

If you’re curious how the M1 version of Lightroom Classic compares to a more high-end Intel MacBook, make sure to check out PetaPixel’s benchmarking of the new software here.


The M1-optimized machine was therefore 74 percent faster at this task. The M1-optimized version was able to complete the task in 9.6 seconds, while the Intel machine took 36.4 seconds.

The M1-optimized machine was a whopping 78 percent faster at this particular task.įinally, the fourth benchmark asked each machine to increase the resolution of a 12-megapixel image with the newly-added Super Resolution feature. The M1-optimized software was able to complete this task in 14.6 seconds, while the Intel system took one minute and five seconds. The third benchmark asked both systems to synchronize color adjustments across 1000 images. That makes the M1 54 percent faster at this task. The M1 version of Lightroom was able to do the task in six minutes and 13 seconds, while the Intel system took 13 minutes and 33 seconds. The second test asked each system to export 1000 RAW photos as JPEGs at 100 percent quality to the local SSD. The M1 version completed the benchmark in 28.9 seconds, while it took the Intel system 52.8 seconds which makes the M1 version 45 percent faster at this task. In the first test, 1,000 12.4-megapixel RAW photos were imported into both systems. We’ve also run our own benchmarks, which you can find here. In our coverage below, we’ve re-calculated the “percent faster” claims so that they are accurate, and we would caution readers to approach any percentages in the original report skeptically (and with a calculator). Several percentages mentioned throughout the rest of the report are also wrong. Editor’s Note: The Pfeiffer Report that Adobe commissioned has a lot of great data that compares M1 performance to Intel, however, the percentages included in the table on have been calculated incorrectly.
