

- 3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW UPGRADE
- 3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW FULL
- 3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW PRO
I’m currently writing this review on the i7 model, with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage, and almost everything about this $2,499 machine feels like overkill. Storage constraints, on the other hand, can always be better managed with external drives. Both upgrades will cost you heavily, with only the RAM being really worth springing for now rather than later, because of how finicky Macs can be when using aftermarket memory.
3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW UPGRADE
You can of course pay to upgrade both the RAM and the SSD in small chunks, up to 64GB of memory and 2TB of storage. That’s a smart move in my book, and it will give the device more speed and mileage in the long run.

If you know you’re not going to need a large amount of storage - in other words, you’re not editing video on this thing or using it as a media server - you can spring for the $799 base model and spend that extra cash on an upgrade to an i7. There are some ways to help make this choice easier.

In fact, Apple’s cheapest Mac has moved from a sub-$500 purchase to a $799 one, and much more if you want a larger solid state drive, a faster processor, or more memory.
3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW PRO
It is much more powerful - it is, without hyperbole, a miniature Mac Pro - and as a result, it is no longer all that cheap. So well, in fact, that it took on a second life for many owners as a home media PC, a NAS server, and even as part of a compute cluster.īut the 2018 Mac mini is a different beast. But the Mac mini was simple, it was cheap, and it did its job well. You could of course just buy an iMac, or a display stand for a MacBook Air or Pro.
3.2GHZ CORE I7 MAC MINI REVIEW FULL
The Mac mini has historically been the budget option Mac for consumers who lived in Apple’s ecosystem, but liked the aesthetics of mini PCs, as well as the benefits of a full mouse, keyboard, and monitor setup. I’ve been using a Mac mini as my primary home computer for the last half-decade, and I love it for its simplicity and the tiny corner of real estate it takes up on my desk.īut that’s precisely what makes evaluating the newest iteration of Apple’s smallest desktop computer so difficult. But the Mac mini has always had a special place in the hearts of Apple fans. And it’s never been the versatile product of choice for the coder class, the modern office worker, or the well-off college student. It’s not the preferred workstation of graphic designers or video editors.

For years, the Mac mini has been the black sheep of Apple’s computer lineup.
