
Simultaneously supports up to five displays: Support for up to four Pro Display XDRs (6K resolution at 60Hz and over a billion colors) over USB-C and one 4K display (4K resolution at 60Hz and over a billion colors) over HDMI Thunderbolt 4 digital video output supports Native DisplayPort output over USB‑C Thunderbolt 2, DVI, and VGA output supported using adapters (sold separately) HDMI display video output Support for one display with up to 4K resolution at 60Hz DVI output using HDMI to DVI Adapter (sold separately)īuilt-in speaker 3.5 mm headphone jack with advanced support for high-impedance headphones HDMI port supports multichannel audio output


The Mac Studio is still way smaller, small enough to sit on your desk under your monitor.Īpple M1 Ultra chip 20-core CPU with 16 performance cores and 4 efficiency cores 48-core GPU 32-core Neural Engine 800GB/s memory bandwidthįour Thunderbolt 4 ports with support for: Thunderbolt 4 (up to 40Gb/s) DisplayPort USB 4 (up to 40Gb/s) USB 3.1 Gen 2 (up to 10Gb/s) Two USB-A ports (up to 5Gb/s) HDMI port 10Gb Ethernet 3.5 mm headphone jack On front (M1 Ultra): Two Thunderbolt 4 ports (up to 40Gb/s) SDXC card slot (UHS-II) I recently reviewed the Intel NUC 12 Extreme, and that's as small of a package that you can get while packing a full-powered Intel CPU and proper dedicated graphics. Not only is it powerful, but it comes in a package that simply wasn't possible in the past. That's the thing that makes the Mac Studio truly special. It's pretty obvious when you're looking at it, but it's not so obvious when you're using it, because this thing is a beast, and it's Apple's best Mac yet.

Speaking in terms of volume and most of its dimensions, it's smaller than any Intel-powered PC with desktop dedicated graphics.
