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24-inch M1 iMac buying guide: Everything you need to know

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Apple offers three versions of its new 24-inch iMac and they have very different feature sets. Here’s our guide to help you buy the one you need.
Apple’s new M1 iMac is now available and we totally understand that you want to buy one. It’s easily Apple’s coolest desktops in years, but choosing which one to buy is about more than just picking your favorite color. So follow our guide and spend your money wisely. With the holiday shopping season underway, there could be sales on the 24-inch iMac. We have a separate article that highlights pre-Black Friday deals. And when the Black Friday sales start, we’ll post an article covering those. Before we start getting into the differences, let’s take a look at the features that are the same on all three models of the 24-inch iMac. That’s a lot of computer no matter which model you buy. But there are key differences between the $1,299, $1,499, and $1,699 iMac models. Apple All of the iMac models have the same all-in-one design, measuring 21.5 x 18.1 x 5.8 inches and weighing about 10 pounds, which is quite impressive for such a powerful desktop PC. But the color options are different, with the higher configurations getting a few extra options. Currently, the orange, purple, and yellow iMacs are available only through Apple’s online store. However, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman tweeted that Apple will soon announce that all of the 24-inch iMac colors will be available at the Apple Store. Our pick: If you absolutely, positively must have an orange iMac, you absolutely, positively must spend the extra cash. (It does look fabulous.) Most people aren’t into fancy colors and will go with the silver one. We have a pink one in the office, and while the front is pink, the back is a deep red that looks great. All three models have an 8-core M1 CPU, but the graphics processor (GPU) is different in the $1,299 iMac. The $1,299 iMac has one fewer GPU core than the other two models. To get an idea of how the 7-core and 8-core GPU compare, let’s take a look at benchmarks from the MacBook Air review by Macworld U.K. They tested both the $999 MacBook Air with a 7-core GPU and the $1,249 MacBook Air 8-core GPU. Here’s how the Geekbench test results compare. OpenCL and Metal are frameworks that are used to render graphics. These tests show how fast each GPU can perform. The 8-core GPU shows a 10 percent increase over the 7-core GPU in Geekbench’s OpenCL test.

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