Apple announces MacBook Pros with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips

Apple has announced new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros, featuring its latest M2 Pro and Max chips. The M2 Pro model will launch with a 12-core CPU, up to 19-core GPU, and up to 32GB of unified memory, while the M2 Max includes up to 38 cores of GPU power and support for up to 96GB of unified memory.

The new 14-inch MacBook Pro with M2 Pro starts at $1,999, with the 16-inch model starting at $2,499. Both are available to order online today and will start appearing in Apple stores on January 24th.

Apple says the M2 Pro has double the amount of transistors the M2 shipped with, and nearly 20 percent more than the M1 Pro. It also features 200GB/s of unified memory bandwidth, twice what’s available on the regular M2. All of this power should result in better performance in apps like Adobe Photoshop and Xcode. Apple claims the MacBook Pro with M2 Pro “is able to process images in Adobe Photoshop up to 40 percent faster than with M1 Pro, and as much as 80 percent faster than MacBook Pro with an Intel Core i9 processor.”

Apple’s M2 Pro chip.
Image: Apple

Apple’s M2 Max chip.

Apple’s M2 Max chip.
Image: Apple

The M2 Max chip has the same 12-core CPU as the M2 Pro, but much like the M1 Max it really pushes the GPU power more. Apple claims the M2 Max is up to 30 percent faster than the M1 Max in graphics, and can apparently “tackle graphics-intensive projects that competing systems can’t even run.”

Chips aside, the latest MacBook Pro models now include Wi-Fi 6E3 and a “more advanced HDMI” (probably HDMI 2.1) that supports 8K displays up to 60Hz and 4K displays up to 240Hz.

The new MacBook M2 Pro and M2 Max are both replacing models that have been around since late 2021. While they’re still considered excellent buys (worth keeping in mind, as retailers start to try and dump older models for the new ones), it’s nice to see Apple’s updating its Apple Silicon chips on a regular cadence.

Apple’s last generation of MacBook Pros was offered with the M1 Pro and M1 Max chips, which topped out at a 10-core CPU, 32-core GPU, and 16-core Neural Engine, with support for 64GB of memory and an 8TB SSD.

When Apple initially introduced the next-generation M2 chip, it did so without updating the 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros, instead putting it in the lower-end MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook Pro. The chips in those laptops contained updated performance and efficiency cores, more cache, increased memory bandwidth, and used 25 percent more transistors than the M1.

Despite having older silicon, the M1 Pro and Max-equipped still largely outperformed the updated lower-end models in benchmarks. Of course, this hasn’t stopped people from being curious about what high-end chips with Apple’s latest architecture will be like — when it introduced the M2, Apple said the chips would bring an 18 percent faster CPU and 35 percent faster GPU compared to the original M1.

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