![]() ![]() Unlike the trackpad, it’s not the “best in any laptop,” but it’s certainly “one of the best” as it attempts to strike the right balance between key travel and typing speed. ![]() The more I use the new Magic Keyboard the more I like it, and I don’t just mean compared to the crappy butterfly keys on my last-gen 13-inch MBP. Only two things are worth calling out IMO: The New Keyboard They were already great.Īdmittedly, the bezels on the display are getting a bit thick for 2020 (have you seen the new Dell XPS lineup?) but it’s still a bright, highly accurate monitor that’s perfect for color critical tasks. The massive trackpad is still the benchmark that other computers are measured against, and while the speakers, battery, and the display have not been changed since last year, that’s not a bad thing. The aluminum unibody design is as solid as ever, even if it hasn’t actually changed in years. That last metric is overkill: you could get away with spending $2,400 for the same performance, but only 512GB of on-board storage.īuild quality is classic Apple, which is to say: fantastic. The model we were loaned for testing would run you $3,000 as specced: 2.3GHz quad-core Core i7, 32GB of RAM, and a 2TB SSD. Below that, it’s hard to justify Mac over PC. As I mention in the performance section below, for creators, it is well worth it to step up to the $1,800 tier if you can afford it. This is where you now get either a 10th-Gen quad-core i5 or i7 with the new Intel Iris Plus Graphics, up to 32GB of extremely fast LPDDR4X RAM, and up to a whopping 4TB of fast storage. All of the true performance updates were saved for the $1,800 model and up. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |