(wow look at that reverse intro shot! ) - At this point, it is
super easy to recommend an M1 Mac to basically "mnyone," but now there are more options than ever before, so let's see if the M1 Max
makes sense as your next Mac. This is my 14-inch M1 Max MacBook Pro, which I've had for about five weeks now and it's been my main
computer in that time. I've done a lot of projects
on it, a lot of work on it, and so now I feel like I
can give a full review on it if you're searching for a new computer and you're wondering if
this might be right for you. So just to spoil a few things,
I'm not a computer channel, so I don't normally review computers. However, in this case, these M1 computers are so impactful to a video production, a
streaming, a podcasting workflow that I think it's really
important to talk about them. And the spoiler is:
this computer is awesome. I love it. And if you need one, you won't regret it, if it's within your budget. Don't go into debt or anything. But there's my review– it's great. 👍 As you can see in the timeline down below, there's a lot more time in this video, so let's talk about some of the reasons why it is so great. Just some context real quick, I've been using the base
model M1 Mac Mini for a year, the 8GB cheapest
Apple computer you can buy and it has been great. It has started to hang up a little bit sometimes in my editing process because I'm using a lot
of 4:2:2 10-bit files from the Sony A7S Mark III and when you start laying all that on, and adding color correction, and adding in object
tracking and all that, that's when the computer needs a little time to kind of render. And it's a desktop computer, (even though mine's mounted under the desk.) Still a desktop computer, which means I can't go anywhere with it. It's kind of stuck in here. Having portable power was
really important to me. Prior to this computer, I did have the 16-inch
i9 Intel MacBook Pro and I thought that was a great computer and it worked really well, but the M1 chip just sort of turned everything on its head. The Mac Mini works way better
than the 16-inch Intel did, even though it cost a
fraction of the price. So when it came time to look
into getting a new MacBook, there were a couple things: I knew the 16-inch was
just too big for me, the screen is gorgeous and awesome, but the form factor is just like a little too big for me, personally. It doesn't fit in bags
the way that I want it to. It's not as portable as I want it to be. The 14-inch is basically perfect. If you are coming from one of
the pre touch bar MacBooks, like a 13-inch MacBook Pro, it's basically the exact same size. And instead of getting the
base, base, base model,
(drop the bass) I thought I would upgrade a few things and get one that would
really suit my workflow. So this is not the base model, and it's not the fully maxed out
one, but it is an M1 Max. So the specs of my computer are it's the 14-inch M1 Max
with, no, what is it? (Remember I said I'm
not a computer channel?) It's the 14-inch M1 Max
with 32GB of RAM, a 2TB SSD drive,
and the 24-core GPU. So 2TB of hard drive space was enough to let me
work off this computer without needing to connect
external drives and stuff and then I can move my
projects off when I'm done, so that's why I did that. It'd be nice to have even more space, but Apple is very expensive
when it comes to memory, so I didn't get that. The M1 chips work so differently and they're so efficient
that when we think of RAM, like 8GB on an Intel one is not the same as 8GB
on an M1 chip. It just really isn't and I've
spent a lot of time saying, "Hey, the base model M1
Mac Mini is amazing! You don't have to like
spend a whole bunch of money on upgrades!"
But if you do want to upgrade or your workflow needs it,
it's definitely going to pay off. I decided 32 gigs was plenty for me. And then the reason I got the 24-core GPU over the 32-core GPU is
because...it was an accident. It would've been $200 extra. Honestly, it probably
would've been worth it, but I didn't see it and I got the computer and I didn't even realize that, honestly. I know this like kills
all of my credibility, but I didn't know until like I had already had the computer
and people were asking, "Why didn't you get 32?" And I was like, "Oh, I didn't even realize.... ...oops." I was focused so much on like
RAM and hard drive space. Anyway. If you're already spending
the cost of this computer and you could spend $200
more to get the 32-core GPU, it's probably worth it. But what I can say is that the 24-core has not snored nor bored me.
😬 Anyway, the 24-core is fine. It's not slowed down. This computer is so
crazy fast and powerful. It's worked great for me. I'll show you some of the
work I've done with it and we'll also put it through
a stress test in this video. Let's talk about benchmarks real quick because I don't care about benchmarks, and that's why I said we're
going to do it really quick. Basically I've had
Apple computers since 2006, I've done benchmarks. To me, they're meaningless. They give you a ballpark idea of how something might perform. But if you are somebody who
cares about benchmarks and you want to know how
that factors into things, I did run a GeekBench 5
benchmark on this and the open CL score was
43,412, so 43, four, one, two, and the single core score was 1,764 with the multi-core score at 12,372. So those are numbers.
👨🏻🔬 The reason I don't really
care about benchmarks is because I'm just more interested in how something actually works when it's in my workflow and my world and that kind of stuff. So my use case is that video production and streaming are the
main things that I do. Both of those are very CPU
intensive, GPU intensive things. When I edit, I use Final Cut Pro. Again, my main camera's
the Sony A7S Mark III, which has 4K files that are 4:2:2 10-bit. They're big files, like it takes some
power to work with them. And usually, I'm shooting
with multiple cameras, so I have other cameras coming
in to have different shots. Sometimes I'll have three
cameras going at the same time. I add color correction to every clip, I usually have some object
tracking, add some stabilization, so there's a lot of extra things added to the footage within one
of my Final Cut Pro projects and all those things take
a lot of processing power. The other main apps that I use are Photoshop, Adobe Audition, Logic, I've been getting into
Blender a bit more lately, and then I use Ecamm Live for streaming and recording some stuff,
and then also Zoom a lot. The combination of Zoom and Ecamm is what really ground my
Intel MacBook to a halt and made me end up needing the M1 Mac Mini because I was teaching online at the time and it just was not
working with that computer. A big thing that has popped up, especially with the 14-inch M1 Macs, are battery life and heat. It's crazy the number of messages I've gotten from people asking if it's overheating and the battery's really bad. No. None of those things. I think that is just sensationalism that a lot of people have been putting out to probably get clicks on videos
and things, but it is fine. The battery life on this is way better than the 16-inch Intel MacBook was, but I don't think it's as good as the original M1 MacBooks because even though I haven't used one of those, what I've heard is that the
battery life is like phenomenal, you basically forget you
have to charge those things. This has not run out of battery for me, it's not drained really fast. I think if I'm doing full on
wireless Final Cut editing, not plugged into power, I can get at least four hours of like solid editing in on this. As far as heat, there's not much. It's been sitting here pretty idle and its idle temperature
is 82.9 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 28.3 degrees Celsius. Basically, the middle of the keyboard here is right where the M1 chip is and so when the computer does get warm, that's where it starts to get the warmest.
🔥 It never gets to the point where it's like too hot to use or anything. You're just sometimes like, hey, the computer's kind of warm, but it usually cools down as soon as it's done doing whatever
process is making it warm. As I'm sure you've heard, the MagSafe connector is
back and it works great. I love it. Here's my 2013 MacBook, or "MagBook." They are different MagSafes, so you can't swap old ones
to new ones or anything. This one, the old computer,
if I pull it straight out, it comes out pretty easily, and if you pull it out on an angle, it disconnects basically like right away. The new one, if you pull it
straight, it's a lot stronger, but as soon as you hit an
angle, it comes right out. The M1 Max 14-inch comes
with a 96 watt adapter and you might be asking, "Watt for?" And that's just because it
takes so much more power, but also, this lets you fast charge, was it like 50% of the battery
in 30 minutes or something? So a MagSafe charge is super fast. The MagSafe cable itself
is a braided cable, so it's not going to get
like twisted or messed up, which is wonderful because the old cables would break a lot, like mine, which I had to put like shrink wrap, electrical tape stuff on there
because it started fraying and I was "afrayed" of
electrical problems happening. Not a problem here because
the cable itself is better and if it does happen,
you just get a new cable, you don't need a new adapter. The only complaint I have, you want to hear my First
World problem complaint, is that the adapter doesn't
have these little pegs. The old MagSafes had these
little clips that popped up, they would go down and then they pop up and you could just wrap
the cable around it. Completely brilliant. This doesn't have that. I guess the logic being
that you would just disconnect the cable and
put the cable in your bag and the adapter separately,
but that is super convenient, so I'll probably 3D print something to go around this and fix that. And the super cool part is that is only one of the ways that you
can charge the computer. You can still use USB-C charging or Thunderbolt charging if you want to or you've got adapters from
touch bar MacBook Pros. Also, if you have an external display, you can use a Thunderbolt Three cable to not only send the image to the display, but also charge the computer. I know that's not new with these ones, but it's new to my
workflow and it's amazing. The important thing is to get an actual Thunderbolt 3 cable to let the power flow through. And the thing I thought was
really interesting with this was that since it is the M1 Max and it comes with the big MagSafe adapter, my computer display can
only output 60 watts and I didn't know if that was going to be enough to fully charge
it like I needed to, but it's been perfect. The one cable runs the display, let's this be a second display, and then totally charges and
keeps the computer charged. So between MagSafe, USB-C,
and being able to be charged by an external display, and good battery life on top of that, battery life has just
not been an issue at all on this computer for me. It's been awesome so far, so that's my thought on battery life. Before we dive too much
into performance stuff, let's talk about the design. The design is awesome and that's all you need to know about it. I'm sure at this point, if
you're watching this video, you're familiar with the design. It feels really good and that's important since it is a notebook. You're probably gonna be taking
it, carrying it, using it, and it just feel sturdy
and chunky in a nice way. The ports, of course, are awesome.
(which is imPORTant) On one side, you've got full
size HDMI Thunderbolt 3 and SD card slot, which is "SDlightful" because I use SD cards all the time and even the V90 cards that I have to use in this camera work perfectly in here. And then on the other side is
where you've got your MagSafe, two more Thunderbolt ports,
and your headphone output, which also is powerful enough to power like high impedance headphones. The built-in speakers,
as I mentioned in my first impressions video, are awesome. They're not just good for laptop speakers, like they are just good speakers and plenty of times I just use those when I'm doing my rough editing. I was always a pretty big fan of the old school keyboard and this feels, if anything, a little bit better. The keys don't have as much
travel as these old ones do, but it's really, really close. The keys are actually
either a little bigger or a little closer together than they are in this older keyboard, so that actually makes
it easier to type on. I like that a lot. Of course, no touch bar. That's not surprise to
anyone at this point. Touch ID on here is awesome. It is super fast. I miss having Touch ID
for my Intel MacBook and this one is like the second you even barely touch it,
boom, it goes through. It ID's you through touch. There's also this function key over here, which has a little globe on it. I think you can customize
it and program it, but straight out of the box,
it opens up the emoji menu, which I basically use as
punctuation at this point 🤷🏻♂️ despite my English degree
crying in the corner over that.
😢 Something to bring up, too,
only time will tell on this. It might be sort of hard
to show from this angle, so I'll have to do a closeup, but there are like marks on the screen that have worn through the
protective coating over the year and it's from the keys themselves. I guess when the computer is closed, especially if you press down in the middle and it's in a bag or something, over many years of that happening, you start to get little marks in the protective coating of the display. Even though it's hard to tell, this keyboard is slightly
like more recessed, which means when you close the computer, there should be more space and then this computer's also a bit more firm. There's still like a little bit of play. If you push on, you can
flex it a little bit. I think that over time, you shouldn't have that same issue with the keys leaving
marks on the computer. Something else about the physical design of the new MacBooks, which
I notice and I've seen little bits of conversation about online, has to do with sounds that
they make when you move them, like cracking and creaking sounds. So when I got this computer
and I was first using it, I noticed right away when I moved it, it would sort of like make kind of like a creaky, cracky like sound. I don't know how to describe it. It wasn't like an electronic sound. It was like a physical sound from the casing of the computer. After about a week, it
just stopped doing that and my thought is that
it was a brand newly manufactured computer
and everything just kind of needed to get used and settled into place. I don't think it was a bad thing that would've caused any problems, but when you spend this
much money on a computer, you want it to be perfect. Apple is a company that always talks about the perfection of their
manufacturing and design process, so you should hold them
to those standards. Of course, the display. 'Display is better than
'datplay over there. This is basically the best
display I've ever used. It's super bright if I'm pulling
it up to full brightness, it's super crisp, super color accurate. This is a side-by-side comparison between the Liquid XDR display on the 14-inch MacBook Pro on the right
and the Retina display on the MacBook Pro on the left. They're both at minimal brightness, and now they're both at half brightness, and now they're both at full brightness. So you can kind of see a little bit of a difference in brightness, but also in color reproduction, the levels of the blacks and the whites and all those things, and it all comes together to help the M1 Max be "Maxnificent." I'm notch going to spend
a whole bunch of time talking about the notch because it's notch something
that's gonna bother you when you're using this computer. Basically, a lot of us
at this point have phones that have notches in them and if you don't notice the notch on your phone when you're using it, you're probably not going to notice a notch on a much larger display. So physically, these are
almost the same size, but the display, you're getting 14-inch
even without the notch, the part below the notch is still bigger than you were getting here and then the notch, just to be clear, does not cut into your display. The display has been
extended up into this area, which is normally just an empty bezel, and then the camera just hangs out there because it has to for practicality sake, and then the menu bar gets pushed up, so you have more screen space. It's not cutting into your screen space, it's actually pulling the menu bar out of your screen space. I figure if the notch is one of the main things that people are complaining about with this computer, then Apple's doing a topnotch job. Fan noise, let's talk about that because a lot of people are wondering if I'm a fan of the fan noise?
And there really isn't any. I have only found two times
over the past five weeks that this computer has had its fans turned on to a point
where I could hear them. They might be running right now, but I can't hear it or feel it. The M1 Mac Mini that I've had for a year has never made a sound. It's always been entirely silent even though the fans are on. Three days after I got the computer, I was importing six layers of
4K footage to Final Cut Pro, so I threw all the footage in there and then I added my preset
to all those layers, and when you first put
footage into Final Cut Pro, it needs to kind of like
process it and render it. I don't use proxy media or anything. It's the original files. The fans came on while it was doing that, like while it was processing that stuff, and then they turned off
as soon as it was done. They weren't loud. They weren't anywhere near as loud as my old Intel MacBook Pro was, but you could hear them. And as soon as it was done
doing what it needed to do, the fans turned off and then the computer, of course, cooled down
and everything, too. But it hasn't done it other times. It was only in like those
first two projects I did on it, but it hasn't done it since, so I don't know if it was still like indexing because it was new or what. It just hasn't done it since. My workflow hasn't changed, but I haven't heard the fans since then. Weirdly enough, the only
thing I've had issues with in terms of footage is from
the original DJI Mavic Pro. So this drone came out in 2016. It must be something with the codec Because that's the only footage that has like made this computer go,
"What the heck are you doing to me?!" And it sort of like struggles with it, which is really weird because this is nowhere near as
intense as like this camera and it has no problem. But that's the only thing
that's giving me problems. Otherwise, 4K footage, 120 footage, I've even done some 5K
footage from the GoPro, 1080, any other camera,
anything I've thrown at it has been totally fine. Now we can dive into some performance. So, exporting times for Final Cut Pro. I've done a couple
projects on this computer that I kept track of. It did a 22-minute 4K project, it exported that whole thing
in 9 minutes and 33 seconds, it did the 21-minute DD
pocket wireless video that I made in 9
minutes and 1 second, and it did my 29-minute Canon
L1 old school camcorder video, which was a pretty insane timeline, that 29-minute video was exported in 12 minutes and 46 seconds. Now what I'm actually doing
right now as I'm speaking is I have put that exact same project onto my M1 Mac Mini, my base model, and it's exporting and I'm timing it and we will see how long that took. So that giant project
on the 14-inch M1 Max took 12 minutes and 46 seconds,
and on the M1 Mac Mini, it took 13 minutes and 26 seconds. So basically, less than a
minute difference in exporting, but this computer costs $3,000
more than that computer did. But there IS a difference in usability. When I got my first Mac Mini and my video workflow was still primarily 1080p, I was blown away 'cause it
never hung up on anything and then as I started moving into more 4K, and more layers, and more advanced stuff, it started to kind of like hang a little bit in Final Cut Pro. Still, not bad at all and better
than my old Intel MacBook, but it was a thing that happened. This computer, with all that
crazy hi-res footage and stuff, never stops, never hangs at all. In fact, let's put it through
a stress test right now because this computer seems too relaxed and we need to stress it out. So just remember that in addition to everything else that
we're going do right now, I'm also running a screen recording, which is more processing
power for the computer. Let's just get a baseline reading. So when I'm starting this and the computer's just been sitting
here charging for a bit, the keyboard area is
88.8 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 31.6 degrees Celsius. We'll see how that heats up as we go on. The battery is not fully
charged, but it is at 79%. I'm going to unplug it, we're going to do this all on battery power, we're not going to be
using the power adapter, and I'll keep the display brightness right where I would normally have it, which is just about halfway, so I'm not trying to do
anything that's going to like give it an edge. We're just seeing what
the actual performance is. I'm going to open up Final Cut Pro first, that's my most used piece of software, and I'll open up that same project that I've been exporting and working on, which is my Canon L1 video because it's the most complex
timeline I have at the moment. And there's a lot in here. So I showed you clips from
this timeline earlier, but you can see there's
multiple layers of footage, there's graphics, there's object tracking, there's audio happening. When you click on one of these clips, each one of them also
has some color correction applied to it and some stabilization. Pretty much all of this second layer, all of these B-roll clips pretty much have stabilization on them. As you can see, there's just
no lag happening, though, as I'm going through this. Even though the little dots
are at the top of the timeline, which tells me that it's
still processing the footage, there's just no lag and
this is how it's been editing the entire time. I can just continue to
just throw footage on here. We'll put more raw footage in here. Let's go grab from a different video. Here's some anamorphic footage, a really like anamorphic clip that is 15 minutes long and we'll put that there and then I'll play around with it. I'll de-squeeze it a little bit. (desqueeze sound) We'll add some color grading to it, or not color grading, just some
basic corrections, I guess. So we've got this 15-minute clip, which has now been adjusted
and is being processed, but again, there's no delay. Basically, as soon as I press
the space bar to play it back, it plays back and it's super smooth. Final Cut is working great, so we're going to let Final Cut
hang out over here for a bit and then we're going to open up Photoshop. Still no fans or anything. I'll open up my thumbnail document, which has a whole bunch of layers. So here's Photoshop. Let's open up Adobe Audition because that's where I do a lot of audio editing, especially for podcasts and stuff. Let's open up Ecamm Live. I use Ecamm for streaming, I also use it whenever I have a Zoom call. That's kind of my virtual
camera that I use. I'm just using the built-in webcam. Now, I have connected my ATEM
Mini Extreme to the MacBook because that's normally
how I would use Ecamm Live and that's actually bringing in a feed of this camera right here. If you notice, it's a little stuttery. It's just because I don't have the right frame rate for the ATEM. That's happening there
and that's still recording and that will be going just in the background the whole time. What else could we open up? Let's open up Zoom. So I've got a Zoom meeting
going, which is myself in it. Just me. What's up? Feel a little bit of warmth
happening on the computer, but there's no fan noise. The temperature has gone up. Now it's 99.5 degrees
Fahrenheit, 37.5 degrees Celsius, so I definitely do feel
some heat coming here, but it's not making any
fan noise whatsoever. It's dead silent. What else can we open? Let's do Chrome. (laughs in Chrome tabs) So now let's go to YouTube. Let's go to MacRumors. Let's go to my website.
(www.himynameistom.com) Let's open up every page on my website. And battery, it should
say battery is at...oh. No, it's not plugged in. It says that it's connected
to a power adapter, but the only thing that's
plugged in is the ATEM Mini. That's weird. I don't know if the ATEM is charging it. I don't know. I'm going to unplug the ATEM, but I want this to not be running on any kind of power
while we're doing this. Let's add in Blender. Let's open up Blender. I've been working through
the donut tutorial. There's no lag in me like using Blender and doing stuff here, but when
you're dealing with Blender, it's the rendering, the
"Blender Render," that is really where the processing power comes in. So if I click on like my object view and everything, I can see that. I can click on stuff and
change it around no problem. And the M1 Mac Mini worked
perfectly on this, too. So the thing with Blender is every time you are in render mode and you move, it has to re-render things. So it goes real pixelated
and then it becomes clear. You can kind of see up here in the corner, it says path tracing sample. Once it gets to 32, that's the highest resolution
preview we're gonna have. Let's render this image. Oh, the fans are on. (fans whirring) Blender rendering. This is the loudest I've ever heard them. And the temperature is...45.9
Celsius, 114 Fahrenheit, but even while the fans
are on, I can still edit. Final Cut is still working great. So that was Blender that
pushed it over the edge, but not just Blender, Blender on top of
everything else I was doing. When we're done with this, let's open up just Blender
and see if it does it. Oh, you can hear the fans shutting down. They're getting quieter and
quieter and they're turning off, so when the fans do come on, that's only the third
time I've ever heard them and that was by far the
loudest I've ever heard them, they only turn on as long
as they need to be on and then they turn off right away. This is now a 44-minute video with all kinds of cuts and
clips and things in it, so I'm exporting that, Final Cut is exporting in the background, Photoshop is Photoshopping. There's no lag at all in
Photoshop, which is great. Do I have like a raw
image I could put in here? It opens up, I can make
adjustments to my raw image no problem and then I could still transform that full resolution
raw image with no issues. So Photoshop's working great over here. And the computer's back to being quiet now and the temperature is 40 degrees Celsius, 105 Fahrenheit at the hottest point. I guess I've got to open up Logic. (an attempt was made at "The Final Countdown") Okay. Logic is working. It's still dead silent doing all that and it's exporting the Final Cut thing. Oh, Motion. Let's open up Motion. Put some Motion in the ocean over here. So we've got Ecamm, Final
Cut, Motion, Photoshop, Audition, Notes, Chrome,
Messages, QuickTime, doing a screen recording, Zoom, Logic, Discord, GarageBand,
iMovie, and Keynote, and on top of that,
Final Cut is exporting, Ecamm is streaming, Zoom is zooming, and even in my Final Cut export, while it's exporting on
top of all this stuff, I can play it back with
no...with no lag or anything. So what I'm interested in
is with Blender, if the fan, with all this other stuff happening, if the fans are gonna turn on or if it's not just until Blender starts to render that the fans turn on. So if I'm just in here doing stuff, switching through the modes and whatnot, looking at my awesome donut over here. So Blender is actually not
making the fans kick on just by being on. It's going to be when I render this. It's already halfway done. The fans haven't kicked on yet. Oh no, here they come. They're quiet. Oops. So it'll be interesting when
it's done with the render if the fans turn off even
with Blender still open. That took like, I don't
know, 46 seconds on there. And now I'm going to render the same thing out on the Mac Mini, so
that's happening over here. We'll do one last test with that and we'll close out all the other stuff and see how the fans come on when Blender's the only thing running Beause you're probably
not going to be streaming, and Zooming, and Final Cut exporting, and photoshopping, and
GarageBand and all that stuff with Blender. At the exact same time.
(I probably will though because reasons.) Oh no, it's one second. It's 47 seconds to render that
same thing on the Mac Mini. The Mac Mini's super good. (laughs in overspent money) That's what this is showing you. Performance-wise, there
were no issues with any of those applications while they were all running simultaneously. They all worked great. The only thing was the fans came on when Blender was rendering. Now we only have Blender open
and we'll do a render again. Maybe it'll go faster too because
nothing else is happening. That's actually kind of significant. So without anything else running, this render took 31 seconds
instead of 46 seconds, and without anything
running on the Mac Mini, it was 47 seconds. Now we're seeing a bit
of a bigger difference. And the fans didn't turn on at all when it was rendering that time. So the fans only turned on
when Blender was rendering and everything else was happening. That's crazy performance, right? It's crazy, it's good. It's very good. So now that we're done, all of those tests took
exactly 30 minutes. The MacBook right now is
102 degrees Fahrenheit, 39 degrees Celsius, and
the battery is at 63%, down from 79%, so we lost
16% of battery in 30 minutes by literally opening
like every application I could on the computer
and stressing it out a lot. You're never going to do
all that stuff at once because that would be crazy. So the goal here is to
help you draw conclusions for what might work for your workflow by seeing this just sort
of used in my workflow. And maybe we do similar
things, maybe we don't, but you can kind of judge for yourself as far as that goes. The M1 Mac Mini, cheapest
Apple computer you can get, still amazing and super, super usable. This one is absolutely a
joy to use, and for me, the biggest thing is, at this point, no matter what I throw at it, even if it gets a little warm, even if the fans do turn
on from time to time, it never hangs for a second and I love it when technology
can get out of the way and let you do what you need to do. That's like my favorite thing. This computer does that
exceptionally well. And speaking of things that
do things exceptionally well,
(Amazing transition, Tom) Thank you to everybody who helps support my channel through
YouTube Channel Memberships and Patreon. And if you want see more
about that awesome M1 Mac Mini, check out my long-term M1
Mac Mini review right here. (outrobeat_final_final_V2_fghfjgh.mp3)