CrimeMouse
Contributor
You can buy two Mac minis with 16GB/256GB each for the price it costs to upgrade a single one to 32GB/512GB.
You can buy two Mac minis with 16GB/256GB each for the price it costs to upgrade a single one to 32GB/512GB.
That's why the power button is on the bottom. What if someone turns off one in your server farm?Wow. This just blew my mind. You meant to jest but I'm serious.
Buy two, connect them together with Thunderbolt networking.
And then connect one of them to my M1 with Thunderbolt.
Boom, eight extra P cores with 20% IPC uplift for ~110K.
Automator could divide out the files over two machines.
Syncthing could consolidate the output into a single folder.
I mean, I could even just use regular ethernet since they're only JPGs.
Not as flashy as a custom 9950X compute box, but wow.
And it's scalable! ahah
But it is custom SSD that only Apple will have. Not clear whether they will let users replace SSD with bigger storage through official channels. Hope they allow this going forward.You can change SSD Storage in new Mac Mini 4
Apple's New Mac mini Comes with Removable Storage
Will leave this to you for further inputs from you all.
Basically this is Super Good News.
Pretty sure that some time down the line, some one will start selling adapters for allowing normal SSD to Mac mini. But keep on the look out for news in this regard.But it is custom SSD that only Apple will have. Not clear whether they will let users replace SSD with bigger storage through official channels. Hope they allow this going forward.
Normal SSDs cannot work even with an adapter. They don't have nvme controllers on the SSD module in the Mac mini. They just have the storage chips. The controller is elsewhere. So, the only way to upgrade storage is to buy a SSD module specifically for Macs.Pretty sure that some time down the line, some one will start selling adapters for allowing normal SSD to Mac mini. But keep on the look out for news in this regard.
For now 16G Ram with 256G SSD is best at that price point.
I am not sure how many will be able to make most of this.Was about to post that dosdude video too.
Given the amount of work needed, saying that it is "Upgradable" is a stretch right now. But given that the module is detachable you could see a future where someone starts selling the part (board with NAND chips + whatever control circuits apple has on theirs) separately and a somewhat tech-savvy end user could replace it.
Was about to post that dosdude video too.
Given the amount of work needed, saying that it is "Upgradable" is a stretch right now. But given that the module is detachable you could see a future where someone starts selling the part (board with NAND chips + whatever control circuits apple has on theirs) separately and a somewhat tech-savvy end user could replace it.
I am not sure how many will be able to make most of this.
This does require some decent tech skills for sure.
Most folks including me will avoid this process in fear of damaging the Mac mini.
I may be able to do it but not taking the risk .
This NAND replacement hack is not new. There are modders who did this with current crop of Apple Silicon Macs. How well it works and how safe it is, they will never reveal. Probably this is just like all those 'street food vidoes where person puts everything at hand into one and tops it with entire block of cheese and butter'.
A whole lot easier to just add a thunderbolt / USB 4 enclosure. (Not USB 3)
Macs will see the enclosed drive as a standard nvme drive over a pcie link.
I have a 2tb crucial added to my desktop setup and the R/W speeds are pretty much same as native (in the range of 3000-3500 MB/s)
Naa, it requires too much precision for those at these places to dabble in, especially for a very small market. Shenzen is another thing though, they would do it on the streets.Quite sure this will become available at Nehru Place or Gaffar or Lamington Road sooner than later. And if someone has the luxury of visiting China for work, they can do such upgrades before you finish lunch.
I have a 4tb ssd with a 40gbps case giving 3.5gbps speeds. 5yrs warranty on ssd, none on case. Price I got for both was below 20k. So works for me lol.A whole lot easier to just add a thunderbolt / USB 4 enclosure. (Not USB 3)
Macs will see the enclosed drive as a standard nvme drive over a pcie link.
I have a 2tb crucial added to my desktop setup and the R/W speeds are pretty much same as native (in the range of 3000-3500 MB/s)
Just one point , more semantics than anything else.I have a 4tb ssd with a 40gbps case giving 3.5gbps speeds. 5yrs warranty on ssd, none on case. Price I got for both was below 20k. So works for me lol.
The problem comes with the laptop. I have an M2 max macbook with 512gb ssd. Was thinking of adding a 1tb sd card. But UHS2 1tb cards are expensive or not in high capacity. How are the uhs1 one cards with around 170-190 speeds ? Any other option that wont dangle from the macbook?