Skip to content
Main Navigation Puget Systems Logo
  • Solutions
    • Content Creation
      • Photo Editing
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe Lightroom Classic
        • Adobe Photoshop
        • Stable Diffusion
      • Video Editing & Motion Graphics
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe After Effects
        • Adobe Premiere Pro
        • DaVinci Resolve
        • Foundry Nuke
      • 3D Design & Animation
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk 3ds Max
        • Autodesk Maya
        • Blender
        • Cinema 4D
        • Houdini
        • ZBrush
      • Real-Time Engines
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Game Development
        • Unity
        • Unreal Engine
        • Virtual Production
      • Rendering
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Keyshot
        • OctaneRender
        • Redshift
        • V-Ray
      • Digital Audio
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Ableton Live
        • FL Studio
        • Pro Tools
    • Engineering
      • Architecture & CAD
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk AutoCAD
        • Autodesk Inventor
        • Autodesk Revit
        • SOLIDWORKS
      • Visualization
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Enscape
        • Lumion
        • Twinmotion
      • Photogrammetry & GIS
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • ArcGIS Pro
        • Agisoft Metashape
        • Pix4D
        • RealityCapture
    • AI & HPC
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Data Science
      • Generative AI
      • Large Language Models
      • Machine Learning / AI Dev
      • Scientific Computing
    • More
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Compact Size
      • Live Streaming
      • NVIDIA RTX Studio
      • Quiet Operation
      • Virtual Reality
    • Business & Enterprise
      We can empower your company
    • Government & Education
      Services tailored for your organization
  • Products
    • Puget Mobile
      Powerful laptop workstations
      • Puget Mobile 16″
    • Puget Workstations
      High-performance desktop PCs
      • AMD Ryzen
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • Small Form Factor
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • AMD Threadripper
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • Full Tower
      • AMD EPYC
        • EPYC 9004:
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Core Ultra
        • Core Ultra Series 2:
        • Small Form Factor
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Xeon
        • Xeon W-2500:
        • Mid Tower
        • Xeon W-3500:
        • Full Tower
    • Custom Computers
    • Puget Rackstations
      Workstations in rackmount chassis
      • AMD Rackstations
        • Ryzen 7000 / EPYC 4004:
        • R550-6U 5-Node
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • R132-4U
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • T121-4U
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • T141-4U
        • T140-5U (Dual 5090s)
      • Intel Rackstations
        • Core Ultra Series 2:
        • C132-4U
        • Xeon W-3500:
        • X131-4U
        • X141-5U
    • Custom Rackmount Workstations
    • Puget Servers
      Enterprise-class rackmount servers
      • Rackmount Servers
        • AMD EPYC:
        • E200-1U
        • E140-2U
        • E280-4U
        • Intel Xeon:
        • X200-1U
    • Comino Grando GPU Servers
    • Custom Servers
    • Puget Storage
      Solutions from desktop to datacenter
      • Network-Attached Storage
        • Synology NAS Units:
        • 4-bay DiskStation
        • 8-bay DiskStation
        • 12-bay DiskStation
        • 4-bay RackStation
        • 12-bay FlashStation
      • Software-Defined Storage
        • Datacenter Storage:
        • 12-Bay 2U
        • 24-Bay 2U
        • 36-Bay 4U
    • Recommended Third Party Peripherals
      Curated list of accessories for your workstation
    • Puget Gear
      Quality apparel with Puget Systems branding
  • Publications
    • Articles
    • Blog Posts
    • Case Studies
    • HPC Blog
    • Podcasts
    • Press
    • PugetBench
  • Support
    • Contact Support
    • Support Articles
    • Warranty Details
    • Onsite Services
    • Unboxing
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Customers
    • Enterprise
    • Gov & Edu
    • Press Kit
    • Testimonials
    • Careers
  • Talk to an Expert
  • My Account
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Hardware Articles
  4. /
  5. Apple M1 MacBook vs PC Desktop Workstation for Adobe Creative Cloud

Apple M1 MacBook vs PC Desktop Workstation for Adobe Creative Cloud

Posted on November 17, 2020 (May 10, 2024) by Matt Bach
Although the information in here may still be relevant, we have published a more up-to-date comparison between Mac and PC in 2024 for a variety of content creation applications, featuring the M3 Max MacBook Pro and the M2 Ultra Studio. Mac vs PC for Content Creation (2024)

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Test Setup
  • Photoshop Performance Analysis
  • After Effects Performance Analysis
  • Premiere Pro Performance Analysis
  • Conclusion: Apple M1 MacBooks vs PC Desktop

Introduction

Recently, Apple announced that it would be transitioning a number of their products from Intel processors to their own chips based on the ARM instruction set. This is very interesting for a number of reasons, but we (and many others) are interested first and foremost in what this will mean for performance.

Here at Puget Systems, we don't sell or even look at laptops all that often, but this is a big enough change that we are interested in doing some quick analysis ourselves. We are not set up for examining things like battery life, keyboard/screen quality, etc., however, so we are going to leave laptop vs laptop comparisons to other reviewers that are better equipped for those comparisons. What we will instead do is see how the new 13-inch MacBook Air and MacBook Pro compare to a number of PC desktop configurations to evaluate how the performance is relative to a desktop.

Apple M1 MacBook vs PC Desktop workstation
Image
Apple M1 MacBook vs PC Desktop workstation
Open Full Resolution

One thing to note is that we do not have pre-launch samples of the new Apple M1 MacBook Air or MacBook Pro, so these tests were not performed by Puget Systems. But, there have already been a number of results uploaded to our public benchmark database that we can use instead which removes the need for us to get in these laptops for direct testing (although we do have a MacBook Air coming in for benchmark development)

CTA Image
Looking for a Content Creation Workstation?

Puget Systems offers a range of powerful and reliable systems that are tailor-made for your unique workflow.

Configure a System!
CTA Image
Labs Consultation Service

Our Labs team is available to provide in-depth hardware recommendations based on your workflow.

Find Out More!

Test Setup

Listed below are the specifications of the systems we will be using for our analysis:

MacBook Air
CPU Apple M1 chip with 8-core CPU and 8-core GPU
Memory 16GB
Storage 512GB SSD
Price $1,449 [Configure]
MacBook Pro
CPU Apple M1 chip with 8-core CPU and 8-core GPU
Memory 16GB
Storage 512GB SSD
Price $1,699 [Configure]
Puget Systems PC – AMD Ryzen 5800X
CPU AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
RAM 2x DDR4-3200 8GB (16GB total)
Storage 500GB SSD
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080
Price ~$2,400 [Configure]
Puget Systems PC – AMD Ryzen 5950X
CPU AMD Ryzen 9 5800X
RAM 4x DDR4-3200 16GB (64GB total)
Storage 500GB SSD
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080
Price $3,500 [Configure]

Obviously, this is not going to be a comparison based on similarly-priced configurations. Here at Puget Systems, we tend to start at mid-range options and go up from there, so we do not have anything at the sub-$2,000 price point to use. In addition, we have not moved all our internal testing over to the new Adobe application versions, so we are limited to the results in our public benchmark database that matches the benchmark/application versions used by whoever uploaded the MacBook results.

However, one thing we will also do is to provide the specs for a system that scored roughly the same as the new MacBooks. Our goal isn't to show that a PC or desktop is going to be faster than a MacBook (desktops will always be faster than a laptop), but rather to help provide context for how fast these new ARM-based MacBooks are with the current software that is available from Adobe compared to our current and past workstations.

Photoshop Performance Analysis

Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next
System Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next

Full Benchmark Results: MacBook Air | MacBook Pro | 5800X Desktop | 5950X Desktop

Starting off with our PugetBench for Photoshop benchmark, our two desktop configurations are certainly faster (almost 2x faster in most cases), but for a mobile platform that is roughly half the cost, the new MacBooks hold up pretty well.

As for a desktop configuration that is roughly the same performance as these MacBooks, we found a couple that performed roughly in the same ballpark:

  • Overall Score: 716 | Specs: Intel Core i5 8600 w/ NVIDIA GTX 1060 [Full results]
  • Overall Score: 649 | Specs: Intel Core i7 6700k w/ NVIDIA GXT 1060 [Full results]

These systems are both fairly old now, with the Intel Core i7 6700K having launched back in 2015. In other words, it would be reasonable to expect that these Apple M1 MacBooks perform about on par with a decently configured desktop PC that is around 4-5 years old.

After Effects Performance Analysis

Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next
System Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next

Full Benchmark Results: MacBook Air | MacBook Pro | 5800X Desktop | 5950X Desktop

Next up is the PugetBench for After Effects benchmark. Here, the desktop configurations take a larger lead, coming in at 2.1-2.3x the performance of the MacBook Air in particular. In addition to the higher performance from the Ryzen CPUs, the fact that the desktops have a discrete GPU also makes a big difference. In fact, the "GPU Score" is around 3.5x higher on the desktops which, considering GPU acceleration is becoming more and more widely used, is a very significant factor.

As for a desktop configuration that is roughly the same performance as these MacBooks, here are two that performed roughly in the same ballpark:

  • Overall Score: 671 | Specs: Intel Core i5 6600k w/ AMD R9 390 [Full results]
  • Overall Score: 730 | Specs: AMD Ryzen 7 1700 w/ NVIDIA GXT 1060 [Full results]

Once again, these systems are both fairly old now, with the Intel Core i7 6600K having launched back in 2015. The AMD system is a bit newer (~2017), but at that time Intel had a strong lead in applications like After Effects, so most Ae users would likely be using an Intel platform. That means that the new Apple M1 MacBooks again perform about on par with a decently configured desktop PC that is around 4-5 years old.

Premiere Pro Performance Analysis

Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next
System Image
Gallery Image
Gallery Image
Previous Next

Full Benchmark Results: MacBook Air | MacBook Pro | 5800X Desktop | 5950X Desktop

Last up is our PugetBench for Premiere Pro benchmark which has a bit more interesting results than the other two benchmarks. Not only is the "GPU Score" almost 5x higher on the desktops, but even exporting is around 4x higher. Our export tests includes exporting to ProRes as well as H.264 with the ProRes exports benefiting from the higher CPU power and the H.264 exports benefiting from having a discrete GPU.

Live playback is also much higher on the desktops, averaging around 2x the performance of the MacBooks. However, this is one test we intend to update since around half of the tests have become too "easy" for modern computers. If most configurations are able to play the media at full FPS, then there is no way to show relative performance between each configuration. If you instead only look at the more intensive multicam playback tests, the desktops are again about 4-5x faster than the MacBooks.

As for a desktop configuration that is roughly the same performance as these MacBooks, we found a number that performed roughly in the same ballpark:

  • Overall Score: 391 | Specs: Intel Core i7 7700 w/ NVIDIA GTX 1070 [Full results]
  • Overall Score: 531 | Specs: AMD Ryzen 7 1700 w/ NVIDIA GXT 1050 Ti [Full results]

It was actually difficult to find desktop results that were as low as the MacBooks (although there are plenty of laptops in the same range), but both of these CPUs were released in 2017. However, the Ryzen system, in particular, is significantly faster than the MacBooks, so it is likely that a decently configured desktop from 2016 would be in line with the new MacBooks. In other words, it would be reasonable to expect that these Apple M1 MacBooks perform about on par with a decently configured desktop PC that is around 3-4 years old.

Conclusion: Apple M1 MacBooks vs PC Desktop

From a performance standpoint, the new Apple M1 MacBooks do fairly well considering that they are using a complete processor based around the ARM instruction set and software that is likely not fully optimized yet. But compared to a typical desktop workstation from Puget Systems that is around 2-3x faster on average (albeit at a higher cost), they certainly can't keep up.

These units only cost around $1,500 as configured, however, so the fact that they are half the performance shouldn't be unexpected since they are also half the cost. What will be very interesting to see is how performance will shake out as Adobe improves support for native Apple Silicon and when (or if) Apple launches a higher-end laptop – or even better, a more powerful desktop variant than the Mac Mini.

Another way to look at it is that these new MacBooks (and presumably the Mac Mini) are roughly equivalent to a desktop that is around 4-5 years old. So if you have a PC from 2015 or 2016, be aware that these MacBooks likely won't be any faster. Comparing laptops to desktops in somewhat of an "apples to oranges" comparison since they are really different tools for different jobs, but if you are thinking about moving from a desktop to an Apple MacBook, hopefully, that provides a bit of context for what you can expect in terms of performance.

Overall, this move to ARM is very interesting, and something we are going to be keeping a close eye on. We have recently seen what can happen when two companies (AMD and Intel) are highly competitive, and throwing a third player into the mix should only be a good thing for both Mac and PC users.

CTA Image
Looking for a Content Creation Workstation?

Puget Systems offers a range of powerful and reliable systems that are tailor-made for your unique workflow.

Configure a System!
CTA Image
Labs Consultation Service

Our Labs team is available to provide in-depth hardware recommendations based on your workflow.

Find Out More!

Related Content

  • Do Video Editors Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
  • Z890 vs. B860 vs. H810
  • AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT Content Creation Review
  • Do Graphic and Motion Designers Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
View All Related Content

Latest Content

  • Do Video Editors Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
  • Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects – What’s New In Version 25.2?
  • The Future of LED Walls: Arena & Nuke Stage Go Beyond Game Engines
  • 2025 Tariff Impacts at Puget Systems
View All
Tags: 5800X, 5950X, After Effects, Apple M1, MacBook, Photoshop, Premiere Pro

Who is Puget Systems?

Puget Systems builds custom workstations, servers and storage solutions tailored for your work.

We provide:

Extensive performance testing
making you more productive and giving better value for your money

Reliable computers
with fewer crashes means more time working & less time waiting

Support that understands
your complex workflows and can get you back up & running ASAP

A proven track record
as shown by our case studies and customer testimonials

Get Started

Browse Systems

Puget Systems Mobile Laptop Workstation Icon

Mobile

Puget Systems Tower Workstation Icon

Workstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Workstation Icon

Rackstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Server Icon

Servers

Puget Systems Rackmount Storage Icon

Storage

Latest Articles

  • Do Video Editors Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
  • Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects – What’s New In Version 25.2?
  • The Future of LED Walls: Arena & Nuke Stage Go Beyond Game Engines
  • 2025 Tariff Impacts at Puget Systems
  • Z890 vs. B860 vs. H810
View All

Post navigation

 GPU Rendering – NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series Multi-GPU ScalingPCI-Express 4.0 vs 3.0 Video Card Performance 
Puget Systems Logo
Build Your Own PC Site Map FAQ
facebook instagram linkedin rss twitter youtube

Optimized Solutions

  • Adobe Premiere
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • Solidworks
  • Autodesk AutoCAD
  • Machine Learning

Workstations

  • Content Creation
  • Engineering
  • Scientific PCs
  • More

Support

  • Online Guides
  • Request Support
  • Remote Help

Publications

  • All News
  • Puget Blog
  • HPC Blog
  • Hardware Articles
  • Case Studies

Policies

  • Warranty & Return
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Delivery Times
  • Accessibility

About Us

  • Testimonials
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter

© Copyright 2025 - Puget Systems, All Rights Reserved.