![]() ![]() With companies doing their 3-year hardware refresh cycles, I have seen many coders end up with the new 16” M1 Pro/Max. The massive downside of that machine is that lugging it to the office and back feels very 90s. In contrast, picking the M2 Air up and walking anywhere, any distance feels a lot more 2022, as you genuinely don’t feel you’re carrying something. The other benefit of lightness with the M2 is the fact that now you can pop over to a colleague’s desk, or even just walk around the office with the laptop open, holding it in one hand while explaining some code you wrote, doing a commit, whatever it is, you can do it one-handed. I genuinely think software companies should start looking at the M2 Air as a viable machine for many of their software engineers, instead of blanket-buying or leasing the top spec 14” or 16” MacBook Pros.īy far the biggest selling-point of the M2 Air is its size and weight. There is of course a downside to smaller size, and that’s the screen real-estate. No matter how you want to flip reality here, this is a less than 14” screen, and when it comes to coding, I found that be that WebStorm, VsCode, Xcode or Android Studio, after a couple of hours, the screen size becomes a limitation that only the 16” model can solve, albeit only partially. If your only screen is going to be the laptop’s screen, I would not recommend getting the M2 Air. It’s a beautiful screen, no doubt, but simply not wide and tall enough for extended coding sessions. Sure it’s fine for the odd day you’re on the move, or in a meeting room sneaking in some code while designers fight about font-sizes and shades of grey, but otherwise you’ll be doing yourself a disservice going for a device with such a small screen. #YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS CODE# Of course, none of these limitations exist if you’re going to connect to an extended monitor, even if it’s just another 13” screen or even an iPad. I think it has now been established that an 8 GB RAM model will not be suitable for most software developers. This is not unexpected, and while you might really want that to be true, and frankly so did I back in 2020, the reality of it is, that other than occasional and fairly light coding projects, the M2 on 8 GB of memory will simply feel like a bottleneck. Having said that, the 256 GB SSD - yes, even with its lower speed - is passable if you’re really just about coding and building apps without using any virtual machines or dockers. With 16 GB of memory, however, things change drastically for the better. #YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS ANDROID#īecause I am terrible at closing anything, I was simultaneously running WebStorm, Android Studio and an iOS emulator with up to 50 tabs open in Chrome and Safari, and didn’t experience any issues. ![]() Of course adding dockers to that already ridiculous situation changed things again, but really, 16 GB of RAM should allow you to work with one or two moderately sized dockers. Most software engineers should go for 16 GB RAM and 512 GB SSD. #YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS SOFTWARE# All other configurations are a small niche. Now, what about 24 GB RAM? I said this before, and I’ll say it again, simply don’t. #YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS CODE#.#YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS SOFTWARE#.#YOU CALL ME OUT BEYOND THE SHORE INTO THE WAVES GENIUS ANDROID#. ![]()
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