![]() Apple Silicon is more efficient than the Intel CPU in a 2013 MacBook Pro, so you might expect to get a lot more Lightroom Classic battery life than you could on your 2013, though it’s hard to say how much more. That said, you should not be discouraged. So the energy usage of Lightroom Classic will be significantly higher than the tests used for Apple marketing. It will also do a lot of reading and writing to storage, as it renders and retrieves previews and thumbnails, and as it uses the Camera Raw Cache in the Develop module. In the Develop module, it will engage the GPU, but probably doesn't max it out. It can and will push all the CPU cores - especially the high power performance cores - as far as they will go, especially during preview building and export. Like many Adobe applications, Lightroom Classic is at the other end of system usage. Because of the video coprocessors in the M1 Pro/Max, it’s possible that not only might those tests be light on the CPU, they might be mostly handled on the low power efficiency cores of the CPU, and that is how you get to 17–21 hours. So 17–21 hours applies to web browsing and video playback. ![]()
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