- #Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch install#
- #Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch upgrade#
- #Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch pro#
- #Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch plus#
If going for an external SSD, USB 3.0 in theory should not bottle neck most SSDs, but theory only goes so far. USB 3.0 will be cheaper than Thunderbolt. Since most external HD will be HDD, I don't think USB 3.0 would bottleneck SSD > HDD and give you more options to use it on non Mac device.įor a external hard drive for storage, either would be fine. My question would be USB 3.0 vs Thunderbolt. And virtual RAM will be faster with a SSD.įor storage, I would suggest external HDD.
#Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch upgrade#
using your hard drive.or if you upgrade your SSD, then the SSD). Plus, with the boot drive as a SSD, even if you run out of physical RAM, it will resort to virtual RAM (i.e.
#Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch plus#
That is with about 20 or so web windows/tabs open as well as iTunes (with music playing), Apple Mail, Bus圜al, and Chroma actively running plus a handful of memory resident programs (iStat Menus, Bartender, Dropbox, Box, VirusBarrier, Netbarrier, and a couple others that I am likely forgetting). While I suspect you likely will be fine in terms of memory as long as you are not running a lot of programs and/or have a crap ton of browser windows open, you might be pushing it when you do video editing.įWIW, I am only using about 1.7 GB of my 16 GB of RAM at this moment. You might take Buddyme2's advice of looking at the Activity Monitor Panel or iStat Menus (you mention you use it in another thread) to see what happens to your memory usage during your typical activities before you make your final decision. I don't believe the video editing is as memory intensive as photo editing, although I could be wrong. I agree that a SSD will likely give you more bang for your buck than a RAM upgrade based upon your use. Will help a lot with large file reads like Final Cut. SSD means faster, more battery, less heat all things better for laptop. OWC has 8, 12 and 16 GB RAM chips starting from $49.75 and OWC brand SSDs that may be within your budget. Even if it shows yellow your Mac would be better off with more RAM. If the memory pressure shows green, your Mac has enough RAM. When you are editing videos or gaming watch Activity Monitors Memory Pane.
#Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch pro#
I am into video editing using iMovie and Final Cut Pro and some gaming that I do (Dota 2 via steam) will RAM be a good choice for now? Personally, two SSDs is kind of a waste unless you REALLY need the drive speed (and maybe drive security.no moving parts in a laptop drive is nice) for everything. If you really want lots of storage on an SSD, then I would personally get the largest SSD that you can (either 1 TB or 2 TB) as the primary drive and just leave the optical drive in there until you run out of space.
#Macbook pro mid 2012 specs 13 inch install#
If/when you do go with an SSD, here is an article on using TRIM with SSDs in Macs: Īnd personally, if you are going to remove the optical drive to install a second drive, I would personally install a traditional drive as the second data drive. I also tend to use OWC SSDs in my Mac as they are designed for and test on Macs (I do use Samsung SSDs on my Windows computers), where as other manufacturer's may or may not test their SSDs with Macs. If you are manipulating large Photoshop files or running a LARGE amount of programs, then you will notice the RAM upgrade more.Īs to brands, I tend to purchase any memory that I use for a Mac from OWC ( aka as offer a lifetime warranty and will give you a trade-in rebate for your old RAM. If you are constantly opening and closing new programs, rebooting, or doing other disk intensive tasks, then you will notice the SSD upgrade more. If you only use basic browsing and email, then neither will really have that much of an overall impact, but you will notice the SSD upgrade more as opening up your browser and/or email program will happen faster. The impact will also depend on what you do with the computer.