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How to rent a virtual M1 Mac mini for 12-cents an hour


In yet another signal of the extent to which the needs of enterprise users have changed, French company Scaleway has launched a service providing access to M1 Mac mini systems in the cloud.

Apple Silicon Mac as a service

France’s Scaleway has an extensive history offering up ARM Bare Metal as-a-service.

Now it is offering access to an M1 Mac mini in the cloud for as little as $0.12/€0.10 per hour, though the minimum lease is 24-hours. It’s the dawn of Apple Silicon as a service, and narrowly beats AWS to the punch, which has previously announced plans to introduce M1 as a service.

There are others offering Mac-based deployments in the cloud, including long standing providers such as Macstadium, which has offered hosted Mac infrastructure for years, and already provides M1 servers in both Europe and the U.S.

Who is this for?

The company says its solution is designed for developing, building, testing, and signing applications for Apple devices.

That means developers wishing to offload Xcode builds and enterprises seeking temporary access to M1 Macs to test iOS and Mac apps, and for machine learning development.

Of course, in a scenario in which workforces are becoming increasingly remote, there’s likely a slim chance some customers may choose to use these remote Macs to furnish temporary access to teams. 

[ Related: Review: M1 Mac mini shows a bright future for Apple Silicon ]

Yann Lechelle, CEO of Scaleway explains:

“This is the perfect setup to tackle increasingly complex macOS or iOS continuous integration and delivery for distributed development teams.” 

What’s on offer?

You get access to a fully native user experience on your remote 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD Mac minis using VNC or SSH. The use of VNC is great as it means you can run your virtual Mac from Linux, Windows and macOS-based computers using the relevant client.

The service promises lightning-fast CI-CD for iOS and macOS and claims “excellent latency” from Europe. Xcode 12.4 comes pre-installed and the Macs are held in a state-of-the-art datacentre buried in a former bomb shelter beneath Paris.

Enterprises and users access the service using an online portal, where they can set the location and choose the OS (Big Sur being the only available option at present).

Customers get 24-hour Mac-focused support and set-up takes approximately five minutes. Take a look.

In use, you will need to change the keyboard layout to match that of the local keyboard you are using when accessing the Mac.

Once logged in you can launch applications as if you were using your Mac locally, you can also reboot your Mac remotely via Scaleway’s console, though you must ensure FileVault is disabled on the remote Mac.

Why is this happening?

So, why is Scaleway doing this?

In part it reflects the company’s existing expertise around cloud deployment of ARM-based systems, but the highly significant energy/performance provided by these Macs most certainly helps make it possible.

Apple’s Mac mini’s deliver outstanding computing performance while consuming an astonishing 55% less power than before, giving its processors the world’s best CPU performance per watt.

While that’s great for domestic energy bills, running such capable systems at such a low power draw is a bottom-line benefit for server farms and larger enterprises.

Scaleway also offer more traditional cloud services, such as private data center colocation and infrastructure, dedicated servers and elastic public cloud services, including Kubernetes and Terraform support. 

The Mac you always have with you

Of course, while the service is very much aimed at high end enterprise users and developers testing machine learning systems and seeking access to machines to which to offload Xcode builds, it may also provide a tantalizing chance to explore how M1 Macs work, enabling any user (including potential Windows to Mac switchers) to accustom themselves with Apple’s OS.

The service may also become a useful tool for UK residents travelling to Europe who may want to avoid carrying their Macs across borders given the need for additional paperwork following that nation’s crazed divorce from its main trading partner.

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Copyright © 2021 IDG Communications, Inc.





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