these M2 based systems for real world activities are even faster.
The $1,299 model features the same 256GB of SSD storage as its M1 predecessor, but speeds are much slower.
Like the M2 Air before it, the M2 MacBook Pro seems to have switched to larger NAND chips, with the base model seeing slower SSD performance as a result.
Max Tech's Max Yurvey shared SSD benchmarks of the M2 MacBook Pro and compared it to its predecessor in an extensive vs. video.
Starting with the latter, Max Tech recorded drive performance with the Blackmagic SSD benchmark and saw sequential read speeds go from 2,900MB/s on the M1 MacBook Pro to 1,446MB/s on the M2 ...
Speeds on Apple's new M2-powered MacBook Pro aren't as fast as the speeds on last generation's M1-powered MacBook Pro.
The 256GB M3 MacBook Air features faster SSD storage than the M2 variant - here's how Apple fixed this "problem" we didn't really have.
It is disappointing to see that the base-level M2 Pro are measurably worse than their predecessors in terms of SSD performance. Especially considering the 14-inch MacBook Pro costs $2,000.
A recent YouTube teardown shows basic internal details about the new M2 MacBook Air, including its storage performance.
Qualcomm unveiled its upcoming Snapdragon X Elite chip last week and has now revealed internal benchmark results — here's how the upcoming laptop CPU stacks up.
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