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Hands on: MacBook Pro review

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Comments (41)
  1. JackMarse says:

    Inconsistent “touchbar” implementation. The “touchbar” should display on external screen when Macbook Pro is docked for desk work. iMac users would appreciate that too.

  2. Alastair J. Archibald says:

    I was completely Apple 18 months ago (15″ MBP, iPhone 5S, iPad Air). Now I am 100% MS (i7 32GB, 1TB, dGPU Surface Book and Lumia 950XL. No need for a tablet now).

    Apple were the leaders, but I think MS are pulling ahead now. The SB has 2 x USB 3, mini DisplayPort, SD card slot, natively runs Photoshop, Premier Pro, 3DS Max and any other desktop software. When I partner it to a Surface Dock, there’s a lot more ports.

    The phone has a single USB-C, which means it charges quickly (and at least MS give you a charger and a USB-C to USB lead), but if I plug it into the dock, it becomes a Windows computer, showing full Windows 10 on the monitor and working with a keyboard and mouse connected to the dock.

  3. Capt. Arty says:

    The OS 10.12.2 update did not cure the bug that obstructed graphical performance in certain MacBook Pro models. After hours on the phone with Senior Apple Advisors and having returned my first Mac Book Pro to Best Buy for the second MBP the same graphic bug that others were complaining about was present. The second MBP was returned to Apple Engineering and I received a third MBP from Apple. The third MBP had the same continuing graphic problem and Apple sent me the fourth MBP. Well, the fourth MBP continues with the shaky graphic problem and now I have sent Apple a demand for my money back.

  4. Wire Paladin says:

    Replaced aging MBPro with 2016 MBPro sans Touchbar. Decided to put the $300 into 16Gb memory and 512Gb SSD.
    This is a nice machine, lightweight, nice screen, fast drive, acts like a iPad (almost instant on).
    The Multiport adapter has USB-C (for power only, frees up other port) HDMI and USB (that I use to connect a 7-port USB hub.
    No buyers remorse here.

  5. tarta70 says:

    that emoji touch bar…….zzz………sorry Mr. Jobs….:(

  6. Kenneth says:

    It’s time for me to get a new Mac. But I am so much in doubt what to buy. 13″ or 15″. In my work I do UI/UX sometimes heavy PSD work in Photoshop. Usually has about 8 programmes open at a time.
    Is the 13″ good enough? I really like the size of the 13″. But then again, the bigger 15″ fully equipped is a monster machine or?
    I have a iMac to use for additional display at work and home.
    Any advice for a graphic designer on web and print?

  7. Jeff Craft says:

    So i’ve been reviewing the order of events here since launch and now realise that 1. MPB last launch 2015 no significant update for many years 2. 2016 MBP with prev gen cpu launch and price across all laptops goes up significantly. 3. Anyone who wants a Pro machine or built in ports will prefer the spec of the older 2015 model. 4. Apple get to shift all of the old stock MBP and at a higher inflated price. 5. Anyone buying a 2016 model is faced with a heap of upgrades and a bunch of cables and hubs. 6. Whilst the 2016 model is smaller most people perch their laptop on a stand at home/office and use a separate keyboard / and larger screen – the wifi keyboards will now need a cable or hub to work and the touch bar version wont much use as the laptop sits to far back on the desk to continually be reaching across to.7. So the only reason for buying Apple anymore is the OS which is great but its difficult to digest doing this with old tech or over priced tech. 8. or to say look at me I used have 2 grand in my pocket.

  8. Wangchuk Sadutshang says:

    Great article! It has in depth details about the specifications about the new Macbook Pro, and gives insight on both the positives and negatives. This new touch bar should add a whole new look on the Macbook Pro and should attract more customers hopefully. This information is very helpful and provides full knowledge for anyone that is considering to buy a Macbook Pro and needs some information about it.

  9. tommo4130 says:

    How hard are you sucking Apples dongle shaped cock, Techradar? This is a worthless excuse for a laptop update and you fucking know it. And that price? Jesus…

  10. Easily Amused says:

    It’s a re-branded MacBook Air. As Forbes said, it’s a Pro MacBook Air. It isn’t a MacBook Pro. The people who wanted an upgrade to *that* lineage were betrayed.

  11. prometheus says:

    “Massive improvement” in the deletion of USEFUL stuff:
    1. Removal of MagSafe
    2. SD Card support
    3. HDMI port
    4. Soldered RAM and SSD
    5. Unlabeled USB Type C ports

    There’s nothing “Pro” about this upgrade. Apple apparently doesn’t give a shit about its users and will create “change” just for the sake of change. And it’s backwards change at that.

  12. Unknown says:

    Apple can’t sit there and say they’re innovators and limit their laptops to 16gb. That is a joke.

  13. Ryan Karolak says:

    I feel exactly the opposite than the reviewer. The new Macbook Pro laptops are nice and great laptops, but they clearly aren’t targeted at the “Pro” audience.

    There was a time when the Powerbook and Macbook Pro differentiated its self from the iBooks and Macbooks by not only having more power and a nicer build, but put functionality before form. The Pros had expansion card slots, a sizeable variety of different ports, and some limited upgradability, like with the RAM, SSD/HD, and optical drive (or second SATA drive). They also had a decent dedicated GPU (graphics card).

    Instead, these have all been continually traded away for aesthetics and thinness. The strip above the keyboard is neat, but wasn’t really anything people felt was missing. It also removed the function keys, which have been useful for decades.

    The processing power is just marginally better and the convenience and flexibility of the MBP is worse. It makes sense if Apple wants to push minimalism and new features to the Macbook and Macbook Air lines, but the Pro should be more conservative on its major changes and focus on a large array of features and power over aesthetics. I think most professionals and power users would rather have this then having a laptop that’s a bit more slimmer and requires a large connection of dongles and adapters. The Pro should be like the high-end workstation and gaming laptops in the PC world. People who feel it’s excessive or too bulky can get the Macbook or Macbook Air instead.

  14. Mansgame says:

    Fanboy says what?

  15. Mansgame says:

    Such a fanboy “article”. Apple is getting hammered left and right for the dongle hell and underpowered/overpriced laptops they introduced. Are you in Apple’s pocket?

  16. Veritas says:

    I’ve had my late 2011 17 MBP for about 5 years now. At the time it was a amazing laptop, and the fact it still works great today despite hours of daily use shows the quality.

    However there’s no way I can justify upgrading to this new MBP, are they kidding, not a single standard USB port despite the fact that nearly ever single piece of hardware still uses it. In fact not a single other port apart from USB-C. They even got rid of mag safe which was amazing.

    Why would I pay such a large amount for a laptop labelled ‘pro’ and then have to buy adaptors and just to get basic bits of hardware to integrate?

    I can’t believe its not even mentioned as a Con in the summary. So much for impartial reviews.

  17. tenonic says:

    This new Macbook Pro is a joke. 32GB should definitely be an option, instead some ridiculous touch strip inconveniently placed on top. Price is way beyond acceptable. As a software dev I care less about the weight but more about usefulness and practicality. I need my USBs, HDMI and ESC key. As well it would be nice to get the touchscreen.

  18. Richard Crossley says:

    https://www.youtube.com/shared

    Although I have been waiting for several years to buy a new MacBook Pro this video perfectly sums up why this can’t be called a Pro device! I ended up selling my Air and buying the MacBook as that isn’t my main portable work computer so can live in USB C land! I’m still sticking with my self upgraded none retina display 2012 13 MacBoook with 16GB 512SSD (that I can change at anytime) and it even has RJ45! I need cables for thunderbolt or monitor and power…that’s it as rest all built in! For this thing I’d be in same boat as this video!

  19. NewClassTraitor says:

    30 yr Mac user here (Plus, then SE/30, then PB 170,…, currently iMac 5K and MBP mid-2012). After seeing this pathetic Twiggytop I started spec’ing Linux laptops. ElementaryOS (a Ubuntu variety skinned to look like Mac OS) even looks a bit familiar.

  20. Jason Dailey says:

    Additional pros: Comes in two colors!

    Additional cons: Lack of USB ports, lack of Thunderbolt/DisplayPorts, lack of MagSafe port, lack of HDMI port, lack of SD card slot. Significantly higher cost for iterative improvements to power. 13″ models are still dual core and integrated graphics only. Apple logo on the back of the screen no longer glows.

    1. Wire Paladin says:

      Did you also complain when Apple ditched the floppy drive and CD-ROM drive? We buy Apple because they are (1) the most secure ie, peace of mind from hackers (Windows has improved, Android major fail), (2) most reliable (highest customer satisfaction) and (3) highest resale value (we sell old ones on eBay for a premium compared to what old Windows machines fetch).
      You will always pay more for newer tech. We opted out of getting Touchbar MBPros, didn’t see the value, put the $ in more memory, larger SSD.

    2. The Don says:

      I LOVE my Bose Q 35’s.. and they are Bluetooth noise canceling over ear headphones. I use them with my iPhone 6S+ and rMBP mid 2014. Like I said I am more of a pro user in a previous post so my next purchase is going to be a Dell Precision 15 7000 series 7510… the new MBP’s just don’t have the specs I need. Mac changed their business model .. being great died with Mr. Jobs IMO.

    3. Easily Amused says:

      Um, I wouldn’t go THAT far. Although I do want to see a REAL MacBook Pro, a REAL iMac upgrade and a REAL MacPro upgrade. But playing with digital recording and Affinity Photo and Designer and Photoshop, I can really see how that touch bar will be very handy. Maybe not as nice as a full touch screen. I think Surface Pro has the right idea there. The iPad and the MacBook Air may need to merge. But pro Software developer, Apple developers and any content creator or person who needs to run a lot of virtualization really needs, and wants some serious computing, design and recording professional level hardware.

    4. another_user says:

      gotta ask, where do you get these stats that most people are buying bluetooth headphones? I don’t know anyone that buys wireless headphones as they just use the ones that came with there phone, and yes I know my evidence is anecdotal, but so is yours.

      1. Rick says:

        I understand that you think that my thoughts about Bluetooth are anecdotal. But my thoughts come from the fact that many of the people that I know, being military, are buying Bluetooth headphones/earphones because they can use them for multiple functions, including going to the gym, while travelling and for use with their phones. The transition from one to the next makes great sense. For those that have no need for wireless, I can see the cost of wireless tech being inhibiting.
        Rick Chapman

        1. another_user says:

          Your friends happen to buy a lot of bluetooth headphones, and as you stated, being in the military may be the reason… My friends, on the other hand, don’t. The fact is that your thoughts are anecdotal, as are mine. This means that you can’t assert that MOST people are buying bluetooth anyway. You can say that most of your friends do, but that is a statistically insignificant number.

          1. Rick says:

            Most of these people aren’t my friends; I don’t even know them, but they are still spending their money on convenience.
            Rick Chapman

          2. another_user says:

            Sorry, you lost me there. If you don’t know them how do you know what they buy?

          3. Rick says:

            I see them wearing them while doing sports at the military sports plex.
            Rick Chapman

    5. Mansgame says:

      What have you achieved, fanboy? Finished that novel that you keep working on while at Starbucks?

    6. Rann Xeroxx says:

      “It is a far more effective analog to digital tool than anything else
      currently available with the possible exception of the 15-year-old
      technology of Microsoft’s “Dial” which has to be physically placed on
      the screen to use it.”

      I don’t think you fully understand what the dial can do. It will function with any Windows 10 PC without putting it on the screen. But with a Pixel Sense screen, the screen under the dial reacts and displays… whatever you want it to.

      And as MS said, the dial is just the first of many of these type of elements they will be making that performs this interaction. And Pixel Sense is a foundational technology. Frankly I can see the Surface Desk coming in a few years where you set your phone on it and can swipe information, display the screen, etc and control it from the desk. Apple has nothing like this.

    7. Rann Xeroxx says:

      “It keeps your fingers off the screen so you can pay attention to what you’re really doing.”

      You are looking at your screen, not at your keyboard. You would have to take your focus away from the screen and look at the keyboard then look back at the screen. If you had something that required this action over and over again this would be very unproductive.

      If you placed the UI elements at the bottom, its about the same distance as the touch bar but facing your and at focus.

      1. VulpineMac says:

        … And lose screen real estate in the process.

    8. Mansgame says:

      And developers have overwhelmingly said they don’t want anything to do with it.

    9. Veritas says:

      Got the last 17″ MBP they did back in 2011. Over its time I’ve put in an SSD, more RAM and its served me well, 5 years of daily use.

      Next upgrade is going to have to be to a Windows system, because Apple seem to have lost contact with the real world when it comes to building a professional system.

      1. The Don says:

        I have owned Mac’s and love them. Right now I am using a mid 2014 rMBP i5 with SSD hard drive. The last time I owned a windows machine was in um 2002? DOS is like a Rubick’s Cube to me but not in a fun way. UNIX-Like OS’s like macOS/OS X and Linux make more sense to me personally. With all of that being said I am looking for a new portable workstation; and as of right now the Dell Precision 15 7000 (7510) series. I’m not sure whats going on with Apple these days but they are gearing their products less and less towards super users and more and more towards children, college kids, and very old people. I am still using my MacBook pro now with macOS only due to the fact they don’t ciphen literally every piece of data and send it to apple like ms does, but now they do. So my last bastion of hope was maybe the 5k 27″ iMac with i7, 16GB ram, and 2TB Fusion / 512GB SSD drive… unfortunately the more and more I look at a PC like that Dell with more overall power under the hood then the iMac and being extremely customizable the decision is looking easier and easier. God I wish I could stay but it’s not worth it anymore. Switching everything over at the office to make the products work etc.. used to be worthwhile now its.. just well… EXPENSIVE. sigh. i never thought i would say that.

        1. Rocafella888 says:

          My advice: don’t do it. I was the same, seduced by the specs and I switched from Mac to Dell. Now I’ve sold my Dell and I’m weighing up whether to get the MB Pro13 inch or 15 inch. Admittedly, the Dell was good for games though I didn’t have much time for it. If I need I still have an old 2010 iMac with Bootcamp running Windows 7 with all the same games that I played on my Dell. I hear people complaining about lack of ports and lack of RAM, but I tried the bottom of range mb pro 13 w/o touchbar and found no need for either. In fact, those old USB, serial and ethernet ports look like ancient tech now.

      2. Easily Amused says:

        Apple better knock the socks off the developer / pro content creator community by next October, or I think a key constituency of Apple will bail. The competition is getting too good. Not good enough for people who have spent a lot in Mac OS X compatible software and know and love the Apple paradigm to bail just yet though, mostly, AFAICT. My Late 2012 iMac is getting long in the tooth. If I don’t have some super excellent desktop system from Apple to upgrade to by next Fall, I may go with the competition, as much as an act of rebellion as pragmatism.

    10. Richard Crossley says:

      In a two second search everything I’ve read says that isn’t the case although Bluetooth is closing the gap but all you have to do is turn on Bluetooth on your phone or MacBook and you can see it uses more power. On top on this there are points where I transfer 150GB of VMs via thunderbolt. Good luck doing that via Bluetooth!

      1. Rick says:

        Richard, you are correct that your device will use more power when running Bluetooth than without. However, pushing powerful magnets in your earphone/headphones requires lots of juice; just because they are small doesn’t mean they don’t draw a lot of current. The other reason for Apple going this way has to do with peoples comfort and the experience they get using their device. Most people want their devices to work and no cables at all if they can help it. Too many times Apple has done this…forgone another cable to simplify the whole experience; the only things to make this simpler now is batteries lasting so long that sleep mode would be any time your headphones/earphones are not on/in your ears.
        Rick Chapman

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