Watch below as Stalman realizes halfway through the video that the MacBook Neo can handle more demanding photo and video production workflows than he initially thought. As today’s embargo lifted, most of us are still getting a feel for Apple’s new 16-inch MacBook Neo. One thing is certain - it has some impressive specs on paper. Tyler Stalman, a professional photographer and filmmaker, decided to put these claims through his own tests.
test the performance of the laptop in demanding photo and video workflows.
The first half of the test shows that MacBook Neo struggles with tasks such as 4K video editing and heavy image processing. However, halfway through the video Stalman realizes that he should have given it a little more credit. The second half is all about pushing the laptop to its limits in various photo and video workflows.
The end result? A laptop that can handle demanding production tasks with ease - far beyond what Tyler thought at first.
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{“postTitle”:“Photographer Tyler Stalman tests the MacBook Neo with pro photo and video workflows - 9to5Mac”,“post_ topic”:“Photographer Tyler Stalman tests the MacBook Neo with pro photo and video workflows - 9to5Mac”,“postContent”:"Photographer Tyler Stalman tests the MacBook Neo with pro photo and video workflows - 9to5Mac1200×628 75.6 KB\nWatch below as Stalman realizes halfway through the video that the MacBook Neo can handle more demanding photo and video production workflows than he initially thought. As today’s embargo lifted, most of us are still getting a feel for Apple’s new 16-inch MacBook Neo. One thing is certain - it has some impressive specs on paper. Tyler Stalman, a professional
Hey there! I’m wondering if anyone’s got some thoughts on how far we can push this new MacBook Neo in terms of video production? Tyler Stalman seems to be having a blast with it, but what about when you’re dealing with 4K footage and crazy color grading? Are these machines really going to hold up under the strain or are they just marketing hype?
Also, I think we need more transparency on how Apple’s optimizing their software for hardware. If they can get us some real-world benchmarks that show exactly what kind of workflow performance we’re talking about… well, then maybe this thing will be worth its weight in gold.
But hey, who knows? Maybe someone out there has already pushed the limits and can share their experiences!