![]() I am not a video editor by trade, but I do edit regularly enough that I need a speedy machine both in the office and on the road. R3D clips into ProRes or H.264 formats from Premiere Pro. R3D clips into ProRes or H.264 formats from Final Cut Pro. There are two specific video editing tasks that are time-consuming for me: I’m hoping this will be helpful to others considering the rather steep cost of a new 16″ MBP, and what build configuration to go with. And after comparison testing, here are some tangible results. Ultimately I made some educated guesses while building out a configuration. In my case, I wasn’t able to find anything that told me in concrete terms what difference a well-spec’d 16″ Macbook Pro would make vs the 2017 15″ model I wanted to replace. And the always informative folks over at Barefeats have some tests with the entry-level 16″ MBP, if you are considering that configuration. ![]() Clearly the new model is much faster than previous generation Macbooks, standard benchmark tests prove that out. While carefully deciding on this new laptop and the specifications, I was frustrated by the lack of speed tests and performance examples that addressed my specific workflow needs for video. ![]() ![]() Here are my 16″ Macbook Pro video export performance tests in Premiere Pro and FCPx. I recently updated a 2017 Apple MacBook Pro to the larger 2019 model. ![]()
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