When WIRED reviewer Brenda Stolyar last reviewed the Apple iMac, it was introduced with this headline: “This M3-powered all-in-one desktop delivers the same beauty and ease of use as its predecessor, just now with more oomph.”
I was initially tempted to use that language again here, changing only one character: from “3” to “4.” But unlike the latest MacBook Pro update, Apple has put a little more thought into upgrading the user experience, at least behind the scenes and in a few places where it counts. Sure, the design is nearly identical to last year’s iMac, but Apple has listened to most of our gripes and made some key improvements that will benefit almost everyone. That said, as has been the case since the arrival of the M1, Apple’s priority remains unconcerned about design but is rather focused on continuing to boost pure, raw power.
Raw Power
That power comes courtesy of the M4 CPU and it doesn’t disappoint. The new iMac with the M4 cranked out the highest CPU-related benchmarks I’ve seen on an all-in-one computer—including Intel and AMD-based machines—and it had (by far) the best GPU scores among machines with integrated graphics. I don’t have apples-to-apples numbers from the M3-based iMac to compare with, but provided benchmarks suggest the new iMac has 1.7 times the CPU performance and 2.1 times the GPU performance versus the M1-based iMac. That’s not bad, but frankly, I would have expected to see better growth over three years.
Chalk that up to the power of the M1 then. As is the case with the MacBook Pro M4, the iMac is simply suffering from attempts to improve on an already good thing. To mitigate that, in addition to touting a raw performance boost on this fourth trip to the well, Apple is leaning hard on artificial intelligence features in Apple Intelligence, powered by its 16-core Neural Engine and faster unified memory (which you can configure with up to 32 GB). The latter is actually part of a pretty big deal: The base amount of RAM on the iMac has doubled from 8 to 16 GB, a game-changing upgrade for entry-level shoppers.
So yes, you’ll still be able to use Apple Intelligence features on older iMacs (all the way back to the M1), but on the M4 they’ll be speedier. Officially, three times faster than on the iMac M1.
Design Duty
The iMac has always been built around offering color options to consumers—what other computer brand is available in seven colors? The iMac continues down that road. This year the same seven color options remain (green, yellow, orange, pink, purple, and blue, plus colorless silver), but Apple now calls them “fresh shades,” implying they are different. While they are purportedly a bit lighter, comparing the pink M4 I was sent for review to photographs of pink M3 iMacs didn’t reveal any changes at all that I could readily discern. Perhaps placing an M3 and M4 side by side would reveal more of a difference, but whatever it is, it’s subtle.