Sorry they are very different!
- Mid 2009 MacBook Pro - Requires: 204-pin PC3-8500 (1066 MHz) DDR3 SO-DIMM
- Late 2015 iMac 5K - Requires: 204-pin PC3L-14900 (1867 MHz) DDR3 SO-DIMM
You do have the right idea of the easiest upgrade! Bumping up the RAM to 16 GB will improve working on large projects or having lots of windows open at once.
As you didn’t give us your systems config as well as what type of projects you are doing its hard to guide you on the best direction to improve your system in the future.
I'll assume you got a Fusion Drive setup which is a step up from a HDD. You could jump to a dedicated SSD as the next level of performance. It’s just a matter of which direction makes the best sense.
In your case you have two drive interfaces a 3.5" SATA bay and a PCIe/NVMe custom blade SSD port on the logic board. Presently, you are using both ports for a Fusion Drive setup. The next step would be to break the Fusion Drive and either swap out your HDD for a SSD iMac Intel 27インチ Retina 5Kディスプレイ ハードディスクドライブの交換, or if you want the best performance I would swap out the small blade SSD your system has now for a much larger blade SSD iMac Intel 27インチ Retina 5K Display Blade SSDの交換. I’ll worn you this is not easy and its more expensive but it will give you the best performance gain and you still have your HDD for your deep storage.
An alternate solution would be to get a Thunderbolt2 external SSD RAID drive here we aren’t opening the system and getting the same performance as the blade SSD.
As you can see your CPU is currently a 3.3 GHz i5-6600 the best this system will support is a 4.0 GHz i7-6700K. Again this is a big job while it will give you more performance given the amount of work and risk I would hold off on doing this last iMac Intel 27インチ Retina 5Kディスプレイ CPUの交換
1件のコメント
Here's your systems specs: iMac 27" 3.3 GHz i5 (5K, Late 2015)
Dan さんによる