Same with the CPU. Linux compiled faster on an M1 than on the fastest Intel i9 at the time, again using only 25% of the power budget.
And the M-series has only gotten better.
It is kind of sad Apple neglects helping developers optimize games for the M-series because iDevices and MacBooks could be the mobile gaming devices.
You're cooked if you actually believe this
For a Qwen 3.6 35B / 3B MoE, 4-bit quant:
- parsing a 4k prompt on a M4 Macbook Air takes 17 seconds before generating a single token.
- on an M4 Max Mac Studio it's faster at 2.3 seconds
- on an RTX 5090, it's 142ms.
RTX 5090 uses more power than an M4 Max Mac Studio but it's not 16x more power.
There are other workloads where the M1 actually beats the 3090.
Apple does plenty of hyping but it's always cute when irrational haters like you put them down. The M1 was (well, is) a marvel and absolutely smokes a 3090 in perf per watt.
The context of this thread isn't consumer chips, but Apple's analog to an H/B200.
> The GPU is monstrously good. Depending on the workload, the M1 series GPU using 120W could beat an RTX 3090 using 420W.
You're just listing the TDP max of both chips. If you limit a 3090 to 120W then it would still run laps around an M1 Max in several workloads despite being an 8nm GPU versus a 5nm one.
> It is kind of sad Apple neglects helping developers optimize games for the M-series
Apple directly advocated for ports like Death Stranding, Cyberpunk 2077 and Resident Evil internally. Advocacy and optimization are not the issue, Apple's obsession over reinventing the wheel with Metal is what puts the Steam Deck ahead.
Edit (response to matthewmacleod):
> Bold of them to reinvent something that hadn't been invented yet.
Vulkan was not the first open graphics API, as most Mac developers will happily inform you.
OpenGL had become too unmanagable which is why devs moved to DirectX.
Unless you meant a different one?
Surprised Apple didn't create a TPU-like architecture. Another misstep from John Gianneadrea.
Bold of them to reinvent something that hadn't been invented yet.