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Apple MacBook Pro 2011 review


The company's laptop range has been particularly successful, and to capitalise on that success Apple has now overhauled its entire range of MacBook Pro laptops.

The MacBook Pro doesn't have the elegant slim-line design of the MacBook Air but, as the name implies, these models are aimed at professional users who require power and performance above all else.

Apple has therefore updated these latest models with more powerful processors and graphics, and introduced a brand new Intel I/O technology called Thunderbolt.

The new models look virtually identical to their predecessors, and there are no major changes to the existing 'unibody' aluminium chassis design. As before, the MacBook Pro is available in three different sizes, with 13in, 15in or 17in screens.

The entry-level 13in model that used to cost £1,020 with a 2.3GHz Core 2 Duo processor now gains a Core i5 processor running at the same speed and a minor price cut that brings it down to £999.

For another £300 you can bump the processor up to a Core i7 running at 2.7GHz, but we reckon the £999 model will hit the sweet spot for many existing MacBook owners who are thinking about upgrading.

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There's a bit of a price jump when stepping up to the 15in models. The two earlier Core i5 models are now replaced with Core i7 processors, starting at £1,549 for a 2GHz model. However, we looked at the 2.2GHz model, which comes in at £1,849 with 4GB of 1,333MHz memory and a 750GB hard disk.

This model includes the integrated Intel HD 3000 graphics plus a separate AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 1GB of its own memory. That gives you the option of switching between the two graphics processors depending on whether you need greater battery life or greater performance.

Finally, there's the top-of-the-range 17in model, which was previously equipped with a 2.53GHz Core i5 processor, but which now steps up to the i7 running at 2.2GHz and goes up about £150 in the process.

Other features that are common across the range include Bluetooth and 802.11n wireless networking, Gigabit Ethernet, built-in stereo speakers and microphone, and digital audio input and output. Apple has also upgraded the built-in iSight webcam from VGA resolution to 1,280 x 720.

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Expansion options include a single FireWire 800 port, along with a pair of USB 2.0 ports. Apple has completely turned its nose up at USB 3.0, and is now the first manufacturer to ship systems that use the new Thunderbolt I/O technology.

Thunderbolt was originally developed in Intel's labs using the codename Light Peak but, according to Intel's web site, the firm collaborated with Apple before bringing it to commercial release in the new MacBook Pro.

Apple claims that Thunderbolt provides data transfer speeds of up to 10Gbit/s, which makes it faster than USB 3.0, and much faster than either USB 2.0 or FireWire 800.


Visos spec:

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Na manau tikrai gerai padirbėjo. :lol: Užsiupgrade'inus tikrai geras aparačiokas. ;)
Labiausia, man patinka baterijos laikymo laikas... Iki 7valandų. Mmmm... ;)
Dar plius galima dar su 512GB SDD nusipirkti. ;)

Ehhh, pavydžiu, kas tokį gaus... :)

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Nori pasakyt 7 valandos laiko ? Nejuokink žmonių, su tokiu procu ir vga žaidžiant ar dar ką darant 2 - 3 maks., 7 valandas nebent budėjimo režime, nieko nedarant išvis.

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Sorry, bet aš nejuokinu. :huh:

Taip parašyta, beto, Apple tikrai savo baterijom nežmoniškom pasižymi.

Na tikrai bus dar žmonių nuomonių, ir tikros tikrovės, kai jau bus daug išbandę ir patyrę su juo... :)

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Sorry, bet aš nejuokinu. :)

Taip parašyta, beto, Apple tikrai savo baterijom nežmoniškom pasižymi.

Na tikrai bus dar žmonių nuomonių, ir tikros tikrovės, kai jau bus daug išbandę ir patyrę su juo... :)

Cia tikrai visi apple produkcijos turintys sutiks. Man bent jau, iphone 3g naudojant kaip telefona(be wifi), baterija laiko 5-6 dienas. Aktyviai naudojant wifi ir t.t. pora dienu trumpiau.

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Sorry, bet aš nejuokinu. :)

Taip parašyta, beto, Apple tikrai savo baterijom nežmoniškom pasižymi.

Na tikrai bus dar žmonių nuomonių, ir tikros tikrovės, kai jau bus daug išbandę ir patyrę su juo... :)

Na jau, nuo kada Apple geras batareikas turi? KAip ant laptopu nezinau, bet iPhone'ai tai tikrai greitai issikrauna Redagavo isstatu1

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Na jau, nuo kada Apple geras batareikas turi? KAip ant laptopu nezinau, bet iPhone'ai tai tikrai greitai issikrauna

Apie laptopų batareikas kalbu, kadangi tema juk Mac'o. :) Tikrai laiko gerai, dėdė turi lietuvoj mano, ateini su laptopu vakare kokią 7h prie TV, ir sedi iki 00:00 ar 01:00... O tam laptopui berods daugiau nei metai. :) Laiko laiko jos. :) Nu pamatysim, kaip su šituo bus, visgi laikas išbandys juos. :)

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aha , pats su macbook'u pro sedziu , tai baterija labai patenkintas , aisku nepelskinsi ten 7 h be sustojimo nepakraudamas , bet istverme tai nerealiai prisiminus galinguma

Redagavo Magnumas

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Battery Life

 

As with previous iterations, the 2011 MacBook Pro range features integrated, non-user-replaceable batteries. However, it also marks a change in how Apple measures runtime estimates. Traditionally, manufacturers have promised the longest figures possible, leading to usage expectations far beyond what notebooks can actually achieve in everyday use.

 

Apple’s switch, then, is to a more realistic model of testing, or what the company is calling “wireless web testing.” That involves setting the display brightness to 50-percent and then browsing “25 popular websites” over a WiFi connection until the MacBook Pro expires.

 

The result is a shorter estimate, on paper, compared to previous generations of notebook, but one, which is more in keeping with what owners can legitimately expect. Apple suggests 7 hours is reasonable, and we’ve found that to be pretty accurate. The previous-generation model was rated at up to 9 hours using Apple’s old-style testing, but we found 7 hours was a likely maximum in regular use.

 

With an HD video on looped-playback in the background, we exported seven 1m 31 second 1080p HD videos, import and edited numerous images in iPhoto, then browsed and wrote emails over WiFi; brightness was at 3 bars for around 45 minutes and then at 50-percent for the remainder of the time, until the notebook shut down after 3 hours and 15 minutes. It’s still relatively early days for the new MacBook Pro, and so we’ll revisit battery life after some more real-world testing over the next week or so.

cia info is jau pilno testo o ne teoriskai. yra pilna review ,ten visko labai daug prirasyta ir pan. aisku idomiausia tas ju naujas lizdas Thunderbolt. PC turi USB3.0 Mac tures savo . saunu kad nuo siol nebus suderinami irenginiai tarp pc ir mac. biski fail. bet ka daryt.

Thunderbolt

 

Arguably the most interesting feature of the new MacBook Pro is, frustratingly, the one we can’t currently test. Thunderbolt is Intel’s production name for Light Peak, the high-speed connectivity standard that hopes to replace USB, FireWire and various video ports along with way. Promising 10Gbps of bi-directional communication, along with 10W of bus-power and the ability to daisy-chain in strings of up to six peripherals, Thunderbolt makes its debut on the 2011 MacBook Pro line.

 

For the moment, though, the Thunderbolt port will generally only see Mini DisplayPort connectors plugged in: there simply aren’t any Thunderbolt peripherals out there yet. It’s backward compatible with your existing Mini DisplayPort hardware, so a current Apple LED Cinema Display will hook up without adapters required, but we’ll have to wait until later in 2011 for the first Thunderbolt hardware. That’s going to include external storage – LaCie, Promise and others are talking about RAID arrays, and Apple has shown us a dual-SSD high performance external drive targeted at video professionals – as well as A/V interfaces.

 

From what we’ve seen in private demonstrations with Apple, however, Thunderbolt has no shortage of promise. A 5GB file moved from the MacBook Pro to a Promise Pegasus RAID in a matter of seconds; meanwhile, the notebook could pull four, uncompressed HD video streams from the RAID, then push that back out down the same Thunderbolt pipe to an LED Cinema Display. In effect, there’s 20 Gbps of bandwidth to play with – 10 Gbps for DisplayPort video and 10 Gbps for PCI Express data – with this particular demo pulling at around 7 Gbps from the RAID and then pushing at around 6 Gbps to the monitor. Apple tells us that, theoretically, a single Thunderbolt connection could drive two 27-inch LED Cinema Displays simultaneously. Since there’s no daisy-chain Thunderbolt connection on the current Cinema Display line, however, they’d either need to be updated or users have a desktop hub.

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Redagavo scalman

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Na jau, nuo kada Apple geras batareikas turi? KAip ant laptopu nezinau, bet iPhone'ai tai tikrai greitai issikrauna

Pats turiu 2 macus(macbook, macbook pro) narsant internete baterija laiko 4 - 5 valandas, ziurint filmus apie 3 h, zaidziant 2 h.

 

Macai 2009 metu kai buvo 5h deklaruojama baterijos galia.

Redagavo mantosis

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Platesnis review'as. :)

 

MacBook Pro review (early 2011)

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Apple might say we're in the post-PC era, but hey -- turns out they still make Macs in Cupertino, and the new MacBook Pro is actually one of the more aggressive refreshes in the machine's history. Not only has it been less than a year since the last MacBook Pro spec bump, but our 15-inch review unit is actually the first Sandy Bridge system we've received from any manufacturer. And it's not just the CPU that's new: Apple's also launching the new Thunderbolt high-speed interconnect, and there's been a big switch to an AMD Radeon HD 6750M GPU paired with Intel's integrated HD Graphics 3000, an arrangement that should offer both solid graphics performance and great battery life. That's a lot of new parts in a familiar case -- but do they add up to something more than just a speed bump?

 

Look and feel

 

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It's been nearly three years since the MacBook Pro last had a significant design change, so you'll need some eagle eyes to tell these new models apart from its predecessors. Seriously, Thunderbolt even uses the Mini DisplayPort connector, so the only distinguishing characteristics are the lightning-strike Thunderbolt icon on the port row and a subtle new texture to the aluminum lid. Oh, and the SD slot is now SDXC. Almost everything else is exactly the same: the still-best-in-class keyboard and glass multitouch trackpad, the standard glossy display, the ports, the sealed-in battery, you name it.

 

That's both good and bad, of course: Apple's competitors have only recently gained any ground on the MacBook Pro's unibody build quality and stiffness, but would it really kill anyone to throw in a couple extra USB ports? And maybe space them out enough to allow for both a thumb drive or wireless card and another device without an extension cable? That would be cool. And while we're at it, we'd also love that optional higher-res 1680 x 1050 display to come standard -- in matte, if possible. We will not even begin to lament the lack of a Blu-ray option; down that road lies only the aching pain of desire forever unfulfilled.

 

To sum this up: it looks and feels exactly like a MacBook Pro. It's still the industry standard in terms of design and quality, but after three years competitors like the HP Envy 14 have started knocking on the door, and we'd like to see the best get even better the next time around.

 

Performance, graphics, and battery life

 

No two ways about this: the new MacBook Pro is the fastest laptop we've ever tested, hands-down. We were sent the stock $2,199 15-inch MacBook Pro, and its 2.2GHz quad-core Core i7-2720QM, 4GB of RAM, and AMD Radeon HD 6750M graphics with 1GB of dedicated GDDR5 RAM turned in numbers exceeding any Mac we've ever had in the labs. In fact, the raw CPU score is so high you'd have to step to a Mac Pro and Xeon processors to get anything faster, as far as we can tell. (That'll obviously change when Apple bumps the iMac line to Sandy Bridge.)

 

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Let's talk about those graphics scores for a moment. While the Radeon HD 6750M performed admirably when active, it also seemed to run a little hot -- yes, we got between 80 and 130fps running around in Half-Life 2: Episode 2 at native res, but the fan kicked in as soon as we launched the game, and it stayed on loudly the entire time, even as the case got noticeably warm around the hinge. It's obviously a capable GPU, but it's a good thing the system automatically switches to the integrated Intel HD Graphics 3000 when it's not needed -- there's a serious decrease in heat and power usage.

 

Unfortunately, reduced heat and power usage comes at the expense of raw capability. Intel's integrated graphics have never been much to write home about, and while HD Graphics 3000 is an improvement, it's still pretty slow. Apple told us Intel integrated graphics performance should equal or exceed the previous Pro's integrated NVIDIA GeForce 320M, but we found it to be slightly slower at every turn, although not enough so to be dramatically noticeable. It's not a huge problem on the 15- and 17-inch Pros, since you can fall back on that Radeon, but we wouldn't try to do more than average HD media playback or casual gaming on the entirely-Intel 13-inch model.

 

On a happier note, we set up Boot Camp and ran benchmarks in Windows 7 to provide some more context to our numbers, and the MacBook Pro crushed those tests as well -- the VAIO Z only got a better PCMarkVantage score because of its fast SSD, and the Envy 17 just barely pulled out better graphics performance. (You can configure the MBP with a 128GB SSD for $100 extra, which should probably be standard over the pokey 5,400RPM hard drive.) Playing a little Batman: Arkham Asylum while booted in Windows netted a smooth 60fps at native resolution while meandering about, with a dip to 55fps during fights.

 

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Needless to say, we had no problems getting through a workday on the new MBP -- we generally juggle Firefox, Chrome, email, a couple chat clients, and various image and video editing tasks on and off throughout a day, and things never felt sluggish or laggy at all. Used this way, we also managed to get around seven hours of battery life, which is pretty impressive -- we imagine things would have dipped had we fired up the Radeon more often, but in day-to-day usage the Intel graphics did just fine.

 

And fair kudos to Apple: with the MacBook Air, the company switched to a new battery test that automates browsing popular sites over WiFi at standard brightness, which generates a more accurate number, but also means the new MBP actually is rated lower than the outgoing model using the same battery. That's a solidly consumer-friendly move, and one we definitely wish more PC manufacturers would make as well.

 

FaceTime HD

 

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Apple's been chugging along with VGA webcams on their machines for so long we were actually shocked when we found out the new MacBook Pro has an upgraded 720p FaceTime HD camera in the lid. Image quality is obviously improved from the previous generation, and we noticed a slightly cooler cast. We'd love some fine-grained image controls at the system level for this camera -- even just white balance and exposure sliders would go a long, long way.

 

Although FaceTime now supports HD calling, Photo Booth weirdly hasn't been updated and still takes VGA shots. Same with Skype, which only supports sending VGA video on OS X right now -- we'd imagine an HD-ready update is a much higher priority now, though.

 

Thunderbolt

 

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There's just not much to say about Thunderbolt right now -- yes, the port is there, but there aren't any peripherals that use the new 10Gbps dual-channel interconnect just yet. LaCie's announced a dual-SSD Little Big Disk and Promise has announced a Pegasus RAID, but neither of those are shipping yet. Of course, Thunderbolt also carries Mini DisplayPort video, and we were able to drive an external 24-inch monitor without any issues, using an existing Mini DisplayPort-to-DVI adapter. We'll note once again that this marks the first time we can remember Apple switching standards without switching connectors -- a watershed moment in the history of dongle purchasing.

 

In any event, we're marking Thunderbolt as an incomplete right now -- until there are peripherals to support it, it might as well just be a Mini DisplayPort. That'll change soon, though, and we'll revisit the subject when that happens.

 

Wrap-up

 

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Apple's forging headlong into its next era with the iPad and iPhone, and it almost seems like the company's forgotten about its Macs at times -- note that this MacBook Pro arrived in somewhat unheralded fashion just few days before the iPad 2. But the new Pro is something of a wolf in sheep's clothing: although it's perfectly disguised as the previous MacBook Pro, there's no mistaking its raw, visceral speed once you start using it. It's twice as fast as the outgoing model, 2.5 times as fast as the model before that, and almost five times faster than the 11.6-inch MacBook Air... all while getting the same seven-hour battery life in the real world. It's hard to say anything bad about that.

 

Of course, there's no getting around the fact that the MacBook Pro is still incredibly expensive and omits what should be no-brainer features -- $2,199 for two USB ports and no Blu-ray drive? -- but those are tradeoffs and prices professional Mac users have long become used to, just like this particular MacBook Pro design itself. Something tells us the next revision of the MacBook Pro will offer a more radical external redesign to go along with Lion, but that's a long ways off -- until then, this MacBook Pro represents the best blend of power, portability, and battery life we've come across to date. We'll see how the PC world responds with its Sandy Bridge systems soon enough.

Ehh, tokį žveriuką turėt... :lol:

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New MacBook Pros Freeze and Crash Under Heavy Load?


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Apple may have dodged the big Sandy Bridge problem with its new MacBook Pros, but it looks like it may now be experiencing some growing pains of an another sort. As evidenced by a 44-page and growing thread on Apple's official support forums, a number of users have been seeing their 15-inch and 17-inch MacBooks freeze up when they're under a heavy load -- encoding a large video file, for instance. That problem seems to be related to the laptops' new AMD graphics, as switching them to integrated-only seems to "fix" the problem for most users, although obviously at some considerably expense to performance. While Apple isn't offering much publicly at the moment, a user that spoke with customer service said that Apple seemed to be aware of the issue, and that they suggested it was a firmware or driver-related problem, and not an actual hardware issue. Unfortunately, there's still no indication as to when it might be fixed. Let us know in comments if you've run into some similar issues.


Įsivaizduoju kaip reikia jaustis kai toks kompiuteriukas crash'ina... :D

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Mac OS X aprašymas čia.

 

Taigi žiūrint ko nori. Ar lengvumo, patogumo ir mėgsti keliauti tai Air.

Nori didesnės talpos, geresnio procesoriaus tai Pro. :D

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stfu del bateriju, baterija isikrauna per maziau nei pusantros valandos iki max laiko taupiam rezime iki 7 h ir taip, uzsukus garsa aukstyn, ir apsvietima, iskyrus keyboard laiko 3 h. Ir kas cia nepasizymi gera baterija ? mmm ? mmm ?

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