> condensation or humidity from just the weather or even some rain sprinkles.
I find all these comments here very strange indeed.
The Mac Studio is a desktop. Like any other desktop from any other manufacturer it is intended for use indoors in a typical home or office environment.
If you require a device that works outside of "normal" parameters then there are specialist industrial PC manufacturers who will build you something that will deal with humidity, dust, vibration and temperature extremes.
99.999999999999999999% of people on this planet do not require the extra mechanical designs (and associated expense) of an industrial PC.
Hence Apple and every other commodity PC manufacturer on this planet designs for the typical home or office.
Edit to add:
Look at the Mac Studio specs:
- Operating temperature: 10° to 35° C (50° to 95° F)
- Storage temperature: –40° to 47° C (–40° to 116° F)
- Relative humidity: 5% to 90% non-condensing
- Operating altitude: tested up to 5,000 metres (16,400 feet)
I'd say that pretty much covers everyone on the planet, and if your house or office falls outside of those parameters then you probably have bigger personal health problems to worry about (caused by living/working in such extreme conditions for long periods of time) than whether your Mac Studio will boot up. ;-)
Without knowing much about temperature specs, that minimum operating temperature seems quite high. This week, here, it'll be a bit colder than 10° C and I don't live in a particularly cold place.
I find all these comments here very strange indeed.
The Mac Studio is a desktop. Like any other desktop from any other manufacturer it is intended for use indoors in a typical home or office environment.
If you require a device that works outside of "normal" parameters then there are specialist industrial PC manufacturers who will build you something that will deal with humidity, dust, vibration and temperature extremes.
99.999999999999999999% of people on this planet do not require the extra mechanical designs (and associated expense) of an industrial PC.
Hence Apple and every other commodity PC manufacturer on this planet designs for the typical home or office.
Edit to add:
Look at the Mac Studio specs:
I'd say that pretty much covers everyone on the planet, and if your house or office falls outside of those parameters then you probably have bigger personal health problems to worry about (caused by living/working in such extreme conditions for long periods of time) than whether your Mac Studio will boot up. ;-)