Cpu speeds for mac

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Although throughput is generally the easiest metric to measure, it doesn't correspond very well to human perception. There's a very common tendency to equate 'performance' with throughput-roughly speaking, tasks accomplished per unit of time. More throughput doesn’t always mean happier users If you're not familiar with the term, it's short for Quality of Service-and it's all about task scheduling. Howard Oakley-author of several Mac-native utilities such as Cormorant, Spundle, and Stibium-did some digging to find out why his M1 Mac felt faster than Intel Macs did, and he concluded that the answer is QoS.

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We're referring, of course, to feeling fast-which has more to do with a system meeting user expectations predictably and reliably than it does with raw speed.

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Apple's M1 processor is a world-class desktop and laptop processor-but when it comes to general-purpose end-user systems, there's something even better than being fast.