Sleek & fast, good quality. quick booth time. Superb operating system
Manufacturer: Apple
Sleek & fast, good quality. quick booth time. Superb operating system
Things are great about it...love it.
I bought it for my brother he is really impressed with price for product, being busy on Boxing day sale the sales person was really helpful and suggested me good upgrade for a nominal price gave some discount on top of regular one. It was a good experience.
Grea service from Daniel at PBm Tech Penrose and great MacBook Pro 13" product. Its as so easy fro migrate from the old MacBook Pro using the Apple Time Capsule.
Amazing value for money, huge performance upgrade compared to older models, at a more affordable price surprisingly! Would highly recommend for anyone doing light work to music and film production.
While it's a shame that picture and sound quality haven't been upgraded, the iPhone 13 was great in these regards and the iPhone 14 is, too Excellent display Admirable headphone performance Solid build quality No upgrades to picture or sound Familiar design Notch is still present
The true realization of Apple's ultra-thin, ultra-powerful professional-grade notebook has finally arrived, elevated to greatness by the maturation of USB-C, the fixing of a flawed keyboard, and the polish of an increasingly versatile macOS platform.
MacBook Pro; Mac OS X; Review; macOS; 2018 MacBook Pro
Apple recently launched a new advertising campaign called Behind The Mac , that focuses on professional Mac users such as photographers, musicians and coders (Apple's current flavour of the month).
Slimline; lightweight design; All-day battery life; Quad-core Coffee Lake Intel Core processor; Attractive Retina display with True Tone technology
Expensive; No discrete GPU; No user upgrades
Still, these changes are all good stuff. Sure, it’d be great to see Face ID on the MacBook Pro, but that won’t happen until a major overhaul. In the meantime, we get plenty of extra power, an improved display, a quieter keyboard, and a battery that gets the machine through an entire day of normal use – assuming ‘normal’ to you isn’t running games and hugely demanding software non-stop. What you won’t enjoy is the impact on your wallet. The base level price of £1749 isn’t too bad, but that only gets you an i5, 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage – and you must be mindful the MacBook Pro is a sealed unit. What you choose at the point of purchase are the specs for the Mac’s entire life – bar the potential to use external GPUs. The set-up Apple loaned Stuff would set you back an eye-watering £3599. The SSD accounts for much of that, the 2TB option adding a whopping £1400. But even 512GB costs an extra 200 quid (1TB is £600), and bumping up the RAM to 16GB costs another £180, for some nudging the MacBook Pro from lust territory to ‘What are the alternatives?’ Of course, if you swear by macOS, there aren’t any, bar something old (MacBook Air) or comparatively underpowered (MacBook). So if you do want a shiny MacBook Pro, it’s just the price you have to pay. Fortunately, for the outlay you do get a pretty great pro-grade notebook.
More powerful innards; Keyboard is quieter; True Tone display is great; Really nippy SSD;
Expensive; Touch Bar lacks support; Non-Touch Bar model not (yet?) updated;
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