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Mac Studio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mac Studio
DeveloperApple Inc.
Product familyMacintosh
TypeCompact desktop
Workstation
Release dateMarch 18, 2022; 3 years ago (2022-03-18)
Operating systemmacOS
System on a chipApple M series
RelatedMac Mini, Mac Pro
Websiteapple.com/mac-studio

The Mac Studio is a small-form-factor workstation developed and marketed by Apple Inc. It is one of four desktop computers in the Mac lineup, sitting above the consumer-range Mac Mini and iMac, and positioned below the Mac Pro. It is configurable with either the M4 Max or M3 Ultra system on a chip.

Overview

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Rear ports

The Mac Studio is a desktop personal computer, designed to sit between the consumer-level Mac Mini and the professional-targeted Mac Pro.[1][2] The Mac Studio has an identical width and depth to the contemporary Mac mini, 7.7 inches (200 mm), but it stands taller at 3.7 inches (94 mm).

The Mac Studio was initially offered in two ARM-based SoC: the M1 Max or the M1 Ultra, which combines two M1 Max chips in one package.[3][4] It has four Thunderbolt 4 (USB 4) ports, two USB 3.0 Type-A ports, HDMI (up to 4K @ 60 Hz), 10Gb Ethernet with Lights Out Management[5] and a headphone jack. The front panel has two USB-C ports (Thunderbolt 4 in M1 Ultra models) and an SD card slot (that supports SDXC cards and UHS-II bus), making it the first desktop Mac since the 2012 Mac Pro to have I/O on the front. It is cooled by a pair of double-sided blowers and a mesh of holes on the bottom and back of the case, which helps reduce the noise of fans spinning.[6] Nevertheless, there have been reports of excessive fan noise.[7]

Mac Studio models with the Ultra SoC are heavier than the Max-equipped models, as they exchange the aluminum heat sink for one composed of copper.[8] Apple says the Mac Studio performs 50 percent faster than a Mac Pro with a 16-core Intel Xeon processor.[6]

The Mac Studio was introduced alongside the Apple Studio Display, a 27-inch 5K monitor with an integrated 12 megapixel camera, six-speaker sound system with spatial audio and Dolby Atmos support and a height adjustable stand.[6] Customers reported months-long shipping delays for the Mac Studio, attributed to a global chip shortage.[9][10]

Updates

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On June 5, 2023, during WWDC, Apple introduced updated Mac Studio models based on the M2 Max and M2 Ultra chips. Updates include Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi 6E, the capability of running up to six 6K monitors, and support for 8K displays over Thunderbolt and HDMI.[11]

On March 5, 2025, updated Mac Studio models were announced with M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips, which began shipping on March 12. Updates include Thunderbolt 5, and memory configurable up to 512 GB and storage configurable up to 16 TB on the M3 Ultra models.[12] Despite the M4 chips being a newer generation than the M3 chips, the M3 Ultra was included in the high-end model due to there being no existing Ultra chips in the M4 line.[13]

Repairability

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A Mac Studio with Studio Display, Magic Keyboard, and Magic Trackpad in an Apple Store

Mac Studio has two removable flash storage ports, with one or two of them in use, the latter in models with 4 or 8 TB of storage.[14] While it is possible to swap the flash storage card between same size models, with an Apple Configurator restore,[15][16] upgrading is not supported. Some reviewers have criticized this decision as unfriendly for right to repair, while Ars Technica notes this limitation may be due to the design of Apple silicon that implements the SSD controller into the system on a chip rather than the drive itself for encryption purposes.[17] The positioning of components such as the SSD beneath an exposed power supply has also been criticized.[17][18]

Reception

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Specifications

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Model 2022 2023 2025
Basic Info Hardware Strings Mac13,1 Mac13,2 Mac14,13 Mac14,14 Mac15,14 Mac16,9
Model number A2615 A2901 A3389 A3143
Part number MJMV2 Build-to-Order MJMW3 Build-to-Order MQH73 Build-to-Order MQH63 Build-to-Order MU973 Build-to-Order MU963 Build-to-Order
Date Announced March 8, 2022 June 5, 2023 March 5, 2025
Released March 18, 2022 June 13, 2023 March 12, 2025
Discontinued June 5, 2023 March 5, 2025 In production
Unsupported Supported
Operating System Initial macOS Monterey 12.2 macOS Ventura 13.4 macOS Sequoia 15.2
Latest macOS Sequoia 15.4
Colors  
Dimensions Height 3.7 in (9.4 cm)
Width 7.7 in (20 cm)
Depth 7.7 in (20 cm)
Weight 5.9 lb (2.68 kg) 7.9 lb (3.58 kg) 5.9 lb (2.68 kg) 7.9 lb (3.58 kg) 8.0 lb (3.63 kg) 6.1 lb (2.77 kg)
Performance Cooling System Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with copper heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with copper heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor
Chip Chip Name Apple M1 Max Apple M1 Ultra Apple M2 Max Apple M2 Ultra Apple M3 Ultra Apple M4 Max
Technology Node 5 nm (N5) 5 nm (N5P) 3 nm (N3B) 3 nm (N3E)
Bit 64-bit
Total CPU Cores 10 20 12 24 28 32 14 16
High-performance Cores 8 × 3.23 GHz 16 × 3.23 GHz 8 × 3.68 GHz 16 × 3.68 GHz 20 × 4.05 GHz 24 × 4.05 GHz 10 × 4.51 GHz 12 × 4.51 GHz
Energy-efficiency Cores 2 × 2.06 GHz 4 × 2.06 GHz 4 × 2.42 GHz 8 × 2.80 GHz 8 × 2.57 GHz 4 × 2.59 GHz
Online Configuration 32-core CPU 16-core CPU
Graphics Processor Apple G13C Apple G13D Apple G14C Apple G14D Apple G15D Apple G16C
Total GPU Cores 24 32 48 64 30 38 60 76 60 80 32 40
GPU Family Apple GPU Family 7 Apple GPU Family 8 Apple GPU Family 9
Hardware-accelerated Ray Tracing No Yes
Metal Support Metal 3
Online Configuration 32-core GPU 64-core GPU 38-core GPU 76-core GPU 80-core GPU (Requires 32-core CPU) 40-core GPU (Requires 16-core CPU)
Neural Engine 16-core (11 TOPS FP16) 32-core (22 TOPS FP16) 16-core (15.8 TOPS FP16) 32-core (31.6 TOPS FP16) 32-core (36 TOPS FP16) 16-core (38 TOPS INT8)
Media Engine Hardware-accelerated H.264, HEVC, ProRes and ProRes RAW Hardware-accelerated H.264, HEVC, ProRes and ProRes RAW
AV1 decode
Apple Intelligence Yes (currently not available in China mainland)
Unified Memory Memory Type LPDDR5-6400 (3200 MHz) LPDDR5X-8533 (4266 MHz)
Memory Bus Width 512-bit 1024-bit 512-bit 1024-bit 384-bit 512-bit
Memory Bandwidth 409.6 GB/s 819.2 GB/s 409.6 GB/s 819.2 GB/s 409.5 GB/s 546 GB/s
Memory Size 32 GB 64 GB 32 GB 64 GB 96 GB 36 GB 48 GB
Online Configuration 64 GB 128 GB 64 GB 96 GB 128 GB
192 GB
256 GB 256 GB
512 GB
64 GB
128 GB
Storage Storage Type PCIe 4.0-based SSD
Storage Speed Up to 7.4 GB/s read speed
Storage Size 512 GB 1 TB 512 GB 1 TB 512 GB
Online Configuration 1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
16 TB
1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
Connector HDMI HDMI 2.0 HDMI 2.1
SDXC card slot Yes
Ethernet Type 10 Gb Ethernet port with RJ-45 connector
Online Configuration
USB-A
USB-C/Thunderbolt Front Two USB-C ports supporting charging Two Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two USB-C ports supporting charging Two Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two Thunderbolt 5 USB-C ports supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two USB-C ports supporting charging
Back Four Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 5 USB-C ports supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others
Transmission Speed Up to 40 Gbit/s transmission speed (Thunderbolt 4 or USB 4)
Up to 10 Gbit/s transmission speed (USB 3)
Up to 120 Gbit/s transmission speed (Thunderbolt 5)
Up to 40 Gbit/s transmission speed (Thunderbolt 4 or USB 4)
Up to 10 Gbit/s transmission speed (USB 3)
External Display Support[19] [note 1] Maximum display 5 8 5
One external display
  • 1 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt), or
  • 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
Two external displays
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt), or
  • 1 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
Three external displays
  • 3 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt), or
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 3 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, requires split across port groups)
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, no split across port groups), or
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
Four external displays
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt), or
  • 3 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz + 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, requires split across port groups)
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, no split across port groups)
  • 4 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, requires split across port groups), or
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, no split across port groups)
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 8K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
Five external displays
  • 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt) + 1 × 4K at 60Hz (HDMI)
  • 5 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 5 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 1 × 8K at 60Hz + 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 5 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 3 × 8K at 60Hz + 2 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 5 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
Six external displays
  • 6 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz + 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
  • 6 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI), or
  • 2 × 8K at 60Hz + 4 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI)
Eight external displays
  • 8 × 4K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, one via daisy chain in front Thunderbolt ports)
  • 8 × 6K at 60Hz (Thunderbolt or HDMI, one via daisy chain in front Thunderbolt ports)
Connectivity Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6 (802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax) Wi-Fi 6E (802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax)
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.0 Bluetooth 5.3
Audio Speakers Built-in
Dolby Atmos playback Yes
Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking Yes
3.5 mm jack Yes With advanced support for high-impedance headphones
Audio output from HDMI Yes
Power Power supply 370 W 480 W
Total greenhouse gas emissions 262 kg CO2e [20] [data missing] 375 kg CO2e [data missing] 290 kg CO2e [21] [data missing] 346 kg CO2e [data missing] 276 kg CO2e [22] [data missing] 382 kg CO2e [data missing]

Software and operating systems

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The macOS operating system has been pre-installed on all Mac Studio computers since release, starting with version macOS Monterey, which is the first release of macOS to ship with the original Mac Studio.

Supported macOS releases
OS release 2022 2023 2025
12 Monterey 12.2
13 Ventura Yes 13.4
14 Sonoma Yes Yes
15 Sequoia Yes Yes 15.2


Timeline of Power Macintosh, Pro, and Studio models
Mac ProMac StudioMac ProMac StudioMac ProMac ProMac ProPower Mac G5Power Mac G5Power Mac G4Power Mac G5Power Mac G4Power Mac G4 CubePower Mac G4Power Macintosh G3#Blue and WhitePower Macintosh 9600Power Macintosh G3Power Macintosh 8600Power Macintosh 9500Power Macintosh 8500Power Macintosh 8100Power Macintosh G3Power Macintosh 7600Power Macintosh 7300Power Macintosh 4400Power Macintosh 7500Power Macintosh 7200Power Macintosh 7100Power Macintosh 6500Power Macintosh 6400Power Macintosh 6200Power Macintosh 6100Power Macintosh G3Twentieth Anniversary MacintoshPower Macintosh 5500Power Macintosh 5400Power Macintosh 5260Power Macintosh 5200 LC

Notes

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  1. ^ 5K at 60Hz is equivalent to 4K at 100Hz, 6K at 60Hz is equivalent to 4K at 144Hz, 8K at 60Hz is equivalent to 4K at 240Hz

References

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  1. ^ "Mac studio: Everything we know about Apple's powerful new desktop computer". The Independent. March 11, 2022. Archived from the original on May 10, 2022. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  2. ^ "Apple's Mac Studio Is the iMac Pro Reboot You've Been Waiting For". PCMAG. Archived from the original on July 6, 2022. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  3. ^ "Apple's new M1 Ultra aims to beat Nvidia's RTX 3090". The Verge. March 9, 2022. Archived from the original on March 10, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  4. ^ "Apple M1 Ultra Chip Is Nearly 3 Times Bigger Than AMD's Ryzen CPUs, Benchmarks Show Desktop Intel & AMD CPUs Still Ahead". wccftech.com. March 19, 2022. Archived from the original on March 21, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  5. ^ "Lights Out Management MDM payload settings for Apple devices". Apple Support. Archived from the original on April 27, 2022. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c "Apple's Mac Studio Is a Mightier Desktop for Creative Pros". Wired. March 8, 2022. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  7. ^ "Some Mac Studio owners are not happy with a high-pitched noise coming from the fan". UMA Technology. February 2, 2025. Retrieved March 12, 2025.
  8. ^ "Apple explains why the M1 Ultra-equipped Mac Studio is two pounds heavier". The Verge. March 9, 2022. Archived from the original on March 10, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  9. ^ "Delivery Estimates for Mac Studio and Studio Display Slip to April". Mac Rumors. March 8, 2022. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  10. ^ "Mac Studio shipping dates already slipping to April and May". Apple Insider. March 8, 2022. Archived from the original on March 10, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  11. ^ "Apple unveils new Mac Studio and brings Apple silicon to Mac Pro". Apple Newsroom. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
  12. ^ Cunningham, Andrew (March 5, 2025). "Apple intros new Mac Studio models with M4 Max and… M3 Ultra?". Ars Technica. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
  13. ^ https://arstechnica.com/apple/2025/03/apple-announces-m3-ultra-and-says-not-every-generation-will-see-an-ultra-chip/
  14. ^ Porter, Jon (March 24, 2022). "iFixit teardown offers a detailed look inside the Mac Studio and Studio Display". The Verge. Archived from the original on April 15, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  15. ^ "iFixit on Twitter". March 23, 2022. Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved April 20, 2022.
  16. ^ "Mac Studio Teardown: No Upgradable Storage … Yet". ifixit. March 21, 2022. Archived from the original on April 20, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  17. ^ a b Cunningham, Andrew (March 22, 2022). "Explaining the Mac Studio's removable SSDs, and why you can't simply swap them out". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on May 24, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  18. ^ "The Mac Studio's removable SSD is reportedly blocked by Apple on a software level". The Verge. March 22, 2022. Archived from the original on June 2, 2022. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  19. ^ "How many displays can be connected to MacBook Pro". Apple Support. November 9, 2024. Retrieved November 30, 2024.
  20. ^ "Product Environmental Report Mac Studio (2022)" (PDF). Apple. March 18, 2022. Retrieved August 3, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ "Product Environmental Report Mac Studio (2023)" (PDF). Apple. June 5, 2023. Retrieved August 3, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. ^ "Product Environmental Report Mac Studio (2025)" (PDF). Apple. March 5, 2025. Retrieved April 13, 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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