![]() We did just that with the 50 "Soccer RAW Samples." However, for this function, it uses 6 cores max and 6GB of total real memory (OS X + Aperture).Ĭolor is an example of one Apple's pro apps that does not take full advantage of multiple cores. One CPU intensive operation is when you export RAW photos as JPEG. All graphs display time in seconds.Īperture is popular with photographers. Continuing that theme, we present you results below for four more popular real world apps. ![]() ![]() Then we showed with After Effects, Compressor and Motion that much of the theoretical advantage shrinks in the real world. We published some artificial benchmarks (Cinebench, Geekbench) that showed the 2010 Mac Pro with the most cores beating up on the ones with less. September 17th, added some 12-core results Posted Wednesday, September 15th, 2010, by rob-ART morgan, mad scientist
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