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Comment by A4ET8a8uTh0_v2

10 months ago

I am not a mac person, but I am debating buying one for the unified ram now that the prices seem to be inching down. Is it painful to set up? The general responses I seem to get range from "It is takes zero effort" to "It was a major hassle to set everything up."

LM Studio and Ollama are both very low complexity ways to get local LLMs running on a Mac.

As a Python person I've found uv + MLX to be pretty painless on a Mac too.

Read the article you are commenting on. It is a how to that answers your exact question. It takes 4 commands in the terminal.

> I am not a mac person, but I am debating buying one for the unified ram

Soon some AMD Ryzen AI Max PCs will be available, with unified memory as well. For example the Framework Desktop with up to 128 GB, shared with the iGPU:

- Product: https://frame.work/us/en/desktop?tab=overview

- Video, discussing 70B LLMs at around 3m:50s : https://youtu.be/zI6ZQls54Ms

You can use the method in this tutorial or you can download LM Studio and run it.

The latter is super easy. Just download the model (thru the GUI) and go.

The article should answer your question. Or do you mean setting up a Mac for use as a Linux or windows user

  • << Or do you mean setting up a Mac for use as a Linux or windows user

    This part, yes. I assume the setting a complete environment is a little more involved than the 4 commands sibling is also refers to.

    • It's relatively easy. macOS is easier to set up than Linux, but it will always depend on your specific needs and environment.

      E.g.: I go a little bit overboard for the average macOS user:

      - custom system- and app-specific keyboard mappings (ultra-modifier on caps-lock; custom tabbing-key-modifier) via Karabiner Elements

      - custom trackpad mappings via BetterTouchTool

      - custom Time Machine schedule and backup logic; you can vibe-code your install script once and re-use it in the future; just make it idempotent

      - custom quake-like Terminal via iTerm

      - shell customizations

      - custom Alfred workflows

      - etc.

      If all you need is just a sensible package manager and the terminal to get started, just set up Time Machine with default settings, Homebrew, your shell, and optionally iTerm2, and you're good to go. Other noteworthy power-user tools:

      - Hammerspoon

      - Syncthing / Resilio Sync

      - Arq. Naturally, the usual backup tools also run on macOS: Borg, Kopia, etc.

      - Affinity suite for image processing

      - Keyshape for animations on web, mobile, etc.

    • I mean that's more like old habits no? MacOS is pretty easy to setup. if all your target apps are available on it, you shouldn't have much of a problem.

      As a Windows/MacOS/Linux dweller kinto is a godsend so I can have macos keyboard (but you could have linux or windows by default) on all OSes https://kinto.sh/

Honestly, it is quite a hastle, took me 2 hours BUT. if you just take the whole article text and paste that to gemini-2.5-pro and give your circumstance, i think it will give you specific steps for your case and it should be trivial from that moment on