![]() The MSI GE76 Raider was able to take the lead in Basemark and Speedometer tests, but the Dell XPS 17 (and other Windows laptops) remained behind. M1 Max did well in other CPU benchmarks including Cinebench, Basemark, and Speedometer. Apple’s M1 Max has a clear advantage in this test. The Dell XPS 17 we tested with Intel Core i7-11800H processor achieved a single-core score of 1564 and a multi-core score of 7999, by comparison, and MSI’s GE76 Raider with Intel’s Core i9-11980H hit 16, respectively. The Geekbench 5 benchmark, which tests raw processing power, spat out a single-core score of 1777 and multi-core score of 12791-exceptional numbers, the best we have seen to date from a laptop processor. It’s expensive, but Apple has packed a lot of performance, and battery life, into every inch of its MacBook Pro 16. Serious power users can boost RAM up to 64GB and unified memory up to 8TB for a maximum all-in price of $6,099. ![]() Our tester was a high-end, $3,499 configuration with the M1 Max, 32GB of RAM, and 1TB of memory. ![]() The range starts with the $2,499 base model that has an M1 Pro chip, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of unified memory.
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