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The GoodThe
second generation of Apple's Retina-screen MacBook Pro adds internal
upgrades to its Wi-Fi, Thunderbolt, SSD, graphics card and CPU. The
result is a faster laptop with better battery life and a lower starting
price.
The BadThe
changes are internal-only, and not significant enough to upgrade if you
have last year's version. At $1,999 to start, this is still a very
expensive laptop. Both the 13-inch MacBook Air and Pro have much better
battery life.
The Bottom LineThe
slimmer body and higher-res screen of the original Retina MacBook Pro
were a revolutionary leap. This revamp adds modest internal upgrades for
modest improvements, but price cuts to both the 13-inch and 15-inch
models sweeten the deal.
Apple's 15-inch MacBook Pro, recently updated to current-generation
Intel CPUs (just in time for the holiday shopping season), retains its
position as a favorite premium laptop for power-users. But that
long-awaited upgrade, introduced at an Apple press event in October
2013, happened just in time.
The high-end, high-price Retina Display versions of the
previous MacBook Pro were stuck
in an unusual position. While other systems, from budget laptops
to premium hybrids, had all moved onto Intel's latest CPU platform,
known as either the fourth-generation Core i-series or by the code name
Haswell, the MacBook Pro used last year's processors, until now.
The first Mac systems to get Haswell were the 11- and 13-inch MacBook Air back in June 2013. The iMac all-in-one desktop
followed. That left the more expensive MacBook Pro a generation behind
its less expensive Air counterpart in CPU power and battery life. That's
important because our Labs testing has shown that Haswell offers
significant improvements to battery life in PC and Mac systems.
Josh Miller/CNET
Note,
however, that this CPU update applies only to the thinner MacBook Pro
models with Retina Displays. Currently only the 13-inch version of the
"classic" MacBook Pro is still for sale. The 15-inch version is presumably relegated to the same lonely afterlife
as its long-gone 17-inch relative. For the sake of expediency, we'll
now refer to the current 13-inch and 15-inch Retina Display models
simply as the MacBook Pro.
Updated components and a lower price
The
flagship MacBook Pro retains its very high screen resolution, which
results in crisper text and clearer photos (2,560x1,600 pixels for the
13-inch model, 2,880x1,800 for the 15-inch model). Unlike some Windows
PCs with higher-res screens, OS X is more interested in scaling your
onscreen content to look its best (or what Apple thinks will look best),
rather than giving you full unfettered access to that very, very high
resolution. However, the tile interface view in Windows 8 does something similar with the handful of higher-res PCs now available.
Josh Miller/CNET
Like
the recent MacBook Air and iMac updates, the new MacBook Pro models
also feature 802.11ac Wi-Fi, faster PCIe solid-state drive (SSD)
storage, and Thunderbolt 2 ports for data and video output.
We
were pleasantly surprised when the 13-inch MacBook Air saw its starting
price cut to $1,099 earlier this year. The MacBook Pro follows, with its
prices going from $2,199 down to $1,999 for the 15-inch version (and
from $1,499 for the 13-inch version down to $1,299). That's a break from
traditional Apple pricing, where prices would remain the same
generation over generation, with updated components adding value.
The
15-inch version defaults to 8GB RAM and a 256GB SSD (which Apple
cheekily described as a "quarter terabyte"). Our review configuration of
the 15-inch MacBook Pro is the step-up model (and it's a big step) for
$2,599, with a faster 2.3GHZ Core i7, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and the
Nvidia GeForce 750M GPU.
In our hands-on testing, these new
model looks and feels a lot like the previous generation, so if you
bought one last year, there's no need to reach for your wallet. However,
if you don't already own a Retina MacBook Pro, the promise of longer
battery life, somewhat improved performance, faster Wi-Fi, and lower
starting prices is enough to make this a significant overall update.
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch with Retina Display (June 2012)
Alienware 14
Price
$2,599
$2,199
$1,799
Display size/resolution
15.4-inch, 2,880x1,800 pixels
15.4-inch, 2,880x1,800 pixels
14-inch, 1,920x1,080 pixels
PC CPU
2.3GHz Intel Core i7-4850HQ
2.3GHz Intel Core i7-3610QM
2.4GHz Intel Core i7 4700MQ
PC Memory
16GB DDR3 SDRAM
8GB DDR3 SDRAM
16GB DDR3 SDRAM
Graphics
2GB Nvidia GeForce GT 750M
1GB Nvidia GeForce GT 650M
2GB Nvidia Geforce GTX 765M
Storage
512GB SSD
256GB SSD
256GB SSD + 750GB
Optical drive
None
None
BD-ROM
Networking
802.11a/c wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
802.11a/b/g/n wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11b/g/n wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating system
OS X Mavericks 10.9
OS X Lion 10.7.4
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
A power-packed thin design
As in the
first generation of these MacBook Pro models
from 2012, the current versions exist somewhere
between the chunkier idea of a "pro-level," power-user laptop and the
slim ultrabook ideal. Denser than it looks at first glance, the 15-inch
MacBook Pro isn't exactly a carry-all-day-every-day package, although
one could conceivably pull that off a few times per week.
Josh Miller/CNET
The
15-inch MacBook Pro is more striking than the 13-inch, especially
considering that its slim chassis includes a decent discrete graphics
card. Still, from the outside at least, this is the same MacBook Pro as
last year. Like the 2013 MacBook Air and iMac updates, the new features
are internal in nature, or software-based, if you're considering OS X Mavericks to be part of the overall package.
The
keyboard and trackpad remain essentially the same as seen on the last
several generations of MacBook. Other laptops have matched, but not
surpassed, the backlit Apple keyboard, with the possible exception of
Lenovo, a company as involved with keyboard research and development as
any. The large glass trackpad, with its multifinger gestures, remains
the industry leader, even as Windows laptops move to more touch-screen
controls, at least partially to compensate for the hassle of using a
touch pad with Windows 8. The ability to do easy four-finger swipes, and
the no-lag scrolling in Web browsers, is something Mac users always
have trouble with when they switch back to a PC. That said, tap-to-click
really should be turned on by default. Instead, you'll have to go into
the settings menu to turn this obvious feature on.
The 15-inch
Retina Display remains a main selling point, and the Retina branding now
crosses over between the iPhone, iPad, and MacBook Pro. Some new and
upcoming Windows laptops go for even higher resolutions, and it's not
unreasonable to ask when we'll see this trickle down to the MacBook Air
line. The Retina screen is a 2,880x1,800 display, and is at its best
when displaying text or professional photography. Videos rarely go past
1080p, and most Mac games can't display higher resolutions to begin
with.
MacBook Pro displays: the 2012 Retina vs. 2012 non-Retina.
CNET
As
originally noted last year, the Retina Display looks great, although
you're more likely to notice it when comparing with a non-Retina laptop.
A great way to see the screen in action is to zoom in closely on plain
black text against a white background, as we did with the original
Retina MacBook Pro.
By going into the settings menu, you can
set the scaling so that onscreen text and icons appear as they would on a
number of common resolutions, although I would have liked the
opportunity to get the full unfettered 2,880 view.
Apple MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2013)
Video
HDMI, 2x Mini DisplayPort/Thunderbolt 2
Audio
Stereo speakers, combo headphone/microphone jack
Data
2 USB 3.0, 2 Thunderbolt 2, SD card reader
Networking
802.11ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical drive
None
Connections, performance, and battery
Apple
can drive people a bit nuts when it comes to ports and connections, but
over the past few years, some semblance of universality has come to
many Macs, with the addition of SD card slots and HDMI ports to many
models. As in last year's model, you get two USB 3.0 ports, two
Thunderbolt ports (now Thunderbolt 2), which also double as Mini
DisplayPort outputs, an SD card slot, and Bluetooth and 802.11ac Wi-Fi.
The HDMI and Thunderbolt video outputs can drive two additional
external displays, at up to 2,560x1,600 pixels (I've set up a Retina
MacBook Pro with its Retina screen sandwiched by two high-resolution
external monitors, and it becomes quite the command center).
If you're looking for legacy items, such as Ethernet, an optical
drive, or FireWire, keep looking. And yes, Apple apparently considers
Ethernet to be a legacy port.
Josh Miller/CNET
While our review unit is the (significantly) more expensive $2,599
model, you can quite easily trade down to the $1,999 model if you don't
need the extra storage space or discrete GPU. For a hair under 2 grand,
you get a 2.0GHz Core i7, and cut the RAM and SSD in half, to 8GB and
256GB. In the less-expensive version, you get Intel's Iris Pro graphics,
the higher-end version of the improved integrated graphics offered with
Intel's Haswell-generation processors.
In our benchmark testing,
you can rightly expect the high-end configuration supplied by Apple to
perform extraordinarily well. Some of our tests, including Photoshop and
iTunes,
display a natural OS X bias, but in each of the tests, it excelled,
with the exception of a single-app Photoshop test, which suggests that
program may not be fully optimized for Mavericks
yet. In hands-on use, it felt just as fast as the original model, which
is to say this is more than enough power for even heavy multitaskers,
video editors, and photographers. The scores reflect a modest to medium
jump in most cases over the 2012 version of this system, as seen in the
charts below. However, true power users are no doubt waiting for the
$2,999-and-up Mac Pro desktop, which will be available in December 2013.
Upgrading
from last year's Nvidia GeForce 650M to the newer 750M is a great
excuse to fire up a few games on the MacBook Pro, especially as it's
easier than ever to be a Mac gamer. Steam, GOG.com, and other game
distributors have robust Mac sections now, and Windows games are being
ported to OS X within months, not years.
Both BioShock Infinite
and Metro: Last Light, excellent 2013 PC games, are available on Macs
now, although in somewhat limited versions that cap the graphics options
and resolutions, preventing them from truly showing off what the
MacBook Pro can do. Diablo III allows you to fully crank up the
resolution to 2,880x1,800, and the game ran with settings maxed at about
23 frames per second. Dropping the resolution to 1,968x1,230 (a 16:10
resolution close to 1080p), the game ran at 44 frames per second.
Our old Mac standby, Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, ran at 35 frames
per second at the highest detail settings and full 2,880x1,800
resolution. The game ran at 81.2 at a more reasonable 1,680x1,050
resolution. Last year's Retina MacBook Pro ran that test at 70.8 frames
per second (1,680x1,050) and crashed at the higher resolution.
Josh Miller/CNET
One of the main reasons moving to the current generation of Intel CPUs
is important is because of the improvement to battery life, always a key
factor in a laptop. Apple promises 8 hours from this system, and last
year's model ran for a bit under 7 hours. The summer 2013 MacBook Air --
the first Haswell MacBook -- exceeded Apple's own estimates in our
tests, running for more than 12 hours. Our 15-inch 2013 MacBook Pro fell
right in between those two numbers, running for 9:52, which is
especially impressive for a 15-inch laptop.
Conclusion
If
you like the idea of investing in a higher-resolution laptop, and can
live without an optical drive (a concession that seems more reasonable
every day), the updated 2013 version of the Retina MacBook Pro,
especially in its 15-inch incarnation, remains an irresistibly powerful
yet reasonably portable laptop.
This has been a year of
incremental, and mostly internal, upgrades for Macs, from the Air to the
iMac, but a handful of price cuts to base models help the entire line
from feeling too stuck in time. The only really "new" Mac coming this
year is the Mac Pro desktop, which is far from a casual/consumer
machine, but will be idolized by anyone interested in technology design
and aesthetics.
Its $2,599 price is a major hurdle (as is the
$1,999 base model), but there is no other laptop this year (or last)
that combines powerful components, design, display, and flexibility
quite like the MacBook Pro.
Note:
Shorter bars indicate better performance
Adobe Photoshop CS5 image-processing test (in seconds)
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012)
119
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, October 2012)
186
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
192
Alienware 14
199
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013)
244
Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus
248
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
333
Note:
Shorter bars indicate better performance
Apple iTunes encoding test (in seconds)
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
60
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012)
64
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, October 2012)
68
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013)
73
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
82
Alienware 14
92
Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus
119
Note:
Shorter bars indicate better performance
HandBrake test (in seconds)
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
177
Alienware 14
180
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013)
445
Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus
506
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
532
Note:
Shorter bars indicate better performance
Call of Duty 4 (Retina comparisons; in fps)
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013); resolution tested at 1,680x1,050
81.2
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012); resolution tested at 1,680x1,050
70.8
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013); resolution tested at 1,440x900
34
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, October 2012); resolution tested at 1,440x900
25.5
Note:
Longer bars indicate better performance
Video playback battery drain test (in minutes)
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
865
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013)
782
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
592
Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus
509
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012)
419
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, October 2012)
417
Alienware 14
233
Note:
Longer bars indicate better performance
System configurations
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
OSX 10.9 Mavericks; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-4850HQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM; 2GB
Nvidia GeForce GT 750M + Intel Iris Pro Graphics; 512GB Apple SSD Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (October 2013) OSX 10.9 Mavericks; 2.4GHz Intel Core i5-4258U; 8GB DDR3 SDRAM ; 1GB Intel Iris Graphics; 256GB Apple SSD Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012)
OSX 10.7.4 Lion; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-3610QM; 8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz;
1GB Nvidia GeForce GT 650M + 512MB Intel HD 4000; 256GB Apple SSD Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus Windows 8 (64-bit); 1.6GHz Intel Core i5 4200U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 1,749MB (shared) Intel HD Graphics 4400: 128GB SSD Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
OSX 10.8.4 Mountain Lion; 1.3GHz Intel Core i5 4240U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM
1,600MHz; 1,024MB (Shared) Intel HD Graphics 4000; 128GB Apple SSD Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch with Retina Display (October 2012) OSX 10.8.2 Mountain Lion 2.5GHz Intel Core i5 3210M, 8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz, 768MB (Shared) Intel HD 4000, 256GB Apple SSD Alienware 14
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit); 2.4GHz Intel Core i7 4700MQ; 16GB DDR3
SDRAM 1600MHz; 2GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 765M; HDD#1 256MB Lite-On SSD
HDD#2 750GB, 7,200rpm Western Digital
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