I recently came into a Macbook Pro, 18 GB of Ram, 1TB of storage. Its the only Mac thing I own. Its a real shame I have no idea what to do with this and it is just sitting there. I want to use it for something, but I dont know what. My homelab already has a huge host with a threadripper in it (which also fell into my hands), a pi-hole on a low end pi, and an old PC that runs a Minecraft server just fine. Any suggestions for what to do with this bad boy? I’m not afraid of any OS, all are welcome here. I tend to mostly host media and game servers, I do not have any home automation yet.

Edit: thank you everyone for the suggestions. I love this community <3

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    10 hours ago

    By “came into”, I’m going to assume that you either received it for free or got it very inexpensively because of circumstances.

    In which case I’d take the opportunity to make a profit by selling it for far more than it’s value to some moron who see’s an Apple logo and automatically creams themselves. They’re not hard to find.

    Then you can buy whatever you want.

  • FrostBlazer@lemm.ee
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    12 hours ago

    The music mixing capabilities are very solid if you’re looking to use your new laptop as a creative outlet. The default software is solid for journaling and writing as well. You can set up shortcuts to run some custom automations as well. Hope this helps!

  • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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    18 hours ago

    It is really powerful per watt, and has a built-in UPS. Any homelab type things you could do with that? macOS+homebrew will give you a nice *NIX feel, very familiar if you’re a Linux user.

    I’m a fan of having a remote homelab computer+disk for off-site storage. This would be a good candidate in that it wouldn’t use excessive power at a friend/family’s place, but may be overkill (I use a pi3 for that).

  • Lasherz@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Something as powerful as an M3 at the very least could be used as a folding@home client. Other suggestions would be a rendering farm machine, a retro emulator for higher end consoles like PS3+, or part of a carputer since it’s got GPS and is quite efficient.

  • DickFiasco@lemm.ee
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    22 hours ago

    Combined with a minimalist Linux distro, a laptop like that should have amazing battery life. Not sure of a specific use, but maybe something where you have to run off battery for long periods of time. Portable server maybe?

  • __ghost__@lemmy.ml
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    22 hours ago

    The transcode performance on the apple silicon is pretty solidif you wanted to go the media server route. Or have a really expensive NAS host lol

    I have a macbook for work and I like it generally, it integrates well with other *nix environments. But if you don’t use a laptop or don’t want to have the uncomfortable interruption to your hotkey muscle memory it’s a bit useless. I’d either sell it and/or find someone in my network that needs it

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    22 hours ago

    As someone who really needs a laptop but is broke because of cancer, I am very jealous.

    You can always use it as something like a Pi-Hole if youre fine with leaving it on at all times. Probably overkill for a Pi-Hole, though. Anyway nearly any PC can be turned into some kind of network appliance.

    Hope you find a good use for it!

    • Sanctus@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 hours ago

      DM me, while it won’t be this laptop, I have a few others I got from work before they had a proper recycle program that still work fine. Nothing fancy but I couldn’t let my former boss toss them.

  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    It would be a fast host (and client) for more heavily modded Minecraft.

    You could self-host an LLM, but unfortunately 18GB total system RAM (so less than 14GB usable by the GPU?) is pretty skinny.

    You can do some stuff to an iPhone with one. Like sideloading, I think?

    • Sanctus@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 hours ago

      You think this would run Project Ozone 3 better? I dont think anything will with that modpack as is but my current host has to be reset daily or it crashes.

      • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Some mod packs are just unstable.

        Could be a specific area/item crashing it, and TBH all modded servers need regular maintenance like mob culling and regular server restarts. But it could also be a problem with your host, yeah, and the M3 Pro is going to be way faster than any CPU your host has. Plenty of RAM too.

        I’d recommend running it with GraalVM EE as your JVM.

        I tend to gravitate towards Enigmatica and ATM myself (as their devs/dev process is pretty good), but not sure about Ozone or skyblock mod packs.

  • ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I mostly use Linux but I have a MacBook from a previous job. I mostly use it for media consumption. It’s not the problem it once was but back in the day, Linux and streaming services didn’t always get along because of DRM.

    I do like how using macOS pushes me to get the design details right on my own software. I mean, say what you want about Apple but they do usually put care into the aesthetics and design details. When I feel like a project is done because it’s functional, I’m wrong. That extra 10% effort to use the right fonts or consistent margins or whatever is what makes good software great.

    So, I would say use it as a learning tool. There’s plenty things that are worse on macOS but it’s different. And that’s healthy. Periodically using a different OS with a different goal is good for you. (Don’t bother with Windows 11. Nothing of honor is to be found there. Distro hop and keep Windows in a VM if you need it.)

    I also found it helpful when working from home. Like, I’d spend all day on my Linux machine writing code or whatever and then I’d clock out and just use the MacBook. I could have probably used a PlayStation or done anything but sometimes, you’re busy. Switching operating systems and having zero work stuff on one computer can be good when you’ve had a long day.

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I’m surprised dabbling with the Mac creative suites hasn’t been suggested yet. It’s the main reason a lot of users go for the OS over Windows or Linux.

    • Sanctus@lemmy.worldOP
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      23 hours ago

      Its got them. I’m not a fan boy by any means but they make very nice toolsets. Thats one thing I like about Mac is a lot of the shipped programs are good. Microsoft has been dragging ass on that as years go by.